Dear Chelsea - Psychic medium with Tyler Henry
Episode Date: July 13, 2023Tyler Henry joins Chelsea to talk about the ways our loved ones communicate from the beyond, the family secrets that changed his life, and his experience re-learning how to speak as a teenager.  The...n: Tyler does a reading. The daughter of a paraplegic wonders if her mom suffered at the end. A granddaughter can’t seem to get past her grief. And secrets are revealed about how to find a psychic - and when you should avoid one altogether. * Need some advice from Chelsea? Email us at DearChelseaPodcast@gmail.com * Executive Producer Catherine Law Edited & Engineered by Brad Dickert * * * * * The views and opinions expressed are solely those of the Podcast author, or individuals participating in the Podcast, and do not represent the opinions of iHeartMedia or its employees. This Podcast should not be used as medical advice, mental health advice, mental health counseling or therapy, or as imparting any health care recommendations at all. Individuals are advised to seek independent medical, counseling advice and/or therapy from a competent health care professional with respect to any medical condition, mental health issues, health inquiry or matter, including matters discussed on this Podcast. Guests and listeners should not rely on matters discussed in the Podcast and shall not act or shall refrain from acting based on information contained in the Podcast without first seeking independent medical advice.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Hi.
Hi, Chelsea.
Hi, hi, hi. I'm very, very vibrant this morning. Oh, I bet. Because I
haven't had a drink for a couple days and I just feel so much better when I don't drink,
but obviously that's not going to last. So I try and take a couple down days, you know,
but I mean, with summertime, it's just very difficult. Too many social engagements,
too much traveling. The most amount of time I spend sober is probably on an airplane.
I don't like to drink on planes.
It does make you feel extra yucky when you get off the plane.
Yeah, I don't like to mess with that.
I like to get on a plane, take a Xanax, go to sleep, wake up and feel fresh as a daisy.
Oh, that's the way to do it.
I once took an Ativan on a flight and like watched an entire movie.
Forgot I watched the movie.
Welcome to my whole fucking life. I don't even, I've watched entire series and not remembered
that I've seen them until like re-watching them and being three episodes in. Yeah, I'm a hot mess.
Sometimes I'm like half asleep, you know, I like to fall asleep to television. I know they say
don't do that, but I got this amazing rose quartz face mask that I sleep on. Is it cold?
Well, it feels cold.
It gets warm in the night, but it's like just because it's crystals.
So I have a full face one and I have a half face one.
I've been sleeping with that and any under eye puffiness or swelling or anything like that, it just gets everything out.
So I've been, I'm really into that lately.
Anyway, I go to sleep with the TV on.
I put on my rose quartz mask.
And then eventually I turn the TV off.
I love it.
I mean, who's paying attention to television anymore anyway?
I mean, it's so hard to pay attention to anything because we all have such ADD, ADHD, ADD.
All the things.
Bipolar disorder.
Multiple personality.
Borderline.
Anyway.
Okay, guys.
We have added more shows to my Little Big Bitch tour because I'm coming all over.
We added a second show at the Pantages in Los Angeles.
So that's October 12th and Friday the 13th, which is my favorite day of the year.
We added a second show in Boston at the Wang Center.
September 29th and 30th is two shows in New York.
I also have a show in East Hampton, New York, August 26th.
We added a second show in Portland. So Thursday, November 2nd, Friday, November 3rd in Portland,
November 4th and 5th in San Francisco, two shows there. We added a second show in Seattle,
November 10th and 11th. Two shows Boston are November 16th and 17th at the Bach Center at Wang Theater. And I'm also coming to Toronto
and Montreal and Ottawa and so many other cities, Columbus, Cincinnati, Detroit, Louisville. So I
will see everybody at all of these shows. Thank you. Get your tickets at ChelseaHandler.com. Chelsea, have you always
believed in something beyond our physical world, like what we can't see sort of thing? Maybe not
a higher power, but an afterlife? I mean, I guess, yeah, I know. I mean, I hoped so, right? Like,
I think when I was younger, I believed in God because that was instilled in me that there was a God. And then as I became in my teens,
I was questioning it a lot, but always kind of, I've always felt like there's something
personally like watching over me, like protecting me. Like I've always felt like,
oh, there's something protecting me. There's something steering me. I'm accountable to
this invisible eye in the sky. So when there's a choice to make the good decision or the bad
decision, I always make the good one because I feel like there's a witness. Meanwhile,
that's like a fantasy. But as I've grown older, and I think my brother's death and my mother's
death makes me believe in mysticism, makes me believe in the other. I believe there is a
universal intelligence. The more that I've read and discovered and then therapy also really made
me, I always went to psychics and stuff
because I like that kind of stuff.
Yeah.
But I never necessarily always believed it.
But sometimes it's just very comforting.
And I think that now that I've witnessed all those little miracles, like I was yesterday
looking at, I took my girlfriends are in town and I went to take them to my new house.
Yeah.
That's going to be ready.
Never.
And they're like, it'll be ready in August. My girlfriends are like, there's no way this house is going to
be ready in August. Everyone's like, there's no way. I'm like, watch.
This house, by the way, that you were talking about renovating when this podcast started.
I know. I know. I know. It's been, I mean, it's just, the joke is on me. I can't believe
how much time I've spent in rentals, wasting money. Well, anyway. But my
friend, we left there and we're at the interlast site with a couple of girlfriends. And my friend
was like, did you see that hummingbird just circling your front door when we were walking
in? She goes, you were talking to the contractors and the designers and there was a hummingbird
just circling, circling, circling. And then when we walked in, so a psychic had said to me,
you know, your mother, the way your mother and a lot of dead people come back are as birds,
whatever. So that's easy because you can always, if you're a cynic, you can be like, well,
there are birds everywhere. But hummingbirds specifically. And they also told me, watch out
for nests when you move into a place or you have a house. Watch out for nests in weird places because your mother is forming nests and that's where she hangs out is around your house.
In Whistler, my property guy called me and he goes, you know, you have a nest right outside your front door.
There's a bunch of hummingbirds up here.
Oh, my God.
And I was like, what?
So yesterday, this was six months ago.
Yesterday, my friend was like, you know,
there was a hummingbird outside your door. And I go, you didn't tell me that. She goes, yeah,
it just kept circling the door, circling the door, circling the door. Why would it be doing that?
It's my mom gracing it or blessing it or saying like, she's here. She's here. Who knows what it
means? But and then when we were there, they're like, there's like three birds nests at every
entrance. And I was like, three? He goes, yes, at every doorway in the back, in the front, and then the doorway to
the gym. He goes, there's three. And I was like, oh my God. And I couldn't, I was just like, holy
shit. It was just crazy. And so I was like, okay, I believe in that. That is my mother. She would
be a bird coming back around me. I do believe she was also my dog, Junk.
But yeah, so I do.
I just I think it's a more fun way to live.
And whatever you believe is true is true.
It's just like when you tell yourself negative things, they become true.
And when you tell yourself positive things, they also become true.
I think that's so true.
I love what you say about like if you don't know what it means, that's still OK.
Because maybe you will in the future and maybe you won't. I tend to see the numbers one, two,
three, four constantly, which seems like, well, those are the first four numbers. But also like
on a clock, like half the time I look at a clock, it's one, two, three, four. And I don't exactly
know what it means. I tried looking it up in numerology and stuff, and it seems to mean
that when you see it, you're on the right track and you're in your growth and you're learning,
which I like. But I'm like, I feel like there's some deeper meaning. And I feel like one day it's
going to hit me like a ton of bricks. Yeah. Numbers are important, too. Like I told my aunt
when my cousin died, she was obviously, you know, never going to be the same. And I said, you know,
she doesn't believe in any of this. I go, you have to think of something.
Think of something so obscure that only he would know about.
Just make it up in your mind.
Communicate to him in your mind that you need to see these numbers or these letters or this symbol.
She chose like X, Y, Z, da, da, da, da.
She chose some random thing of numbers.
So she spent the whole – I go, great.
Now look everywhere.
Just look at – in all the strangest places.
So she's looking at license plates.
She's driving around looking and seeing if she could find this weird combination of lettering.
And then she picked up her phone and the numbers that those letters made out on the phone was
on her phone without making a call because it wasn't a full phone number.
It was just like five letters.
And it just, it was like, whatever that is on your phone.
And she said she looked at her phone in the middle of the day and she called me and she
was shaking.
She's like, oh my God, that's him.
He's okay.
That's so wild.
I have chills right now.
So I think that, you know, when we lose someone, we're so desperate to know that they're okay
and we suffer so much.
It's like, they don't want us to suffer.
And I understand you have to grieve
because you've lost someone. But there is an attachment that real monks and Buddhists know
not to attach, to know not to attach to the physical form. Of course, you're attached
emotionally, but it's not gone. When that person dies, they're just not here. And while that's a
huge loss, don't forget that the energy and the connection and the
love is still there and palpable.
Right.
I mean, even from a straight up physics perspective, energy doesn't disappear, right?
It transforms into something else, whether it's water becoming a gas, et cetera, et cetera.
But I think the same can be true of the literal electric energy that's in our bodies when we're alive. It doesn't just disappear and dissipate. It has to transform into something else. direction and to trust your instinct and gut and you don't resist uncomfortable circumstances or
things that don't work out, you don't let them drag you down so far, everything starts to get
easier. And that has happened in my life in such a major way that I would be remiss to pretend that
it wasn't part of a universal alignment. Like I'm in my flow state. I understand where things are going. And even if things don't
work out, I feel so optimistic about all the work I've done and the direction I'm headed
that I can handle it all. And now I trust myself. And before I didn't trust myself,
or there were times where I didn't trust myself is a better way to put it.
It's a hard thing to learn when something's not going right. Like, okay, this is a learning experience. What am I actually supposed to take from this, even though it's
painful or awkward or annoying? But you can get there, you know, to accepting that all of these
things are learning experiences. Yeah. And the more experience you have, the more you realize
a breakup is not the end of the world. A job, losing a job is not the end of the world. Losing a job is not the end of the world. A family member
dying is terrible experience, but it's part of life and it's not the end of the world. Your world
continues to exist. So how do you want to move forward in that as a victim or as someone who's
empowered and understands that this universal intelligence is going to take and give and upset and like enlighten, be open to all of
the experiences. And, you know, I used to be such a baby and a brat if things didn't go my way. I
would, I would stop my feet and cry to get my way. And I don't have to do that anymore. Yeah. Yeah.
So amen to that. Yes, for sure. Which brings us to our very special guest. Oh, you guys are going to like this. So our next guest is doing a live tour currently, just nominated for an Emmy for his show on Netflix, which is called Life After Death. And he is the star of Hollywood Medium. He's a recent Emmy nominee for his Netflix series Life After Death with Tyler Henry. Please welcome Tyler Henry.
Oh my God, how cute are you? I was so excited to talk to you.
I'm so excited to talk to you. I barely slept a wink last night, so I am looking forward to talking.
Oh my God, you're so cute. I just think your whole vibe and energy is just so
sweet and welcoming and comforting to so many people. It's so touching.
Well, thank you so much. It means the world. I
feel the same way about you. You've entertained me for years and have brought so much joy to so
many people. So I'm excited to chat. Well, I'm less comforting, but more probably joy. Yeah,
I can bring joy and I don't think comfort is what I'm bringing, but that's okay. Not everybody's
here for everything. You know, Catherine, this is my co-host. Hello, Catherine. It's lovely to
meet you. Nice to meet you. Okay,
so I want you to tell me, I don't know if I have this story right. I want to talk about your kind of OG story. Your mom, and I think I read that your mom was kidnapped as a young girl. Is that
accurate? In essence, yeah. Basically, my mom, as a baby, was taken by a woman who we later found out took her.
And we, for the first 20-something years of my life, thought that this woman was my grandmother.
And indeed, we came to this family discovery that she was abducted.
And it led to a whole kind of reunion with my biological family, which was captured on a Netflix show called Life After Death.
Whoa.
Holy shit. I mean, that is a lifetime movie called Life After Death. Whoa, holy shit.
I mean, that is a lifetime movie come to roost.
It really was.
Oh my God.
The woman who did this,
who I thought was my grandmother
for the first 20 something years of my life,
ended up actually serving over 30 years in prison
for the murder of two people.
And ended up actually involving her own family
in having to bury the bodies
and manipulated the entire situation.
And, you know, it was a source of a lot of shame for my mom.
And then to find out
that that wasn't even actually her mother,
it was definitely heartbreaking
and also kind of relieving
to know we weren't related to that person.
Oh yeah, I bet.
God, that must be such a hurdle to get over emotionally, to grow up thinking somebody's one thing and then find out they're not multiple things.
Absolutely. And there's something to be said about people living often with the sins of their father. And you hear all these tropes about how the apple doesn't fall far from the tree. And my mom grew up hearing those things, and it was very taunting for her. And so to realize, hey, there wasn't even a biological link. It was kind of healing. Have you been able to help your mom on that front?
Yeah, definitely. You know, in some ways, my own intuitive inclinations are kind of
limited when it comes to reading my own family. And a lot of that has to do to just implicit
biases. You know, I kind of know too much. I have my own hopes and fears about the people that I
love and care about. And so it was very difficult in my pursuit for answers to be able to really get any through
my normal kind of go-to methods.
But we were able to work with a leading genealogist.
I introduced my mom to another medium and we received a very compelling reading.
And through all of that information, I was able to kind of get an understanding of what
happened, what led to this horrible event that affected so many.
Oh, gosh.
Yeah.
I wonder if that, you know,
when we talk about intergenerational trauma, right? Like, I wonder how that affects you
unconsciously. Absolutely. Oh, I've so often wondered, too, you know, just how trauma and
its effect over generations can sometimes even kind of be inherited in certain proclivities or
susceptibilities to maybe even anxiety, you know, on some level. So I do know
that shame is something very powerful and often does have a ripple effect. And so to be able to
tell that story in a way that was shared with millions of people, I think was liberating and
kind of reclaiming what happened and owning that narrative and being the one to tell that story
versus being ashamed of it. And that show on Netflix, Life After Death, was just nominated for an Emmy.
So I should mention that too.
So if you haven't seen it, definitely go and see it because that is one crazy story.
Okay, let's talk about you and how you came into touch with your abilities.
Absolutely.
Well, for me, it really started when I was 10 years old.
I didn't recognize this as an ability initially. I woke up one night in April of 2006 and just had this knowingness, this overwhelming feeling that my
grandmother was going to pass. And from there, very quickly, I went into the room to try to
share this with my mom. And as I was explaining it to her, we literally in that moment received
the phone call from my dad that my grandmother had just died. So that acted as a catalyst.
But when you're that young, you don't really recognize that as an ability. It was just a moment of connection,
a moment of knowingness that led to a series of other moments of knowingness as time went on.
And was this the grandmother that went to jail or is this your-
Different one. So thankfully I had a very, very wonderful paternal grandmother who was my world
and she made up for all the
nastiness on the other side of the family. But no, this was the grandmother who was my whole life.
And she was really kind of that introduction into what I would later do as a job.
Oh, my God. And so how does one, when you have abilities like this, and you categorize yourself
as a medium, so how does one separate the knowing and the intuitiveness and the
seeing that you have? How do you separate that when you're living your real life and you're not
working or you're not trying? Is that like a switch that you're able to flip easily?
You know, I kind of liken the medium side of things to a little bit of like a volume dial
in the sense that there's always background noise when I go about my life, but I've had certain kind of processes or rituals or routines
that I've created to allow myself to kind of turn on and turn that volume dial up. And then when I
need to kind of go about my life and go grocery shopping, be able to kind of turn it down.
And so that's kind of the best way to describe it. But it certainly is a process of kind of
navigating a constant sense of trying to understand what's
mine and what's other people's and having that discernment.
And how do you feel there must be a sense of responsibility that you must feel as just
a human, decent person, right?
Because if I mean, I feel a sense of responsibility as a human being, and I don't have that ability,
even though I kind of wish I did.
I mean, who doesn't really, right?
I mean, you're the envy of – I mean, who doesn't want to be around somebody who can see, you know, the people that have left your life or has some sort of psychic ability, which I think we're all innately born with, right?
It's a matter of whether or not you're – how in touch you are with the idea of it.
Absolutely.
And it's really about trust.
And, you know, we all get a first impression. We all get a feeling when we shake someone's hand. We all get a vibe when we
enter into a room. And so many, so many of us just kind of discount that as, oh, it was just a
feeling. But so often it's kind of a tool we're relying on and don't even realize. So what was
the biggest discovery you made after the first thing with your grandmother? I mean, obviously,
that's a huge discovery. But what was the next thing that really cemented the idea that this was going to play a major role in
your future and your professional life? Yeah, well, you know, life very quickly
changed for me. At the age of 16, I had an interaction with my math teacher, of all things,
where I shared with her a message that I was getting while I was sitting in class. And again,
it came through as a knowingness, almost akin to like a memory that hadn't happened yet.
And when I shared this message with her, it involved her former relationship and her divorce and what led to that.
And her former mother-in-law came through to let her know that she loved her like a mother loved a daughter,
regardless of the fact that her relationship with her son had dissolved.
And it was just really healing and showed that there was power in these random
moments when they could be applied in the right way, in the right circumstances, and could actually
help make a transformative effect on someone's life. And so that math teacher was interviewed
actually on the Netflix show. She was instrumental in helping me graduate high school at the age of
16, where I then went on to try to become a hospice nurse, because I figured, you know what,
two birds, one stone. And what happened when you tried to become a hospice nurse because I figured, you know what? Two birds, one stone.
And what happened when you tried to become a hospice nurse?
Well, no one's going to believe this, but I ended up reading the dean of my college,
and he literally ran into me one day and was like, Tyler, if you did for me what you did for me,
you probably should just go in that direction more than doing the hospice nursing thing. So in essence, I kind of always joke, the dean of the college gave me permission to quit school.
And that's literally what happened. And then, you know, life obviously went a very different
direction as I got my show when I was 19 years old. Yeah, congrats. Kudos to you on that. Way
to go. Netflix doesn't miss a beat. I just kind of felt guided into it. Well, that's nice. Congrats
on that. Are we going to do a little reading?
Is Tyler going to read me?
Are you going to read me?
Are you open to that?
Doing a little reading for Chelsea?
Yes.
Oh, absolutely.
I would love to.
Well, let's take a quick break and we'll be back with Tyler and Chelsea.
Inside you, two wolves are locked in battle.
One thrives on fear and anger and doubt.
The other, courage, wisdom, and love.
Every decision, every moment feeds one of them.
Which wolf are you feeding?
I'm Eric Zimmer, host of The One You Feed.
I've been there, homeless, addicted, and lost.
I know the power of small choices to turn your life around.
On this podcast, I sit down with thinkers, leaders, and survivors
to uncover what it takes to feed the good wolf.
This podcast saved me.
It's like having a guide for the hardest parts of life.
The wolves are hungry. What will you feed them?
Listen to The One You Feed on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
2025 is bound to be a fascinating year. It's going to be filled with money challenges and opportunities.
I'm Joel.
Oh, and I am Matt. And we're the hosts of How To Money. We want to be with you every step of the
way in your financial journey this year, offering the information and insights you need to thrive
financially. Yeah, whether you find yourself up to your eyeballs in student loan debt,
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holiday spending, or maybe you're looking to optimize your retirement accounts
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well, How to Money will help you to change your relationship with money
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Hey, y'all.
I'm Dr. Joy Harden Bradford, host of Therapy for Black Girls, and I'm thrilled to invite
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All January, I'll be joined by inspiring guests who will help you kickstart your personal
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You know, when you buy a jacket, it doesn't reaffirm what you love about the hair you were
told not to love. So when I think about beauty, it's so emotional because it starts to go back into the archives of who we were, how we want to see ourselves,
and who we know ourselves to be and who we can be. So a little bit of past, present, and future,
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Listen to Therapy for Black Girls starting on January 1st on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
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And we're back.
We're back.
So as far as this reading goes, I have my pen and paper here.
So I'm happy to scribble.
And it might take about 30 seconds for stuff to start coming through.
Information can come through about both of you.
So just kind of good to keep this in mind.
Something might make sense for one, the other it might not so much.
And so we'll kind of go back and forth if that happens.
But I'm going to scribble and then we'll kind of see which direction we go.
Now, very often what will happen is information will come through around conversations we've just had,
family dynamics, things we were just doing. If anything too sensitive comes through,
I'll share it with you after the fact, off recording. But yeah, generally, it just kind
of helps me get a map of where I'm going. Like if my father's planning on coming back
and reincarnating himself during my life, that would be problematic for me.
You know what? I hear you. I hear you. I hear you. Something's funny that I always say
when I meditate or when I'm feeling spiritually or connected really to the universe and I do my
mantras or whatever I'm into at the time, I always feel my mom and my brother, but I never,
ever feel my father. And I'm like, I feel like he's getting, he's in the spin cycle, like in purgatory, making
up for all of his bad behavior.
He's just in limbo, but you know, it's working, working our way out of the spin cycle.
We're good.
Well, we'll see if anything comes through.
Cause one thing I actually want to start with.
So immediately I have to highlight for some reason, when we talk about females within
family, I being a big fan of you, of course, know your mom has passed, but I have to highlight for some reason, when we talk about females within family, I being a big fan of you, of course know your mom has passed,
but I have to highlight for some reason,
acknowledgement also around an aunt.
So if you have any aunts that have passed away,
it could be a way of just kind of trying to acknowledge that.
I like to relay exactly as the symbology comes through
kind of how I'm seeing it.
And that's one of the individuals I feel like
I have to highlight in some kind of capacity.
Check and see within Chelsea, within your family,
if there's anyone who's passed away in their 60s, that would be female.
So like, I don't feel like I get to hit my 70s. I feel like I passed away kind of closer to my 60s
and it wouldn't be your mother. So it would be somebody else. And that's just kind of good to
keep in mind without giving any information away off the top of your head. Do you know of any
females who would have passed away in their 60s? Yeah, my mom's sister Elka would have passed away in her 60s. So yeah, I have one aunt, Elka.
So we'd kind of be going in that direction. The way this keeps coming in is I keep having to talk
about that aunt acknowledgement in the way this comes through, a couple of cancer susceptibilities
that would exist within family that just need to be kept in mind generationally. So as far as I
know, I believe your mom did deal with some kind of cancer.
Is that correct?
Yes.
Because I'm aware of that.
But I also feel like somebody else
may have also dealt with that susceptibility
that also comes through as being significant and female
and dealing with this at kind of an earlier age.
So on mom's side of family,
do you know of any other females who dealt with cancer?
No, I don't.
No worries.
Any like cancer scares, cancer bouts?
When we talk about her sister, do you know if she had any areas of concern in that area?
I forget how she died, but it wasn't cancer. I'm pretty sure she had. I think she had heart issues.
Gotcha. She seems like a very strong person is kind of the way I would describe it. And since like strong will, I'm not going anywhere. I don't know why, but I have to highlight more than one health related thing and I'm putting it definitely more around her. So just something to look into and
we'll kind of look and see if we can confirm with that. I have to talk about some reference in the
way this comes across to somebody receiving a gift and it would be an art piece, but it would
be of a dog and this would be of a dog that passed. So if somebody received some form of
either an illustration of a dog that died,
I feel like I have to highlight this event happening in some way. If it hasn't happened yet,
it may, like we just end up getting surprised by this gift, but it would be something thoughtful
that somebody would do as like a rendition to honor an animal that has passed away.
Yeah, I've had plenty of those with my dog Chunk because Chunk was such a public stud that people sent me so many beautiful things after he died.
And a lot of them were paintings.
And like, yeah.
That's sweet.
And it's really symbolic in the sense of when we see these things, it's just those reminders that we hold on to.
That feeling it kind of brings back and the importance of holding on to that.
I also have to talk about Atlantic City.
And this is just good to keep in mind.
I'm seeing Atlantic City.
And anytime I see Atlantic City, I've been there before. It's usually a place I attribute to casinos in some capacity,
but if there's any sentimental memories, so do you know of any significant memories in that
kind of area? Well, that's where I met Bill Cosby. So that was significant.
I was awake because yeah. Yeah. Yes. Well, you can remember.
Yeah, I'm aware that it happened. So there's that. But yeah, I perform in Atlantic City on
every tour of which I'm on one right now. So my family usually comes down there. And
I have a lot of pictures of the beach in Atlantic City with my nieces. Yeah, I have that.
One thing I want to look into is there's some acknowledgement. I kept hearing a little birdie told me.
So anytime that comes through, for some reason with your mom, there's some connection as
this comes through with like a little bird visiting.
So if you find that like you, when we hang up, if you like go to your window and there's
a little bird sitting there, it's those kinds of things that often happen that kind of validate
what we hear in readings.
But I feel like there's some visitation involving a little bird. It's those kinds of things that often happen that kind of validate what we hear in readings. But I feel like there's some visitation involving a little bird.
It's so funny.
That's so true because I've heard this before and I've read about people and like the most
common ways that they show you signs from the other side.
And birds is obviously very common.
But someone once told me, check for bird's nests outside of any place that you live.
Like they're going to be in weird places. And,
and like three months ago, I have a house in Whistler. My, the guy who takes care of my house
for me sent me a picture of a bird's nest right outside the window. And he goes, Oh my God,
this bird's nest was here all winter. Did you see it? And I thought, Oh, that's my mother.
Oh, I love that. So that's just kind of, for me, when things like that get brought up in a reading,
it's a way to kind of refer back to an event you would be familiar with, something that you can recollect and kind of almost validate as a way of saying that is indeed either me or I know that you thought that was me at the very least.
And that for me is often very comforting.
I have to talk about that. I woke up this morning hearing the song Idlewise. Idlewise, Idlewise. It's a song from I think
The Sound of Music. There's some darn sentimentality with that song. And it will go back and it could
go back generations even, but Idlewise. Well, my mom was German, so she was from that neck of the
woods. I love it. If there's some sentimentality, if that song was played as a child for somebody
on a music box, just remember that I'm saying that check into it because I think we'll end up knowing where that fits.
It feels like we're kind of going back in time on some kind of larger capacity.
So I have to ask as it relates to your kind of overall physical body.
One thing to consider is as we go to lower, I keep in mind that you have a susceptibility
when it comes to legs of one leg being weaker than the other.
And just wanting to be mindful of this because for some
reason when we're talking about balance i'm almost more inclined to worry about one like almost
slipping up so that generally for me can sometimes indicate like knee susceptibilities ankle
susceptibilities anywhere we would have like a joint on one side more than the other just be
mindful of that if you notice any issues because i don't think things are set in stone we can kind
of you know knowledge is power on some greater sense one thing i want to talk about when we go to dad's side
is i when we do talk about that department one thing that i want to acknowledge when i focus
on that symbology i do not get a lot but i will tell you what i get there's an acknowledgement of
for dad either my symbology around what do we do with him where do we put him where does he go if
there was a decision around someone either going into a nursing home or having a rehabilitative kind of situation where they need to be taken care of through the help of like professionals.
There's some conversation around that in some larger capacity. But what's interesting is there's this feeling of if somebody was not or if people were not able to be there when he died, there's this feeling of that's okay. I went the way that I was supposed to go.
But sometimes people will come through and say like,
no, I needed everybody around me.
I'm not getting that feeling with him.
There's this feeling of I went and almost timed my passing.
And I don't know why.
But if somebody like almost intentionally went when they went to avoid people,
but I don't mean to say it in such a kind of
way, but it just kind of feels almost like not having everybody involved when it comes to sending
me off. Well, that's how I want to go. So I mean, I totally relate to my father feeling that way,
if that's how he felt. It's definitely an interesting sense of timing my passing. When
it comes to dad's situation, were there people around at the very end or did he pass kind of more solo? He wasn't with any of us. Yeah. He was solo
in one of those assisted living places. So the way that that comes in is basically,
you know, some people live and feel like, ah, I wish I would have been there. I wish I could
have been there for him. There's this feeling of like, didn't need people to be there.
Timed my passing. The interesting thing is I feel like he kind of held on a little longer than I would have even expected, which is kind of strange.
He gives me an earlier acknowledgement of an earlier point where I almost feel like we were
like ready to say goodbye. And then I feel like he pulls through in some capacity in some larger,
larger kind of way and then ends up passing a little later on. And we're like, what? Like,
we thought it was going to be the earlier thing. Did you have any earlier situations? Yes, we were hoping he would die a lot sooner than he did. Because
at a certain point, it was just not a quality life. And he was such a stubborn asshole that he
wouldn't die. You know what I mean? He was just like holding on tightly to his anger.
I remember when my sister called to tell me that my dad died. My sister Shauna called and I was in
the car with my driver, Billy, and she was crying and she goes, dad died this morning. And I'm like, I said,
why are you crying? And she's like, I don't know. We've been waiting for this for years.
Like not because we hate our dad. I mean, he was disappointing on many levels, but we all
really loved him. It was just that it was no way to live anymore. So I think he definitely extended
his life about six
or seven years longer than necessary. With that, though, equally comes an awareness of certain
cognitive biases, certain cycles that you as an individual have broken on a larger scale. And
there's just an interesting acknowledgement when it comes to dad about dad not being able to see
things in life, being short-sighted in a larger capacity and
from where he's at now i truly believe there's a greater clarity in understanding that ripple effect
oh i love that of how both his actions and inactions affected the people around him and and i
i would really just say i don't get a maliciousness around him. I just kind of get a sense of I feel like he might have sometimes offended people without intending to offend them.
And it's almost like when someone says the worst possible thing at the worst possible time, but they thought they were being comforting.
There's something there that just kind of comes through that if anybody feels he kind of had that quality, there's an acknowledgement of wanting to wipe that clean
of I see maybe perhaps the insensitivity or my timing not always being the best,
but people maybe not understanding that from his perspective. So I don't really feel bad about it.
Yeah, yeah. Well, I definitely have a little bit of what you're describing as well. I was
born with the ability to say the wrong thing at the wrong time, or the right thing at the wrong time or the right thing at the wrong time. There you go.
You know, it definitely, it happens, but there's definitely what I would say is a little sense
of in hindsight and understanding.
Who was born in August?
My brother, Roy.
Okay.
Now for some reason, and this is just one thing to consider, there's an acknowledgement
around like one brother and then another brother and having to kind of separate
the two for some reason. Oftentimes objects that come through have a lot more meaning than just
their initial kind of application. Check and see if anybody has any horse paintings. Kind of a weird
thing to say. I don't know where it's coming from, but like if somebody in the family made a painting
of a horse or has a painting of a horse. I don't know why I'm saying that.
I've been called a horse before, a horse face.
Is that what we're talking about?
Well, I think you're okay in that regard, but it's kind of a weird generational thing.
I feel like I'm going back and I'm not even entirely sure where to place it. It could be switching gears to Catherine as far as this goes.
I definitely have some paintings of
horses. One specifically that was from my grandfather's house. Okay. I want to kind of
go to you because I do sometimes get pulls and I have to kind of go with those pulls because
they're inclinations and we all have inclinations, but yeah, I think there's something in form in
that. So give me, let me scribble really quick. Catherine, one of the areas that does pop up is
just kind of a hypervigilance around the feminine system. That's usually ovarian, uterine, cervical,
but I'm kind of going to lower. Again, this may not be something we include.
No, I'm very open. I've got endometriosis and had surgery for that a couple of years ago. So yeah.
Gotcha. Gotcha. I hope you're on the mend. I just want to keep it in mind. There's some
acknowledgement around what I would view as like susceptibility of inflammation, fibroids,
ovarian cysts, like just kind of being mindful of that thing. I'm just kind of coming to soon
as just being on top of that. Catherine, in your family, I'm just kind of curious,
check and see if there were two passings within a very relatively short period of time.
There's an acknowledgement of three years and two people within family passing in
three years. So that comes in pretty strongly. Do you know off the top of your head, like,
two passings in three years? Yeah. I mean, I would definitely say my two grandparents on my
father's side passed within two years of each other. Gotcha. Now, when we talk about the lung
cancer susceptibility thing separately from this, I would just look into it and see if perhaps when we talk about dad's side of family.
Catherine, for you, do you know of any situations involving three siblings on dad's side?
Do we know what kind of situation?
It's basically so I have to highlight an acknowledgement of three and it's generationally going back above you, which usually would put that on dad's level.
Yeah.
My dad has three half siblings that he grew up with and he has a lot of half siblings
that he did not grow up with.
So that could be what that is.
Okay.
I'm having to highlight the three, generally be three that we'd be kind of more familiar
with in some capacity.
That's where for some reason I'm putting some kind of lung diagnosis, lung prognosis.
Oh, yeah.
Okay.
I absolutely know what that is.
Yeah.
My Aunt Debbie died of emphysema or like complications from emphysema, which is one of those three. Yeah.
So I definitely want to go there. I just generally interpret anything that would be like a terminal lung thing. That's kind of the symbology I'll get. And that's what I was getting. So I'm glad we figured out where it is. I'll go as far as living people goes, which is kind of good to be on top of that. And when you bring up like health issues, is it as to heed a warning or is it to like,
I mean, when someone has already crossed over, say,
and you're acknowledging how they went,
is that a confirmation in a sense
that you're speaking to them?
Is that why they're like saying it,
like to confirm their presence?
So how someone passes is a big part of their life story.
And so very often people's lives and what they valued and who they were will come through.
But very often a way to kind of validate will be kind of leading with what led to where I'm at now.
And that's usually, well, always a cause of death.
Oh, OK.
Well, that was very juicy and cute.
I like that little speed round.
OK, so let's give some advice out.
Yeah, let's do it.
I'm ready.
We'll take a little break and be right back.
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We're back with Tyler Henry and Chelsea.
Our first email comes from Denise. recently lost my mother unexpectedly to a stroke, and I'm pretty devastated. This was the hardest
thing I've ever gone through. My mother was not only an amazing woman, but also my best friend.
I used to talk to her two to three times daily, and she was my bouncing board for everything.
The constant pain I'm feeling is unbearable, and I'm learning about grieving. They say that even
though people die, you can speak with them, and that they're still here with you. I find myself
having conversations with my mom, but I don't know if it's me talking to myself
or is it her? How do you know? And when is too soon to see a medium? All the best, Denise.
What a beautiful question, Denise. You know, I would just say when it comes to seeing a medium,
it's important to do that when we've gotten to a place in our grief where I think we've been able to fundamentally process that physical loss. Medium reading is not a cure for
grief. And it's important that we go through the process of being able to find acceptance,
however that looks to us, in being hopefully able to see grief counselors or find a sense
of community or find a sense of support before we go and receive a reading. So that would be my kind of general advice when it comes to the protocol. Largely, though, I think when it comes to,
you know, wondering if they're there, if they notice, are they connected? Those are all very
normal questions to have. And for me, I find in my own work, one of the number one ways that they
often seem to answer is through something called meaningful coincidence, called synchronicity. And synchronicities happen.
And very often they are moments where events line up
and we just kind of feel an uncanny sense of wonder,
wondering, was that you?
And I think that even those moments where we stop
and are kind of struck by the sense of questioning,
those very often are signs and ways to let them know and affirm that
they're still with us. So not only are dreams a great way for people to kind of come in,
timing is also something important to look at as a way that in a vehicle which they communicate.
And I also want to add in like, you just have to believe like you if you believe it,
then it's true to you, you know, and if like when I'm talking to my mom, I never doubt it for a second because I want to believe it.
You know, I would recommend to try not to resist the judgment of your communication with your mom.
People don't you know, they're not gone.
The love that existed will always remain.
And that is a piece of her that you will always have.
So it's never, ever going to leave like your aura and your energy field.
Like that's your mom.
So you have to trust in that, I think,
energetically to know like,
you think your mom is just going to die
and just forget about you and disappear and ditch you?
No fucking way is your mom going to do that.
Yeah.
And also like, what's the harm in believing that?
Exactly.
Even if you're a total cynic,
like why not be like,
I'm just having a conversation with my mom?
Well, and truly there's something to be said about subjective, you know, truths and objective
truths and creativity, love, spirituality, they exist very much on the meaning oriented
arenas. And that's, you know, a big part of it. So we know objective truths are the pursuit of
science. That's math. You know, that's technology. Subjectivity exists in kind of a different realm,
one that is still valuable and still has meaning, but doesn't necessarily have to be understood by
everybody around you. Right, right. You know, if you believe in your mother, that's all that
matters. If you believe that your mother that you're talking to her and that's so and it's
so comforting. Why would you deny yourself that comfort? Exactly. And also, like, it seems true
to your relationship with your mom. You checked in two or three times a day. You are constantly in conversation. So why wouldn't you still be in conversation with her? Why wouldn't she still be having a conversation with you? I think that's wonderful.
Absolutely. Dear Chelsea, my mom very recently passed away. I was wondering if once someone crossed over,
if they have to prioritize how often they visit loved ones. My mom would want to visit her three
granddaughters first and then my sister and my dad. I don't know that she would feel the need
to visit me as much since I'm living an average life with not a lot for her to worry about. See,
she was a big worrier. But I thought
I would get the sense that she was around me more. I keep thinking maybe she's focusing on those that
need her presence more. Chelsea, having lost significant family in your life, what has been
your experience and have you received any signs that they're with you and how often?
Hi, Amy. Hi, Amy. Hello, Amy.
Hi. Hi, this is Tyler Henry. He's our special guest today.
Hello. Hi. Oh, thank you for joining us. Wow. So you feel like your mom, do you feel like
your siblings or your dad or any of the people you mentioned feel her presence at all?
You know, I think that they do. I don't know if I was expecting some grand sign. I just kind of wanted to know that she was okay.
And she died of cancer and it was a difficult passing. And I just kind of expected maybe
rainbows or a bird to land on my shoulder or something.
Absolutely. Well, first, what I want to say, Amy, is I would love if you contact my website,
we'll give you a full free membership to the collective where you can take part in group readings and see the experience and potentially
receive one yourself. So we'd love to have you over there. But to your question, you know, when
it comes to spirituality on a larger scale, the analogy I like to use when it comes to where
they're at is this, I like to say, if you imagine that you are in New York City, and you know,
there's a car accident that happens two streets over.
If you are in the middle of the city, you're not going to be able to see that car accident two streets over.
But you know who will? A skyscraper.
Somebody who's cleaning a skyscraper window washer at the very top of a skyscraper from where they're at, from where they're situated, would not only be able to see you, but would be able to see the car accident two streets over. That doesn't make the
window washer any more enlightened than you and I, but it's from where they're situated. From
their perspective, they're able to see more than perhaps us on kind of a lower level of awareness.
So they definitely seem to see a lot. They are with us, but not necessarily one at a time. I
think that there's an awareness of that collective sense of connection that they share. Yeah. And I would say in my experience with my mom,
like it's not something that's going to fall out of the sky and land on your shoulder. You know
what I mean? They're not tapping you on the shoulder. Like they're not touching you in that
way. I look at it as like, oh, that's a reminder that everything's going to be okay. And it's also
helpful sometimes for you to pick a symbol, like something that was meaningful between you and your mom. Like with me and my mom, it's
an orange. Whenever I'm like stressed out and I see an orange out of place, I'm like, oh, my mom
is telling me everything's going to be kosher. It's okay. And I think that's a powerful thing
to like think of something between the two of you and keep your eyes open. Don't expect it to come
to you. You sometimes have to find the signs.
You know what I mean?
It's like everything in life.
The more open, the more you see.
And the more narrow-minded, I think, the more limited you are and the less belief you have
in this kind of possibility.
And it's beautiful because you kind of create a language then.
You know, if you can say, this is my sign.
This is how I would like you to present yourself to me, if possible, then you kind of have that code.
You have that language.
You are being that bridge and making an active effort to communicate and keep that relationship
going in a different way, but a way nonetheless.
Yeah, I do something, and I'm sure you're probably not a comedian, Amy, so this won't
be what you do, but I do this thing before I walk out on stage every time.
I do this thing where I like look up as if my mom's above me.
I think everything's above me.
But actually, Tyler just confirmed that everything is above us.
So I'm glad for that.
But I always look up and as I'm walking out, I'm just right before they call my name.
I just I'm like, I have this ebullience of light like shining down around me, which is my mother.
And I'm with her and she's with me and we walk out together.
And that's always how I do it.
And it feels like I'm being lit from within.
And so if you can have some of this imagery for whatever is an important thing that you
do, you know, in your day, it doesn't have to be something that's scary or daring.
It can just be, try to invoke your mother's presence, really invoke it and be like, Mom, I'm here with you. Like even if you're, you know, you're talking
to yourself or not speaking out loud and just thinking it like it's powerful. Our brains are
much more powerful than we give them credit for. So trust it. Absolutely. Being able to live
vicariously, you know, and allow her to live vicariously through every new action, every
achievement, every new memory, everything you do, every new love that you make, every bond that you have is a way to
honor her and to allow her to kind of live through that in some greater way.
Oh, I love everything you guys said.
Awesome.
Love it.
I knew you would give good advice.
Oh, good.
Well, make sure you go over to his website.
Okay, Amy?
Yeah, I'll get you guys connected.
Absolutely.
I'll see you over there. Thank you. That I mean, that really did hit home for me,
you know, the like, I need to not wait for her to come to me. I need to communicate back. So
yes, yes. That really hit. So thank you. Have a beautiful rest of your day.
Thank you. Tyler, how old are you?
127.
Wow, you're very articulate.
Really, really good moisturizer.
No, I'm 27.
I just kind of turned. You have such a good use of language.
I love when young people speak so eloquently,
like your words, your vocabulary.
It sounds very patronizing probably saying that to you,
but I just love language
and I love when someone speaks effortlessly.
Well, that means, well, I had a brain injury of all things and a brain surgery when I was 18. So
it actually really affected my ability to, I get aphasia where I can't talk. So that, that actually
the huge compliment. Thank you. Yeah. Well, you're probably overcorrected, right? Because of your
brain injury that you probably work even harder at speaking. So I try my best, but thank you.
That means a lot. Did you have to like relearn a lot of language and that sort of thing?
It was a whole process.
It's, you know, you have the words inside, but to get them out was really the challenge
and what is often the case with brain surgery.
So it's been a lot of kind of slowing down.
You know, you have a lot that you want to say, but you just kind of have to take one
word at a time.
So.
Well, our next question comes from Whitney. Dear Chelsea, I've been going
back and forth for a couple years about seeking out a medium to help me with my grief. She had
lost a couple of grandparents who were really influential in her life, but I'm very skeptical
and have no idea how to determine if a medium in my area is legitimate or not. I'm assuming that
mediums who've gained national success must be
the real deal, but then at that point, they're probably out of my price range. To say that my
grief bogs me down is an understatement, and I'm not even sure that this would be the way to finally
have a sense of relief in my life, but I've tried every other avenue so far. I've been to grief
counseling. I've seen therapists. I've been medicated. I've tried to wear my grief out like
it's a toddler, but nothing is helping. I know I'll never completely not feel this loss, and I know
that I'll always wish they were still physically here, but I need this enormous weight lifted off
my chest. Is a medium the answer? Whitney. Yeah. What do you do when somebody is having
such a difficult time with their grief? What advice can you give someone?
Sure.
Well, for one, I think expectation management is good.
A medium will never be the answer
or a cure-all for grief.
But it's certainly, if you find a good one,
can affirm and validate that bond
and the fact that that bond still continues.
And that's really, in essence,
what any good medium should strive to do.
But I look at mediumship as that of a practice.
And being that it's a practice,
they are practitioners. And just as there are many practitioners in this world, doctors,
you know, therapists, you want to make sure that if you're seeing a practitioner, you're going to
somebody who is legitimate. And the way to do that in this world, in the world of mediums,
which is unregulated, there is no better business bureau, which to my frustration is the case.
I think it's very important to go through word of mouth, to go through recommendation.
Going to somebody that you know comes under high recommendation from somebody you trust,
somebody you know and have a relationship with, tends to be the best way.
And equally, some of the best readings I've ever received were for free from people who
were not even working as mediums full time. So
there are very talented people that exist among us who may not openly work as a medium, but might
still be able to help you out. And you'll find them through word of mouth. And are there like
group mediums, you know, like where people can do it if they can't afford something like you
mentioned that on your website, which is also something she can explore. But like, are there
group things where you go to a room? There's a lot of people. I don't know. Is that common?
So there is a community called Lilydale, actually, in northern New York, which is just that people
take entire tourist destinations to this gated community in New York. There's been a spiritualist
retreat where mediums live on site and do readings. And it's an entire kind of tourist
industry there. so there's certainly
that in theory i think there's something to be said about just individual experience and being
able to kind of seek out individual practitioners without giving them information and just kind of
understanding when you walk into a medium reading you know your loved one more than any medium
you know what their loved one's. You know how they'd be
inclined to deliver information. And so I think it's just important to trust that more than any
message you hear. You know and will know if there's a connection being made.
And also, I just want to say, Whitney, your grandparent wouldn't want you to be suffering
in this way. This is heartbreaking. No one wants their grandchild to suffer at the loss of her. So
that's something to also contemplate. Think about the
impact. You have an opportunity to live your life in honor of your grandmother and live your life
in an essence for her. I mean, no one should be living their lives for another person, but in a
way, she can vicariously live through you and you can invoke her essence for your life. That's a very powerful way to keep those
relationships close to your heart, even though they may feel far away. And I would suggest to
try and practice that, you know, to try and live, live out loud, live your life fully and try to
really get to a place where you can be joyful again. It's easier said than done. But if you do it
with the idea of your grandmother really just kind of smacking you on the butt, like,
I want you to have the best life. This is your chance. Please don't get hung up on my passing.
I want you to succeed and love and live and all of those things. You know that she would want
that for you. Absolutely. We owe it to them to remember them for who they were
and how they lived versus that one moment
that caused them to transition.
And I think it's interesting in the sense
that Maya Angelou, one of my favorites,
had a quote about, similar to Chelsea,
when she would go on stage,
she'd call upon her departed mother.
She'd call upon her ancestors, her grandmother.
And she said by the time she walked on stage,
she wasn't walking on that stage alone. She came with an army of people who loved her.
And I think we really are a culmination of the love we are given in this world. So to be able
to harness that, to call upon that essence and invoke it, as Chelsea says, is such a powerful
way to still feel that connection, even if that physical bond is no longer there.
Chelsea and I talked about this on a recent episode. Sometimes when you try to push something
away, a feeling away, it makes it worse. And so think of your grief as sort of something that you
bring along with you. It doesn't mean you can't have joy in your life. It doesn't mean you can't
go about your day to day. But that grief is a reminder of the closeness that you shared with
those people. And when you feel that sense of grief, be reminded that that person is still with you
and that you do still have relationship with them.
They're right there.
That grief is part of that relationship.
And bring it along with you.
Feel it when you need to feel it.
But also know like it's okay to have that at the same time as you're having maybe a
joyful moment or something was funny or, you know, you're living your life day to day.
It's okay that that's sort of a passenger with you right now.
I actually have a question for you, Tyler.
What do you think about like reincarnation?
Do you think people can come back?
So I don't view reincarnation as a linear process, like a line.
So the traditional view is that reincarnation
is you are born, you die, you're reborn, you die, you're reborn, you die, in kind of a line, right?
And so my belief is that we as a soul are a lot more multifaceted than we realize.
And in essence, the best way to describe it is I think we basically can exist in many different
forms at once. And
it looks like we are living our individual little lives and our individual little timelines.
But my belief is that in many ways, we kind of have many tentacles in many different arenas.
And it's very kind of uncomfortable sometimes to think about. And it kind of gets into philosophy
of, you know, determinism and all these things. But I believe in a higher self that when we transition,
we become part of something greater than ourselves.
That has always been a part of us.
And we kind of reunite with that part.
And then part of us might continue on in other incarnations,
but that kind of soul essence of us always exists.
And I think it's always retaining information.
And that is why I believe I do readings for people.
And even if they've reincarnated, which maybe they have, maybe they haven't, I'm still able to get information about that life, who that person was, even if
that's kind of continued on. And it's hard to say, you know, it's one of those things. It's
one of those great mysteries. Well, let's take a quick break and we'll be back for our last
question with Tyler and Chelsea. Every decision, every moment feeds one of them.
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Well, our last question comes from Stephanie.
Dear Chelsea, long-time listener, first-time writer.
I've always wanted to say that.
When it comes to mediums, I must admit that I'm a bit of a skeptic.
I'm a nurse practitioner, and so I'm very science-minded. But I also greatly want to believe that there are forces greater than us that we can't comprehend or measure.
Now to the reason I'm writing.
My mom passed away this week.
She was an unstoppable force.
When I was six, she was shot and paralyzed from the waist down by an accidental gunshot wound
by a child. She had severe pain for 31 years but never took any pain medication because she wanted
to keep her mental capacities sharp. She raised two children as a single mom, became CEO of a large
nonprofit organization, sat on two prominent boards in our community, and showed unlimited love to
everyone, especially my four and nine-year-old.
As you can tell, she was someone really special. I cared for her in her last month, and I wish I knew how to know she was at peace. Tell her we're okay, and that's because she's given us all the
tools we need to be okay. Thank you so much for your show. It's a highlight of my week.
So I think the biggest question is, how does she let her mom know that they're all okay? And how does she know that her mom is okay and that she passed without
too much pain? Absolutely. Well, you know, I think we often do understandably get very focused on
what causes someone to transition, even under the best of circumstances. So many of us relive those
last moments or our last interaction or what could have been said or what could have been done, even under the best of circumstances.
So I think it's a very normal place to be in grief.
You know, I just think when it comes to that awareness, if you look at who she was in life,
clearly she prioritized her children and the generations of family that came after her.
And so I would say as you revel in every moment, as you reach, you know, achievements and accomplishments and those big landmark moments, find ways to implement her into those moments.
What maybe, you know, we wear a piece of jewelry and every time we look at that jewelry, we think of mom or whatever it may be.
There's ways to still carry them on and allow them to kind of live vicariously. But, you know, I think that's
one of the great equalizers of death is that in essence, no matter what we're going through,
it does allow for some closure of physical suffering. And that's just a moment in time.
That's not someone's eternity. Exactly. Yeah. You have to know that people who have crossed
over are at peace, like you're not in your body anymore. So there's no bodily suffering. And I would it would be a
big leap of faith to think that they're suffering beyond this earth. You know what I mean? This
earth, I think it has so much suffering already. I mean, what you're talking about is you're
suffering, you know, at the loss of your mom. But when people wreck themselves over the circumstances
in which somebody passed, like, oh, they were in such pain. Even when it's a hard
crossing, as they say, at least they're not suffering anymore. That's what's necessary to
get them out of their body and to stop the suffering. So you have to believe that your
mother is at peace, regardless of how she died. She's at peace now. I mean, I think you just have
to believe that and you have to know that and just keep telling yourself that and keep showing her, you know, in the ways that Tyler suggested to keep living
your life with her, you know, not that it's over.
She's gone, but your relationship with her will never be over.
And, you know, just last point with the nursing aspects, there's so many hospice nurses that
have shared firsthand experiences of, you know, their own grief and also seeing, you
know, patients at the end of life have very firsthand experiences of their own grief and also seeing patients at the end of life
have very compelling experiences. So I would encourage you to ask coworkers.
Yeah. Tell us about your tour, Tyler.
Yeah. So very much hitting the road, been very busy.
Yeah, I've seen it on Instagram. You're on fire.
Oh, it's been so, so much fun. I've been really thankful. We've had a sold out tour all across
the country. And it's been intense every year, 26 cities, I travel all across Midwest, the South,
and it's in a group setting. So it's anywhere from 2000 to 3000 people, I share a little bit
about my story and what people need to know to get the most out of readings. And then it turns
into a group reading. And it's different every single time, you know, people come in as strangers,
and by the end of it, they're hugging.
And it's just a really beautiful experience to be able to have that outlet in a society
that doesn't allow for people to talk about grief very much, to have people come together
and feel comfortable honoring that vulnerability and what they've gone through in a shared
way.
Great.
And people can get tickets at?
Over at TylerHenryHollywoodMedium.com.
You can check out tickets and my full tour schedule. And people can get tickets at? Over at TylerHenryHollywoodMedium.com. You can check
out tickets and my full tour schedule. And there's more to come. Oh, well, that's so excellent. You're
doing such a great service. How nice is it to do what you love and have it be so helpful to people,
right? I feel so privileged and so humbled every single time. I mean, it truly is mind blowing. And
it just reminds me of why we have to live mindfully.
And it gives me a deep sense of gratitude in every reading I do.
I think there's a message for me as well.
Well, it was a pleasure speaking with you.
I hope I get to see you again soon.
Absolutely.
We'll make it happen.
And if you need anything, either of you, if I can help in any capacity, if you have any
follow up readings, friends, family, I'm here and I would love to stay in touch.
Okay.
Thanks, Tyler.
We will do for sure.
Have a good one.
Thank you so much.
Bye-bye.
If you'd like advice from Chelsea, shoot us an email at dearchelseapodcast at gmail.com
and be sure to include your phone number.
Dear Chelsea is edited and engineered by Brad Dickert, executive producer, Catherine Law.
And be sure to check out our merch at ChelseaHandler.com. Every week, I talk to brilliant minds and brave souls about the art of small, powerful choices.
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