The Blindboy Podcast - Speaking with a professional who helps people to die
Episode Date: November 27, 2024Laura Coleman is a psychotherapist and death doula Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information....
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Strangle the balcony you dangly Antonis. Welcome to the Blind By Podcast.
I've been enjoying the wonderful November chill in the air.
This morning I went down to the river at 8am and the water was like glass, still glass.
It was about minus 4 degrees. degrees and there was a beautiful smoky mist curling over the surface of the water and
everything was sparkling with frost because the sky was completely clear. Baby blue with
a pure slenty golden sun and I took in big breaths and just admired admired the wonder and
splendor and marveled at the river just after dawn freezing cold no one else
around and as I took in nature with every one of my senses I reminded myself
how lucky I am how lucky I am to be be healthy, to be able-bodied, and
to be in the right frame of mind.
To get up at 8 in the morning just to enjoy a river, just to enjoy the beauty of a freezing
cold river.
I really asked myself to be grateful, to be grateful for shit that I'd normally completely take
for granted. I was grateful to simply be alive and to say to myself this is enough
this here is enough getting up at 8 in the morning enjoying a river that's
enough. The reason I'm doing that is because I've had a very intense week you
know that last week my documentary came out on television at the Land of Slaves and
Scholars.
Very well received.
Thank you to everybody who sent me a kind message about that documentary.
But as I said last week, because I made something on corporate media, a big RTU1 documentary. Because of that it means
I get covered in the newspapers and on the radio and all that type of shit. So that means
I'm an Irish celebrity for like a week or maybe two weeks I'm an Irish celebrity. And
it's particularly intense, it's very strange, because of the huge amount of harassment that comes with that.
So I release something in the corporate media, maybe once a year, once every two years.
What that means is, you know, you release a book or something or a TV show and then
you get covered in corporate media.
Radio, television, newspapers.
And it means you then reach an audience
that don't usually think about you.
And that comes with harassment.
People are very upset
that I wear a plastic bag on my head
and present serious documentaries.
That seems to be the bones of it.
Now, I'm quite used to that.
But since the pandemic,
since after the pandemic, what used to be
playing with grudgery has turned into, it's become politicized. So aside from
reading comments and receiving messages where people are like, oh it's that
stupid prick with the bag on his head, now, like just today, I got accused of
being a Freemason, I don't know why people
think I'm a Freemason. And I got accused of being a paedophile. Why? Why would someone
think that? Well, because I'm on television, you see. And people who are on television,
people simply appearing on the television or making a television show, even if it's just in Ireland, an RTE.
That means that some people genuinely believe that you're part of an international sex trafficking cartel and that you eat children for adrenochrome and energy. So I get called a paedophile and a
freemason because I made a documentary because I
made a documentary and this documentary went out on RT1 television.
Middle-aged men, middle-aged men up and down Ireland are furious with me because
I wear a plastic bag on my head. This week, this week the mixed martial artist
Conor McGregor was found guilty of rape in a civil
trial in Dublin.
One of the Irish newspapers posted an article about my documentary about early Irish Christianity,
and then all the comments underneath this were just very, very angry men whose reality and sense of safety had
become destabilised because I'm wearing a plastic bag in my head.
And it is, it's 97% men.
One or two comments from women, but it's men, it's very angry men.
And the same newspaper posted another separate article about
about the verdict of Conor McGregor's rape trial
and I compared the comments
there were much more men
vocally upset and angry
and demanding justice
because I'm wearing a plastic bag on my head
than there were men
vocally outraged and angry and
disgusted about Conor McGregor, and that was particularly depressing. It was very depressing.
So the past week has been challenging. It's been very challenging because you're talking about
I'm just trying to live my life
but because I put something out there in corporate media and
it's being reported in corporate media spaces, it just means I'm getting like hundreds, hundreds
of comments and messages all day from men who either just think I'm a fucking idiot
for wearing a bag on my head, which is fair enough I don't really mind that but then the other men who are just as angry, but they're more conspiratorial
They think I'm a Freemason
They think I'm part of a larger plot and that I'm funded by big pharma and that I'm told out
I'm told out to spread globalist propaganda
I don't know what the fuck they believe,
but they believe it enough to feel entitled
to threaten my safety.
And then of course, like I said,
lots of wonderful supportive messages
from people who enjoyed watching the documentary,
and that's nice too.
But I went down to the river this morning
because it's all bullshit.
It is all bullshit.
Some of the negative comments I was receiving, I was taking them on board.
I was allowing them to hurt me, to impact my self-esteem.
So I got up nice and early to witness a wonderful, crisp, sparkly winter morning.
To ground myself and to truly to say to myself
How dare I allow myself
To be emotionally impacted by the negative opinions of strangers when I have the privilege of being healthy
able-bodied, mentally healthy and able to get up and enjoy a river in the morning and just
bask in the absolute splendor and glory of fucking nature.
Because that's what matters. That's what actually matters.
Strangers saying mean things to me, that they're just gonna forget about in five minutes.
Strangers saying mean things to me. That just wounds my identity. That wounds the part of me that would like to be,
that wants to be liked, who doesn't want to be liked. I want to be liked by everyone,
and it's painful when people don't like me. But my, my sense of identity, how I'd like other people to see me, these things aren't real.
I have a choice.
I can choose whether or not I allow a person's negative comments to hurt me.
That's actually a choice that I have.
I haven't hurt anybody.
I haven't done anything bad.
I just made a documentary, put it on TV, and happened to be wearing a plastic bag on my head.
This is confusing and frightening for some people so they get angry because on the internet
anger is a very easy emotion to feel. It's easier, more satisfying and feels more actionable than
feeling vulnerable and threatened and confused, which is what some of these men feel like
when they see a serious documentary presented by a man with a plastic bag on his head.
So I've got a choice.
I can choose whether or not I allow that to hurt me.
And I went down to the river to practice gratitude.
The humility, the humility of realizing that my health and being alive, that these things
are actually a privilege, that some people don't have, that these things are actually a privilege,
that some people don't have these things, that this is a privilege for me to be able to enjoy
a wonderful morning. Touching the earth like that, it's a great way for me to understand that it's
all bullshit, it's all fucking horse shit. Newspapers, TV, radio, whatever the fuck. It's all fucking horse shit. Newspapers, TV, radio, whatever the fuck. It's bullshit.
It's vacuous horse shit. And so is all the harassment that goes along with it. And you know what?
It'll be gone next week. Next week it'll be gone. I'll be back in the world of independent media
just making my podcast and and I don't have to upset people's daz. They'll go back to
forgetting that I exist.
But expressing gratitude and recognizing the privilege, the privilege of simply being alive and being healthy.
I find it, it's a wonderful, it's a wonderful thing to do when you're stressed out about
stuff that has to do with your sense of identity.
There's problems and then there's, I'm experiencing a lot of pain because strangers on the internet
are saying mean things.
It's challenging but I genuinely have a choice about whether I want to be hurt by that or
not.
And the beauty of nature, the beauty of a morning, reflecting on my mortality, understanding
that I'm gonna die someday, appreciating that all human beings are equal, I'm no better
or worse than anybody else.
Other people's opinions of me don't matter, my achievements don't make me better or worse
than anybody else. That type of existential humility, that's what sets me up for a nice day where I can
say, you know what, I'm a good person and I deserve to have a nice day.
Now I know I'm in the extreme situation for like a week where because I'm on a public
platform like TV and newspaper, I get a bizarre amount of harassment.
But I don't think it matters.
All of us, like was it a beautiful morning today when you woke up?
Was it a beautiful, crisp, bright November morning?
Did you notice it?
And were you thankful for being able to notice it? Or were you worried about
the future? Were you angry with somebody who said something to you three weeks
ago and now you're redoing what you should have said in the argument in your
head? Were you jealous of another person? Were you comparing yourself to another
person and feeling like shit because you think someone else is better than you? Or
were you feeling better than somebody else and feeling superior? Did you have a shit morning because of completely
avoidable pain, avoidable pain, centered around your sense of identity? And if you were, chances
are you didn't notice the beautiful morning and would greatly benefit from reflecting
on, reflecting on humility and being genuinely thankful for the privilege of being alive and being healthy. So
that's why I've chosen to put out this week's podcast. This week's podcast
I speak to a wonderful, a wonderful person called Laura Coleman.
She's a
qualified psychotherapist. She's a humanistic psychotherapist and also
a play therapist, but she's also a death doula. Laura Coleman works in hospices with people
who are dying, people who are literally at the end of their lives, and she works in a professional capacity as a psychotherapist to guide people through their
death journey.
She's a death doula.
And there's no way to listen to her speak, to listen to her speak about people who are
dying without coming away from it experiencing humility.
Experiencing the humility of,
I should be really grateful to be alive,
and right now is the time to choose how I want to live.
And do I really want to choose
being upset by other people's opinions of me?
And this might sound like
there's nothing depressing about the chat that me and Lara have.
It's fucking fascinating.
And she speaks about, like she might be working with three or four people a day who are dying.
And she speaks about near-death experiences that people have, people who have died, actually
died and come back.
And the things that they say.
She speaks about what all people who are dying,
what they wish they would have done differently
in their lives.
She's a wonderful woman and a qualified,
qualified psychotherapist.
She's fascinating.
So without further ado,
here's the chat that I had with Laura Coleman,
the death doula in Mayo about a month ago.
And they're becoming much more common. A death doula is somebody that helps people to die.
Makes it as easy for the person as possible for them to die.
You all know that we don't talk about death very freely.
I'm not morbid but I talk about death very freely. It's not, you know, I'm not morbid but I talk about death a lot. I mean I get a wee chance to chat to a big crowd about death. I take
it. Delighted to be here. So a death doula will help the family, they'll help
the patient, just whoever needs a bit of support and I've done it so many times
before with other people so that just, I can help them then through things that they've never been through before most people only day once
And I
Had never heard of a death doula until I researched you for this podcast and what?
struck me as quite beautiful is that I have heard of the word doula and a doula is somebody who
Helps a mother to give birth and after care as well.
Exactly.
And I do find it.
There's just something beautiful about the fact that the word doula is used there.
It's someone exiting the world and also entering the world.
And I'm very curious about what you do, but also I don't want to think about it because
it's really depressing.
You know, it's that contradiction.
Yeah.
And to be honest, a lot of people
think that's what it's about.
When I go into house, that I'm going to sit down and say,
so you're dying.
That's not the way it works.
So a death doula, you talk about a birth doula,
and that's the book ends of life, birth doula, death doula.
And I often say, if we talked about birth
the way we talked about
dying, they'd be uproar. So if a woman was in labour, so there's a person in the
bed and they're very unwell, they're coming near the end of their life and the
family trying to not let the person in the bed think that we all know they're
dying and the person in the bed needs to talk or wants to talk about
dying but they're afraid to upset their partners. One time I was working with this
lovely man, he was an elderly man, lovely man and he was in hospital and I was on
the way in to see him and I met his wife on the way out, she was going for a coffee
and she said Laura I don't think he knows that he's dying and I said I think
he does. He's been talking to the consultant a few times.
I think he does.
And I said, you head off to the coffee, and I'll scoot in
and have a wee chat to him.
So his name was Michael, lovely man.
And I said, Michael, Maura thinks
that you don't know what's happening.
And he said, what has the doctor said?
And he said, oh, it's not good, Laura.
It's not good.
Time's short.
And I said, Maura doesn't know that you know that.
And so they're the kind of uncomfortable conversations
that you can make a wee bit lighter.
Thank God I have a good sense of humor,
and I can bring it to people, because they
don't lose their sense of humor just
because they're sick or dying.
And most people kind of whisper around them,
and shh, no, don't be talking, and don't be saying that.
And people, really, don't be talking, and don't be saying that. And people really that I've met,
didn't matter what age they're,
they need to talk to people to figure out those things
that they're gonna do at the end that they need to do,
that the things they want to say
to the people they're leaving behind,
and that's how I got into this job
and that's why I wanted to help people.
Just ask yourself this question.
Am I afraid to die?
Am I afraid of death?
And if I am, why?
What is it that I've been told down through the years?
What is it that I think death is that's making me afraid?
And Stoics think that there's, well, I suppose Socrates, and I'm
not a very philosophical person at all, but Socrates talked about there's, the body lives
and then it dies.
And you've only two things to worry about.
And it depends on what your beliefs are.
So if you believe there's nothing, well, then there's nothing.
And if I'm nothing, well, then there's nothing to fear if there's nothing.
And the other one is that death is maybe
sort of a hallway or an entrance or a journey
to another existence.
And if you believe that, well great,
because the body mightn't be going with you,
but whatever bit is on the inside will be going with you.
The mind or the soul or whatever you want to call it
goes through that tunnel.
You're also, you're a psychotherapist, you're a humanistic psychotherapist. And something...
And I know from humanistic psychotherapy, it's about the client, we'll say.
So...
How does it work with...
First off, would you be working with multiple people in
the same day? Oh yeah. So in the morning you could be helping someone and they
have a belief they could be Christian or Muslim and then in the evening the
person is completely atheistic and they have no belief in an afterlife or anything
like that. How do you navigate that as a doula? So wherever they want to go,
that's where we go. So it's not I have my own opinions, obviously. I was a rare Catholic. I'm
not particularly religious, but I was a rare Catholic. And so I have that ingrained in me.
But the first time I worked with a woman who was Buddhist, she needed to be, her funeral had to be arranged really, really quickly.
She didn't have family.
There was nobody, she moved here from a place far away
because of her choice in religion.
And so she had to be, everything had to be done
within 24 hours, whereas in Ireland,
we take our time and do it.
But depending on what the person I'm sitting with,
so sometimes I'm having a conversation with the person
about the first law of thermodynamics
and that the energy that is in the body, energy doesn't die,
it just changes form.
And then the next person is talking
about Jesus is going to come and meet me,
and I'm going to go to heaven, and I
see all the people that I've loved, and I go there too.
So it's the same as what I would do if I was in a session
with anybody about anything else.
It would be whatever they needed to work on.
I meet them there.
And lucky enough that I've been with the hospice for 24 years.
So I have a lot of experience.
I was arranging a wedding for somebody
at the end of their life.
It was going to be easier for the wife afterwards
if they were married with all the property and things.
And then in the afternoon, I was going in to sit with a man to do what we call dignity therapy where I'd be finding
out sort of the things that had happened in his life that had given him purpose and meaning. And
we put it together in a little audio track and then I go away and edit it, take out my voice,
and then I type it up and give
them a little book format or they have it for their family. And one thing
that's become more common, I think anyway, in my ears is modern neuron. And I had
the loveliest sister-in-law, I loved her dearly, and she died from modern neuron.
And there's a new thing that we're doing and I'm at the forefront of death and
dying so I know all the the new tricks that are coming
out we have a thing that we use now it's a QR code on a headstone and you go to
the headstone click brings the website and there's pictures of the person or
their favorite music or whatever and when I was speaking to about that about
putting a QR code we had no proper recording of our voice and I said
that that'll never happen on my watch again. Whoever I'm working with I will
make sure that I get a recording of their voice for themselves or for their
family. Trust me, if there's one thing you love after your mother or your
father or your partner or somebody dies, to have their voice.
What I'd like to know about is you're gonna have your people who are
accepting throughout the end of their life but then you're gonna have people
who are not accepting or are terrified. What does denial look like to a person
who's just been told they're gonna die?
Just to say the wee man, I mentioned that it was in the hospital and his
wife has gone down for the tea. When she came back I said, Maura, I said, Michael, we'll chat there
and he knows exactly what's happening. So there's a lot of conversations that need
to happen here now. He had two sons and they had things that need to be sorted and if we
don't talk about it, you definitely can't plan it. If we're all walking about pretending
that we're not going to die or wishing that the
person that we love isn't going to die but we actually know they're dying, that's part
of the work that I would do.
I'd go in and just talk about it normal.
What are your biggest fears about dying?
When the person knows they're going to die, there's no need to pussyfoot around it.
When a doctor or consultant has said,
you're coming near the end of your life,
and you've got a little bit of time left,
my job then is to go in and help them,
so what do you wanna do with that?
What mark do you wanna leave?
What do you not want to leave unfinished?
What do you want to leave messages or directions
or words that you want to leave for the people you love?
What would you tell
them to do?
Like the thing I mentioned there, dignity therapy, one of the questions is can you remember
something that you're really proud of?
I remember working with a lovely wee woman, she was a teacher, she never got married and
she was a teacher all her life and I remember introducing the thing about dignity therapy
and explained to her, there's just a weak conversation,
and I'll answer a few questions, and you'll answer them,
and we'll just see where it goes.
And the purpose of it is so that she
gets a bit of purpose and meaning
from looking back at her life.
What was the purpose of her life?
And she said, I don't think it's going
to be very interesting because I never had any family.
I never got married.
You know, I've been a Spencer all my life.
And I don't think.
And I said, how long have you been teaching?
She'd been 36 years a teacher.
And I said, I think there's a lot of stories in them 36 years
that your nieces and the people after your nieces,
you know, your future grandnieces and nephews,
that they really appreciate knowing how you impacted people.
And so I said, tell me about some of the stories,
some of the tough cases that you had,
some of the tough people that you'd helped.
Oh my God, it was lovely.
I cry a lot when I'm working with people
because it's very move and work,
but I genuinely, genuinely think that we need to talk about it.
We really do need to talk.
It's very easy for me to say, well, I'm not afraid to die.
And genuinely, I'm not afraid to die,
because I do think, personally, there's something more.
Maybe there's not, but I'm going with the there's something
more, and it's making me feel good.
If you say, I think there's nothing after it, Laura.
Great, if there's nothing after it, we'll go with that for you.
But I think the more we talk about it, the less fear there is.
But if it's always, shh, don't mention,
don't say now that he's dying.
Years ago, they could tell the doctor
not to tell the patient, don't tell him he's dying.
Imagine how unethical it is.
Like, I try very much myself
to be okay with, just the concept of my own mortality.
If I don't understand and recognize I am going to die
and it can happen at any point,
then I can't enjoy the present moment.
Exactly.
Something that really changed my perspective is,
have you ever heard of the Tibetan sky burial?
Yeah.
Yeah.
So it's just for the audience.
It's certain Buddhists in Tibet,
where they don't have, they're up in the mountains.
They don't have soil to dig.
So their way of burying people is,
they believe the body on a mountain and vultures come
down and the vultures pick the body apart and they scatter the bones all over
a valley. But then trainee Buddhist monks walk into the valleys of corpses and they
meditate there and they meditate alongside pieces of bodies that are decomposing
specifically to confront death. It was this there was a sect within
Catholicism known as the Poor Clares. So the Poor Clares nuns in France, there's a
monastery, a Poor Clares monastery in France and there's this little room and
they look like big concrete toilets. So it's like a throne and there's this little room. And they look like big concrete toilets.
So it's like a throne and there's a hole in it.
But what these were is when the older nuns died in this monastery,
they would literally place their body on this thing and the body would decompose.
And the young nuns would go there and they'd do their rosaries.
And they would, it's there is death.
There is a body decomposing in front of me.
And I can't ignore this.
If I'm to be spiritually present, I have to go there.
It is. And this is life.
You know what I mean? Yeah.
What you're doing is it is a bit like that, but not as yucky.
What people say to me often, though, is
like, what, why would you ever get involved
and spend most of your day talking about death?
And I think anybody that knows me, I think there's a few people who knows me.
I have I have fun.
I enjoy life.
I squeeze every bit of crack out of it because we do not know the day or the minute.
And every morning I get up and every time I go to bed, my father used to say,
you get up in the morning, you don't know who's going to be taking off your shoes at night.
And that's a fact. We do not know.
Confronting death. And it's not like, oh, big story, it's confronting death.
It's just like looking at it and saying, okay, I know I'm definitely going to 100% die
and then living every day.
The big mistake we make is we think we've got plenty of time and none of us know. Yeah I know. Is there, when you're dealing with people who are at
the end of their life, is there any message that you find in common that
something that they would wish they could say to themselves when they were
younger? One of the questions in the dignity therapy is,
if you went back to your 15 year old self,
or your 30 year old self, what would you tell them?
And it's a lovely piece of work,
because you actually get the real rawness of,
I should have done, why didn't I?
Why did I let other people,
mainly people just are sorry they didn't live the life they wanted to live themselves, that we conformed to you know, getting up in the
morning going to work 9 to 5, coming home, doing whatever you do at home, doing the home
to work and work to home and home to work and instead of squeezing whatever bit of crack
you can into life.
Was the fear judgement from other people or other people?
If you were being honest we all, we'd say oh I don't care what anybody thinks about the fear, judgement from other people or other people?
If you're being honest, we all we say, oh, I don't care what anybody thinks about me.
But we kind of do. We do, like, yeah, kind of do.
Like, if you're being honest, you kind of do.
Yet, like you can.
I saw your thing. I was you said I had the choice of being a psychotherapist
or a mad bastard.
But most of us, most of us try to kind of edge away from the madness.
I think my children would say I've embraced the madness.
I've kind of, you know, kind of run with it and it suits me.
A fair fucking play to you.
And.
Something.
I had the benefit of having much older siblings,
so something that really guides me is...
I'll embrace...
I find that a lot of people don't do what they want to do because they're
terrified of failing.
This fear of failure. So
what I do is I deliberately try to fail. I fail so much that failure isn't
frightened anymore.
And what I've found is I don't think there is such a thing as failure. I deliberately tried to fail. I fail so much that failure isn't frightening anymore.
And what I've found is,
I don't think there is such a thing as failure.
The only failure that I want to avoid
is doing nothing because I was scared to try.
I don't want to be old or someone who's dying,
if I'm lucky enough to die when I'm old,
and I don't want to look back and go,
I didn't do that because I was scared.
Because often the fear is, it's bullshit.
You're just scared of what other people think.
It is.
I'm wearing a bag in my head.
I'm up on stage with a bag in my head.
It's ridiculous, like, it's grand.
I'm having crack.
I'd rather do this than being a job I don't wanna do.
You know what I mean?
I'd encourage you to do it too.
I'm a play therapist, I also work with kids.
Oh, lovely.
And one of the things we do with my husband's a play therapist too.
So we do a lot of playing in our house.
But one of the things that we do with parents or with even when I'm working
with teachers, I'd be telling them how to build somebody's self-esteem,
a child's self-esteem.
And one of the fastest ways to build a child self-esteem is to say,
oh, I got that wrong. Because you're encouraging. Yeah, sometimes even big people get it wrong.
So I almost go out of my way to, you know, do the wrong thing in the play with the vast
demonstrate failure. Because even big people get it wrong. It's one of the it helps them
It helps them to attempt things way faster.
Building a child's self-esteem helps the adult. The adult that you'll meet is a different adult
if that child has self-esteem.
I say, I faked confidence for years,
but when I eventually had good self-esteem,
you don't need to fake the confidence,
then it'll just be there.
And the same with kids.
If you can put that bit of self-esteem into them, you needn't to fake the confidence. No. It'll just be there. And the same with kids. If you can put that bit of self-esteem into them,
you needn't worry about the confidence.
They can be quietly confident because they're shy,
or they can be outwardly confident.
And how would you define self-esteem versus confidence?
Self-esteem is what you think about yourself on the inside,
but that's all right, Sam,
what you think about yourself on the inside,
but it's what you've fed me,
what my parents or society or the teacher or the, you know's what you've fed me, what my parents or society
or the teacher or the, you know, what people have told me about myself. They held up a
mirror and go, that's who you are. And I'm like, and so if that's good, I have internal
self-esteem. So it's on the inside self-esteem, confidence is what you show other people.
And people can have shit self-esteem and be very confident.
Can appear very confident. Exactly. Yeah.
Yeah.
Just before we go for a break,
do you ever do play therapy with adults?
All the time, all the time.
I have actually have a woman, she's 63, and she comes in and she'll say play room.
She'll go and she'll know it.
Because if you're an adult and you're nursing stuff that went wrong for you
and it's in here or it's holding your back or whatever it is, if it's going on, it happened when
you were younger. So it happened either when you were a child or an adolescent. So whatever your
trauma was, and wouldn't it be lovely if nobody had trauma, but life has trauma. And so if we go
right back to the play a bit, we can take it all the way up and work with the bits
Work with the bits and so what you're doing you go back to before the trauma trauma happened
But even the muscle memory of play even lovely and I'll tell you something
so I I do a bit of teaching a teach play therapy for a college in limerick which we live and
And so when I'm it's two adults playing and you would not believe
And so when I'm, it's two adults playing and you would not believe, one's the, the child, taking the place of the child, one's taking the place as a therapist.
You would not believe how difficult a lot of adults find it to sit down on the floor and play.
Because we're worried about right and wrong.
Of course. And also this one's going to think I'm an eachoton.
So it's, it's a lot, it's very freeing, very freeing.
Like I could have a 19 year old that only goes into the playroom,
a 12 year old that wants to have talk therapy, you know, dependent.
And these could be children or parents or people who are either sick
or the family of the person who's sick or dying.
So I bring play as a huge part of what I do. And what I mean, so my job as a
writer, what I'm looking for consistently is the feeling of flow, right? That feel,
if I can get fucking flow, then I can write. But the hardest thing about
writing, about doing anything creative, is this fear of failing.
And what will have you afraid of failing is, first off it's your ideal self.
The desire for me to be seen as a good writer by other people, that will fuck me up immediately.
I sit down to write, I've got this blank page and I'm thinking, oh God, this better be good,
or what if this is shit? And the only thing that will break me out of
that and into flow is when I engage in play. See the beauty of playfulness is
there's no such thing as right or wrong. Like kids playing with Lego, like little
kids playing with Lego, they're not like, I'm not making something, I am doing Lego. I am doing
Lego for the sake of doing Lego. Whereas as an adult I'm conditioned like, I'm not making something. I am doing Lego. I am doing Lego for the sake of doing Lego.
Whereas as an adult, I'm conditioned to be right and wrong.
So just that story I read out at the start there,
the donkey.
Like, that started off as a blank page.
And it started off with maybe two days of me terrified,
terrified, what am I gonna write?
Oh, this is is shit I'm awful
I'm a terrible writer until eventually I engaged in playfulness and and how I
engage in play it's I seek out failure and what I mean by seek out if failure
is the thing I'm terrified of well let's fucking fail so I just said to myself
and I do this often I'm gonna write a story about a fat ass shoving a donkey into a car
And I'm gonna do this for 10,000 words and that's beginning with failure because that's a ridiculous idea
How are you gonna write a story about a man shoving a donkey into a car?
but because I'd
Began with failure now. I'm in a playful state and now I begin writing and now I'm entering flow state.
And now once I'm in flow, that story, yeah, it's about a man with a donkey and pushing a donkey into a car.
But really what it's about is it's a man whose father is has dementia and he kind of wants to not visit him anymore
because he doesn't recognize that person and really what I'm doing is my dad got a brain tumor and I was told I
was 19 and it's like he's gonna die in six weeks and I did the full
patative care thing I watched my dad go from being my fucking lovely dad to a
week later being couldn't talk talk, couldn't move.
He was wearing a nappy in one week and it was tough.
And I was very 19, quite young to be dealing with that.
So that left me with a lot of trauma.
And I don't like thinking about those feelings.
I don't like remembering him in that state.
I couldn't cry for about 10 years afterwards.
You know, it really stuck with me.
But the playfulness of writing like that, that allowed me to go right.
So that story really, it's my dad.
You know what I mean?
It allowed me to go into all those feelings and to process it.
But that's play. That's how I use playfulness.
Take it gets me beyond my defense mechanisms.
Yeah. And then I can cry.
And it lets the creativity out as well.
Creativity.
I mean, creativity is just creativity is adults playing.
That's all it is.
It's playfulness for adults.
And you don't get old because you're getting old.
You get old because you stop playing.
And
that's one of the things that fucking pisses me off about school is but all of us played with, all of us started off crayons, Mala, every fucking
single one of us and when we were one or two years of age we weren't good or bad
at it it's just a thing we do because it's class and then you get to school
and all of a sudden you're brilliant brilliant at painting, you are. You not so much.
But you know what I mean?
And then you end up splitting
and some of us become the good at art people
and then other people, it's just gone, it's gone.
I think everybody should be making art
for the sake of making it and fuck this good or bad.
You make art or even to play.
Carl Jung was great at that.
Carl Jung used to, he was about 70 years of age,
and he used to make sure that every single day
he went and played with sticks at the end of his garden.
Seriously, I'm gonna go down and play with mud and sticks.
Why?
Because I used to do it when I was three.
You know what I mean?
We better take a break soon.
Are you enjoying this? This isn't too heavy for you, is it?
Because it is something I was saying to you beforehand that I am mindful of people's
safety tonight. So we're making sure that we're speaking about this in a way that's
not, we're not going to get too heavy with it.
You know what I mean?
What you were saying there though about, you know, play isn't good or bad
and death in and of itself isn't good or bad either.
It is what it is, but it isn't good or bad.
I've never thought of it that way.
That's an instant way, because for me, it's like, no, that is awful.
Because you were trained to think that, yeah, and you had an experience
that left you traumatized.
So that makes it awful.
Yeah. Whereas if I love some of the some of the people that I've sat with when they're dying, and they're just so peaceful,
and they just drift away, it's like going to sleep.
And they look like they're going to sleep, and it's just lovely.
And then more deaths can be very tough.
But death itself, it's going to happen, it's neither good or bad,
but it can be a tough death or it can be a good death
as in a death that didn't hurt so much.
Or unnecessary suffering.
Or not, that's, I think that's why I do the job I do.
If I look at pain that I've experienced in my life,
the vast majority of pain I've experienced,
it's not something that was
actually happening to me. Most suffering that I experienced, it's the worrying
about what if or why did I do that. Ignoring the present moment, fucking
ignoring the present moment and my life is, what if that happens? Wouldn't that be
terrible? Oh god this is awful, I hope that never happens. Why did I say that to
that person there six years ago?
What a cunt.
I can live my life, all of us can live our lives
in that, continually, what if and why that,
and that is completely unnecessary suffering.
Most of my pain has been that.
And shit that's bad that actually happens.
Like even my dad dying, that was no crack.
But at the same time, I
wouldn't be who I am if it didn't happen.
True.
Like facts, like I just simply wouldn't because that, it was like the hammer of life hit me
into the side of the head and saying you have to be an adult now.
You know what I mean?
Yeah. You said there about the future. So if your mind is in the future, that causes
anxiety and a way of avoiding anxiety is is bringing yourself right back to the moment.
If your mind is in the past, you're feeling low and your energy is low.
So the past is about it.
Brooding.
Yeah. And the future is anxiety takes you.
What if, what if, what if?
And the way to get working away with both of them, come back to the present.
Be in your body.
It's the only place you got to be in your body.
I remember working with a young fellow one time and he was in a he was in foster care for years.
Lovely lad. I was working for seven years, but he was in foster care.
And the father in the foster care home died and he was the carer.
So he went off to the young flat to go to another home for a while.
And he was way down in Bellmullet.
And he came back, and he was all buff.
I hadn't seen him for six months.
And he had been in the gym.
And this is true of his God.
He said, I said, geez, you must have been spending
a lot of time working out.
Do you look mighty or so, all muscle?
And he said, I realized, Laura, this is the truth,
16-year-old, I realized, Laura, this is the only place
I have to live.
He'd been in many as a house, but this is the only place I have to live. He'd been in many as a house,
but this is the only place I have to live.
It doesn't matter how fancy your house is,
what's going on in here and up here
that goes with you everywhere.
Fair play to him.
Let's have a little Ocarina pause now.
We'll have a slight break in the conversation.
Wonderful fucking chat there with Laura Coleman.
She's astounding.
I'm gonna play my ceramic otter,
and you're gonna hear a noise, which hopefully won't't disturb any dogs and then adverts are going to play.
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drink from a gland in their neck that gives me eternal life.
This is what people believe. This is what people believe and this is what I'm being accused of.
Now, not a lot of accusations. Like a couple. But that's enough. That's enough.
Most of the negativity is people calling me a stupid cunt. That's fine.
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blind buy podcast. Upcoming gigs, I'm taking it handy for November and December. I'm not doing any gigs.
No point doing fucking December gigs just in case someone decides to bring an office party,
a Christmas office party to the podcast. That ruins a podcast very quickly. So my next gig,
I was in Vicar Street last week. It was an unbelievable, amazing gig in Vicar Street last
week. So because of demand, there's a second Vicar Street date.
And this is now in January.
Monday the 27th of January I'm in Vicar Street that just went on sale.
Then in February I'm in Leisureland in Galway on the 9th.
Tremendous crack there.
Crescent Hall in Drogheda 21st of February.
Belfast the Waterfront, 21st of February. Belfast, the Waterfront Theatre, 28th of February.
Then in March, I'm in the Ainec on the 7th of March, that's in Killarney.
Cork Opera House there on the...I don't know if that's even out yet, is it?
I'm in Cork anyway in March.
Australia and New Zealand sold out in April.
Oh and just fucking added, just
added on Wednesday the 23rd of April. Limerick, my home city. I'm in the fucking University
Concert Hall in Limerick on the 23rd of April 2025. That goes on sale tomorrow morning.
That's the biggest ever Limerick gig that I'll be doing. Actually that gig, that gig's in the University Concert Hall,
which means technically I'm gonna be gigging
in Yartley's Couch, the spiritual home of this podcast.
So that's very nice.
If anyone's thinking of visiting Limerick,
that might be a good one.
Come to that gig on the 23rd of April.
We got a new Brazilian buffet.
There's a new Brazilian buffet opening up this week as well.
Crossed away from the Hunt Museum. And then June 25, big giant massive tour of fucking
England and Scotland. No Wales this time. So June 25, Bristol, Cornwall, Sheffield, Manchester, Glasgow, York, London, East Sussex, Norwich,
and then there's definitely an Edinburgh in there somewhere.
Just not written down here.
Fane.co.uk forward slash blind buy for those tickets.
I think I've listed out all my 2025 gigs there.
Fuck it, why not.
Back to my chat here with the magnificent Laura Coleman.
This is where we speak about near death experiences.
Laura was trying to convince me to move from a plastic bag
to a cotton bag.
He's sweating like mad.
His thumb crack, no, his thumb crack.
Something I was asking you backstage and I'd love to ask you in front of the audience is...
Do you really want to ask that?
People at the end of their life. What is like a common regret?
Biggest regret? Don't even have to think about it. I work too much.
Every person, doesn't matter if they're in their 20s,
their 50s, their 80s, one of their biggest regrets
is always I work too much.
I didn't spend enough time with my family.
I thought too much of what other people were thinking of me
and people aren't thinking about you at all.
When you realize how little other people think about you,
you get on with your life, do what you want.
And so that's a huge regret, I work too much. I didn't spend enough time with the
people I loved. Always. And then I try and help them to spend that bit of quality
time, because we still have time. Hopefully we've still a bit of time so we
can make the most out of a week, we can make the most out of six weeks. And the
thing is if you think of those regrets, the system of capitalism that we live under
needs us to think you're not working enough.
That's what it needs us to think,
because if we stop thinking that way,
then the system doesn't work.
The system also really, really needs us
to care about what other people think,
because a good way to solve that is to buy shit. You know what I mean? If you're very concerned about other people's opinion, if it's
your physical appearance then you can buy a bunch of shit to improve your
physical appearance or if you want people to think you're more successful
you achieve that by buying things. So we have a system, it's just that's really
dark, it's dark that people get to the end of their lives and the things that they're regretting are the values that our system is most upholding.
All the people's opinions matter and work fucking harder or you're worthless.
That's just the fact of life and I think all of us can identify with that.
It's something I often think of because I get great meaning from work and I love, like I adore working and I
like it but I wonder at the end of it will I go Jesus Christ you should have
chilled out there and just hung around with a daisy a bit more or something.
Are you saying this work goes to be fair if you're getting paid to do this
this is great work? I do I do love Well now that's another way to think of it, yeah.
I mean I actually genuinely love it, I absolutely,
like my definition of, my personal definition of success
for me is can I earn a living doing the thing I love doing?
100%.
And that's what I'm doing, like, you know,
I mean my job is, I don't know, if I wanted to do
a podcast next week talking about the history of this theatre, which I might do,
it's completely possible, you know what I mean? And that's what my job is, to be as curious as possible.
Isn't it something else though, that a random thought comes through his head and boom, he's got a podcast out of it. It's brilliant. That's all, but that's the, that's openness.
That's openness.
I, like I said, I'm always fighting this fear of failure.
I don't allow anything come in and say that,
what a silly idea.
If it's silly, I run with it.
I'm, I try to be playful as much as possible all the time.
And that's a great way.
There's great crack and play, you know yourself.
100% and I'll tell you, it's the make and eat. Thank you very much. You're a great lad. Thank you very much.
I'm trying to phrase this in a way, I don't want to say spooky, like supernatural. In
your work have you encountered anything? Because this was a huge
question that people were asking. Encountered anything supernatural or anything that made you
go, wow, that's odd? Well, I'll take it. I'll take that question and I'll run with it.
But I'll call it natural. Okay. But it is like for somebody who wouldn't have experienced it,
they might think, Jesus, that was strange. But in the work that I'm in, and for anybody that has ever worked in
palliative care, we tell the family to expect the person who's coming near the
end of their life to see people who have already died.
Yeah.
And that, it happens so regularly, we have to tell people because often the person
in the bed thinks they're actually losing their mind as well. They'll say, like I remember a 16 year old saying to me, I see granddad behind
the door and I, and me going, yeah, he'll be there. And that's, I suppose for us that
work at the end of life and he, his family would have been quite religious. It was a
lovely thing because he actually could, had a sense and a visual even that nobody else could see
because he was so close to that veil of death, he could actually see somebody from the other side there in the corner.
For me, I think it's a lovely thing for him to see.
I'm not going to lie and say the first time that I was sitting beside somebody's bed and they said there was somebody behind me,
I got the hairs on the back of my neck were standing up. I was like, oh, Jesus.
But I got used to it.
And now it's like, yeah, that's something that, yeah,
so the people that love you, who have gone before you,
whether it's your father or your grandfather or whoever it is,
they'll come to meet you if that's,
if you think there's nothing and you're looking at somebody
behind the door, that's going to be scary for you.
If you're an atheist and you're like, no, when you're dead, you're dead.
And then you see somebody in the back of the door.
That's going to be frightening.
But if you have some kind of an idea of that, maybe maybe there's something more.
That's what I'd like to know about there is
is this happening to people who have a belief about an afterlife?
Have you seen it happen to a person who doesn't have a belief in an afterlife?
It has, it actually has.
And you see, then sometimes people say,
oh, that's the drugs.
Like they're on morphine or they're on whatever.
Maybe it is, maybe it is.
But all I know is it gives a lot of people a lot of comfort.
If I was dying in the morning,
and if my kids and my husband were sitting there beside me
and I was saying, I see my mother mother wouldn't they be like oh that's great
no you know grannies they are gonna be you know helping her along or whatever
it's a love even if it is the drugs it is a lovely thing but it happens very
regularly it happens in people who are dying at home who don't have medication
or who aren't being medicated so it's it's a thing and it's a fact that people do see.
And it's one of those things where it's the meaning
that you give to it.
I mean, there's the cynical side of things
which says this is just what the human brain does.
Like, I'm sure you've heard of all those theories about,
what's the name of that fucking chemical that's in Ayahuasca?
Is it DMT? DMT. So some people say that you know when people die that the brain
releases the natural DMT and that's where they get the... Like have you
spoken to people who've seen the tunnel or seen the light and all that crack?
I have actually had several people over the years. There was one man and he made it to hospital.
They had announced him that he was gone.
And then they went.
Oh wow, did he die?
Somebody else came around.
Yeah, so they came back and did the electric shock
and he came around again.
And he sat in the bed.
I'd say I talked to him for about 45 minutes
about an experience that he says he didn't know
was it five days or five seconds. I talked to him for about 45 minutes about an experience that he says he didn't know.
Was it five days or five seconds?
It was just this no and and there were he described as a light.
Was he was very chatty about this was he?
Oh, he was a big deal.
So I suppose for me it was his consciousness still had it.
So his body was dead for all intents and purposes, for whatever many minutes.
I can't remember many minutes.
But wow, that's a lot.
That's so minutes.
Yeah. So he was and they chinged him back.
And and he didn't know.
He couldn't tell if it was.
Days or weeks or seconds, but it just felt like space and this light.
I was like, that is so interesting.
And he could talk about the space and the light.
And every time anybody else came in, he was like, and the space and the light. And they were the only two big words, really, that kept coming out of it.
But he was a peaceful, peaceful.
Speaking about a lot, that means fuck me.
That was class. That's exactly what he felt.
That's exactly he was felt. That's exactly he
was like this is unreal and you know people talk about you know what's what
will happen after and you said it and we said depends what you think yourself
like you know I can you can make a heaven out of hell or a hell out of
heaven depending on what you allow yourself to think. Yeah because I'm not
into be honest I'm not into the idea of heaven. I'm not into the idea of anything that doesn't end. No matter how
class heaven is, it's not class if it doesn't end then it becomes eventually
torture. It'd be tortured with good stuff would you? Well if it never ends yeah. I
mean the law of diminishing marginal returns. The law of the limiting marginal returns. Mars bears are class.
I don't want to be forced.
Mars bears forever.
You know what I mean?
No matter how wonderful Mars bears are,
there needs to be an end to the Mars bears.
And it's about the loss of the Mars bear too.
Like I did a podcast once on sparkling water, right?
There's a specific type of sparkling
water that you can only get in Spain it's called Vici Catalan right and it's
it's sparkling water that it comes from a fucking volcano and it's
naturally sparkling it comes out boiling hot and sparkling and it tastes a bit
like bread soda and it's the nicest sparkling water in the world right it's
so fucking
nice I refuse to buy it online or take it home with me from Spain it must live
in Spain and I can only taste it when I go to Spain once every two years you know
what I mean yeah because I know if I get this sparkling water and I have it all
the time it loses meaning oh part of the joy I was in Spain two weeks ago and I tasted it
then, the joy is the memory of it. But if I imagine a heaven of
perpetual fucking Vicky Cattle and sparkling water, I'm gonna be ringing
off the devil. What's the crack down there? You know what I mean?
You were saying about a Mars bar, did you ever get a deep-fried Mars bar?
A deep-fried I did over in Edinburgh. We did, too. That is fantastic.
That is not fantastic.
You didn't like it. Oh, I quite enjoyed it.
No, we shared it between five of us. It was rotten.
So that's your idea of hell.
That was no. Do you know that?
And the modern and this is a fact.
So first off, if you look at the Bible, right,
the Bible doesn't actually
mention hell. The description of hell in the Bible is it's a place where God's love isn't
present. That's it. So God's love isn't present. This business of eternal torture and fucking
fire and devils, there's no mention of that in the Bible. That actually comes from Cork.
I'm fucking serious.
I'm, hold on.
There in the 11th century in Cork,
there was a manuscript written called
the Visio Tnogdalis, right?
So it was, the story goes, right?
So this is the 11th century.
So that's what, nearly a thousand years ago.
There's a story about a knight,
so he was a knight in Cork,
and this fella lived a terrible life,
debauchery, right?
Drinking, riding, whatever he wants to do.
And he would go nuts on the drink,
and then one weekend, he got so drunk
that he had a hangover that basically killed him. So he spent an entire
weekend dead and then he woke up on the Monday and it's like I wasn't dead at all but let me tell
you what I saw. So this manuscript is called The Vision of Thnogdallas and Thnogdallas basically
says because I spent my life riding and fighting and doing all these
bad things, I visited a place where there are specific tortures for the things that
you did in your life that were wrong. So if he's like, I saw people who were
gluttonous, so that they were being force-fed on a mountain, and then I saw
other people in a lake of fire. So this entire vision of hell that we have,
it comes from this manuscript in Cork a thousand years ago.
But this manuscript, it ended up becoming the medieval equivalent of a best seller.
Because we've got the Irish storytelling tradition,
so it was a really good story.
So back then, what would happen is it would be written in a monastery,
and then it would go to another monastery in Europe and a monk would read it and go
this is a great story I'm going to write another one
so all the monasteries in Europe started to copy this one story
about the knight in Cork who visited the hell and saw demons and saw goblins and devils
and fire
reprinted and reprinted and rewritten
until eventually by the 15th century, there was a painter
by the fellow of Hieronymus Basch.
And Hieronymus Basch, he's the one who painted
the visions of hell.
He took all his inspiration from reading this book.
So hell, as we know, it's carc.
It's a fellow, seriously, it's about carc
in the 11th century, it's bullshit.
There's no mention of it in the Bible.
No mention at all. And we've believed this now about devils and fire and all that crap.
I went a bit off topic.
And you took my son back from Cork?
Have you spoken to anyone who had a fucking near-death experience and it wasn't fun?
No, actually no. wasn't fun. No, actually, no.
Which is interesting.
No, haven't even somebody who was a bit of a twat and he was not a nice man.
He was really hard to work with.
I found him really difficult to work with.
I did my best, but he was a really hard man to even just be in his energy.
He had really negative energy, the creature.
And and he had a near death experience and actually was a nicer man after it. That's the truth. He could have been no more than that.
That's what I want to know how many people change how many people here's
here's one when people have these near-death experiences is everybody wow
that was real or are some people skeptical that was chemicals in my brain
as I was about to die this fella this fella
He would anybody else no to pass
I haven't I don't know hundreds of people who died and came back
I only know a few but they that fella he actually did make changes his voice even was softer
Wow, maybe he did damage when he was in there, you know, but he it but he definitely he changed dramatically
Didn't still particularly like him, I don't know. But he definitely, he changed dramatically.
Didn't still particularly like him, but he, you know.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Have you looked into, like,
are there people practicing your profession
in countries where psychedelics are legal in therapeutic use
and they're incorporating psychedelics into your profession?
I know that for a fact, that they are even in this country. Okay, they're doing it on the sly.
Yeah, well, yeah.
Yeah, people are using psychedelics.
I don't use it in my practice but...
Why would they do that?
What is the purpose of psychedelics in palliative care?
What do you think?
Well, I spoke to a fellow called Dr. Paul Litnitsky in Australia and he was given the
license by the Australian government to study LSD, psilocybin and MDMA and he was using
psychedelics and palliative care. I think it was huge doses of psilocybin and what he
said is I'm giving these people a dress rehearsal for death. So I'm giving them a psychedelic experience to let them go,
maybe this is what will happen.
And my personal take on this, if you think, you know,
any psychedelic would help you, well, that should be your choice.
If you think it would make the last part of your life anybody easier,
why wouldn't you? Mm-hmm.
And what he also said to me too,
and it harks back to something you said earlier,
which I found fascinating.
When you were speaking about play therapy,
and you were speaking about trauma,
and how an adult can play,
and just the actions of that play
can maybe take them back to a younger part of themselves,
what this fellow was using, he was using psychedelics to help people address
pre-verbal trauma. So people who had experienced trauma so young that they
hadn't learned to form words yet. And he said that that was the most
difficult to access because.
How do you verbalize trauma when words don't exist?
So he was using psychedelics as a new way for people to access.
I mean, they could be six months old, whatever happened, and psychedelics were
helping these people with that to get back to that world without words.
What what is what they would have been doing there?
And we do it in play. We do it in holotropic breathwork,
even being in the womb, there can be trauma when you're in the womb.
If the mother was using drugs or if there was a trauma that happened, somebody died,
there was a car accident, a child in the womb can experience that as trauma.
The adult has some conscious awareness of it.
The child has it more as a subconscious level. And so doing what you were saying, like when
we spoke about holotropic breathwork earlier, and holotropic breathwork brings you to your
subconscious. So you let go of that conscious mind, people are looking at me, and you move
deep down into the body where the subconscious lives.
And that's where you feel it.
I'd love to speak to you about that because
breathwork is it's it's the closest you can get to psychedelics without taking a
psychedelic like even myself, right.
So I don't do holotropic.
I'd love to get into it.
I just do standard breathing meditations.
It's probably similar, though.
Yeah, just like that's fucking amazing. Like when you can get handy at meditation
and when you can get your breath so slow
that it's like, how am I even alive right now?
You know what I mean?
It's so, but something really profound that happened for me.
And I'm not, I don't really believe in the supernatural,
but I'd been, so I would go to this river
every single day and I would meditate there for 10-15 minutes just for anxiety.
And I'd been doing this every single day for about two months just on this riverbed.
And I came out of the meditation and when I came out of it I looked across the river
and I saw my dad who'd been dead ten years. I saw him and he went into the
reeds and then a voice came on me that said I'm okay and then I snapped out of
it and and then as well and then I looked towards a nettle and the message I got from the nettle was
me and you are one, we're like brothers.
Do you know what I mean?
And it doesn't, the thing is,
I don't believe I saw my dad's ghost.
I don't know what that was, but what matters is
it fucking gave me great meaning.
Like a way it was lifted off.
I don't like I don't need that to be psychedelic or to be supernatural.
Something very meaningful happened to me.
I think what it was personally, right?
Wherever I'd gone in the meditation, so calm.
Anxiety doesn't exist, anger doesn't exist,
emotion doesn't exist, that wonderful,
beautiful center of meditation where it is what it is.
Whatever place I'd gone to there,
it allowed me to safely access repressed grief.
And it allowed me in that moment to go,
let go, your dad's dead, he died 10 years ago.
I don't need that to be supernatural.
For me it's about the meaning and I took a fucking hell of a lot of meaning from that, you know.
Someone else might come away from it and go, I fucking meditated there and I saw a ghost of my dad.
Right.
And you know it's interesting that we say supernatural.
Yeah.
Is that really, really natural?
Is supernatural just very very
natural? It's hard to fucking know. Well when you go, if you want to go at it
though, what the fuck is natural? Like you don't know, but it's true like, because the
thing is like even, like we're here in this room right and there's fucking
speakers and all this shit. At the end of the day it's a bunch of light and it's
bouncing into our human brains and we're interpreting this as visual information.
But I bring a fucking bat into this room and the bat can't see.
But the bat could fly around this room and it would safely not hit you into the head
but it can't see. But the bat is using echolocation.
But what's the room to that bat's mind?
Yeah where are we going now?
I know, I know, I know, I know.
Just talking about, I'm just talking about what is the nature of what is real.
Our reality is human beings. We're human beings. So we, that was a bit bad, all right.
It comes from Descartes. We're human beings and we interpret this world using our human being senses.
So we've got smell, we've got hearing, we've got fucking sight, right?
And our brains take all this information in. A bat doesn't have that at all.
A bat is all echolocation. But what is reality to a bat?
And that's a lovely question. We don't know because we can't talk!
Exactly! And everybody
in this room perceives
through their senses, their
reality, and it would be different for
you or me. We're sitting here
in almost the same position, but
there's a very different experience for me.
I'm all star struck
looking at you in your plastic bag.
Go away out of it.
And you're all saying I thought you was younger.
I'm absolutely in awe of your wisdom and your compassion.
Now you tell me I'm old. When people say it's your wisdom and your compassion, that is not.
No, I'm not.
That's practically an insult. I'm not. What do you do like do you ever reflect your work into we say
Irish traditions like I reckon in Ireland historically we're pretty good
with death compared to other cultures. We certainly are. You know, even
like an old school wake, like, I mean, you'd have people drinking with the carps.
You know what I mean?
In particularly rural areas.
And then you had a form of singing called Keening.
Yeah. You know, and we had all these traditions, rituals and music around death.
And that didn't seem...
I've thought about it.
I think it might come down to temperature.
Because I know in countries where it's hot,
where they couldn't preserve the body, like Spain, for instance,
you tend to have distance from the corpse.
But in Ireland, we didn't have to have that.
The decomposition didn't happen as quickly.
Something I heard, too was, when people died,
the only place that was cold in the village
was the cellar of the pub.
So the body would go down there, and then people are mourning,
going, there's a lot of drink here.
And that's how we ended up with the Irish wake.
That's something I heard.
But how do you feel about Irish traditional death practices? I think you might have made that thing up
about the pub. I don't know where I fucking heard it. I'm not saying it's
fact. Someone told me when I was pissed. So don't quote me on it. Tonight is
All Souls' Night. Actually you said that to me when I asked you to speak. You said
tonight was All Souls' Night. And last night was All Saints' Night, so last night was about me.
And tonight is about who?
So All Souls' Night.
So I'm from Donegal and we are very, very traditional people in Donegal.
And I actually messaged a few of my friends and a few of my sisters and I said, do you
all still do the thing on All Souls' Night?
In our house was, the place had to be all tidied up,
the fire, all the ashes around the fire had to be tidied up,
and then there was two glasses of whiskey,
there was a bit of bar and brack
that was probably left from Halloween.
But this is actually very common.
And there would be cigarettes.
My mother and father smoked like troopers,
and must be everybody long-term to the tooth.
And it was very, you know.
Are these for, like you're leaving it out for the dead people?
Yeah.
Like you would for Santi?
Like you would for Santi, except Santi doesn't get the fags.
Santi doesn't get the fags.
Ha ha ha!
Yeah.
But isn't that love?
So you're leaving whiskey and fags out for dead people?
Are you telling me they don't do that in Limerick?
No!
It's a real kind of a respect thing.
And I remember us like tidying it all up
and then up to bed, right?
You'd be up in the bed terrified in case you'd hear anybody downstairs.
But wow.
And the whole thing of it is and was, there's a lot of my, my sister-in-law is a
lot younger than me and she still does it.
She still does, puts out the cigarettes and puts out the whiskey.
But it's a very traditional thing.
So before Christianity, we had Samhain.
And with Samhain it's
tonight the veil between the dead and the living is very thin so the dead can
walk amongst us and then with the process of Christianization they brought
in All Hallows Eve or All Souls Day because to basically go look you can
still do the shit you want to do but let's just say Christ is involved. You
know that's pretty much it because people like, I'm not getting rid of this.
You can fuck off. No, just bring Christ into it. It's fine.
And because that's what it sounds like to me.
It's it's.
I never knew about that.
I never let that that sounds love.
So your own relatives come back.
That's that's that's what they told us.
But I remember saying, you know, Jesus, would you not be afraid, you know,
like if you went down to the toilet or something,
because we don't have one toilet downstairs, if you go down to the toilet in the middle of the night
and you met some of them. And my mother's answer was, but should they all your own people?
Like they don't, it's only your own that come to you, not next door's people come to you,
it's only your own people that'll come. So you didn't need to be afraid. And again,
it's all interpretation, isn't it? It's all, and they're not going to want to freak you out.
Your great grandfather's not going to come to the future and go, whoo.
And
my father threatened to come and haunt us if he could.
Have you looked at I can't think of the country, but there's certain
cultures in Mexico, is it Mexico?
No, it's in South America.
They are. I think I think Guatemala
is where they literally take out the dead bodies.
They take the bodies out.
And they give them bags and they give them drink as well.
And they dress them up and they dance with them and they parade them.
Everybody dresses their own corpses up and leaves them outside in chairs and things
and dress and then puts them back.
And this is every year.
It's like, here's my granddad from 30 years ago.
And like literally every year they change the clothes.
It's Diemurtis. Yeah. It's Diáimh Murtas, yeah.
It's a festival they call it.
It's a festival.
The issue, the problem that's happening with it now is, so it's not widespread, it's a
small area.
I don't, I think it's Asia, I'm not sure.
Where is it?
Leitham.
Leitham.
Because of the fucking internet, because of the internet.
The internet is fucking ruinous.
So you've got these people in the village and these people are digging up their grandfather
and taking them out and giving them cigarettes, but now all these tourists are coming from
abroad taking photographs of it for Instagram.
The people are very poor and now the tourists are paying for photographs with corpses.
So the tradition is in danger of, the respect is being lost,
and the people, if they're incredibly poor,
they're doing it under JORESS.
You know what I mean?
So it's being exploited by outside forces.
But to be honest, they were doing it anyway.
Like they were doing it.
They were doing it anyway, but it's just.
I know they're getting a few bob.
It seems weird if a yank is involved.
Ah, it's true.
It's true.
Do you know what I mean?
The English aren't great with debt.
Well, I bet that's a bit unfair,
but as I understand this,
it takes ages for them to have a funeral, doesn't it?
Aye, or it could be three weeks waiting.
Why do they ask?
I don't know.
There's so many of them, there's so many.
But there's people dying every day, everywhere.
But what, like, is it the Victorians, is it Protestantism?
Like certain, like, let's go with the Protestants,
we'll go with the Protestants.
Sanitizing, sanitizing death.
We'll go with the Protestants.
Go, we'll blame the Protestants.
Sanitizing it, do you know what I mean?
And making it something that's happening over there.
Like do you have any thoughts on that?
And like you have some cultures,
so Irish way culture, I reckon that's pretty good.
Death is right there.
Like even, sometimes I could say to like American people,
some places in America it's like,
what do you mean you show people the corpse?
It's hidden away.
In Ireland, there is the dead person,
you come and visit it, the whole neighborhood.
Like, I think that's healthy because what you're doing is,
here is the person, they're dead, this is death.
And then other cultures are like, death isn't happening.
Just straight into an incinerator, there's the ashes.
And how do you feel about that? Because the meanings that are being given to that, is one healthy, is one not, or does it matter?
In my experience, and that's all I can speak to, is my experience, but in my experience,
when we, children, let them see the person who's died, if they want to. If the child doesn't want to, well then no, that's fine.
But I remember even when my mother died, the grandchildren running out and out,
and then they were drawing little pictures.
First they were kind of a little bit cagey
coming in to see my mother, and then coming out,
and Granny was such a big part of their life.
And then they were drawing pictures and putting in pictures,
and they were bringing in little things
and putting things in on top of her,
and she had this little, you know, the shroud thing,
and they were tidying that up around her.
You know, they actually, And so they have a conscious.
I remember granny in the coffin and I remember that's that's part of what dead is.
You know, that's part of what it is.
But a lot of people, I think
Irish people in particular, they actually think that they after they go to the week,
that they can go outside and comment on how well or not well
awful bad looking corpse.
I think people need to sort their shit out
if they're thinking that way.
Like, honest to God, if I can think of,
that's the opposite of rest in peace.
Like, if I could think of the exact opposite
of rest in peace, it's commenting on a corpse's haircut.
Can you imagine, that's gonna happen to you? You'll probably be dead years from now.
I'm wearing a fucking bag in my head when I'm dead. But I have thought about when I
die, right, so every single plastic bag that I wear, I never throw it away, I keep them
all, so I've got thousands and thousands of plastic bags. And I was thinking for the crack, right, when I die.
Instead of a headstone, I'm just gonna build like a giant kitchen sink, right, a
huge fucking kitchen sink, and then I'm gonna get every bag I ever wore and put
it inside a larger plastic bag and put that under the kitchen sink that is my
coffin or my fucking...
Or just hop into a... I'd love to throw my corpse into an air balloon.
You should write that down, I'll make it happen.
Do you ever help with that? All the time.
Very strange requests.
Yeah, actually some people have some really interesting requests
and I do write them down on my phone to remember for myself.
There was this, I'm sure you must have seen it, it went all around the internet where
the boy recorded himself knocking, let me out, let me out.
Could you imagine?
And I could see me doing that, especially because of the job I do.
Big gas, wouldn't it?
What about...
What are the laws around that stuff though?
Would you get people...
You can do what you want with ashes.
Can you?
I think so. You can get your ashes made into a tattoo and stuff.
Oh, you can get them made into jewelry?
Into jewelry, yeah.
I know America is a bit more liberal.
The writer Hunter S. Thompson,
I think he had himself shot out of a cannon.
That was interesting, yeah.
Yeah, but like.
But somebody used to go and pick him up,
don't they, like where'd he go?
Actually no, it was his ashes shot out of a cannon.
Oh, that's better.
Yeah.
Um.
Sorry, that's a big difference.
That's a huge difference.
Um. What's the role of pets, the role of pets in death? That's a huge difference.
What's the role of pets? The role of pets in death?
Like, when my dad was dying,
it was really shit that we couldn't bring the dog along.
The dog just wasn't allowed into the hospice.
And see, he is now.
The dogs are allowed in now.
Personal dogs.
Yeah, and horses are allowed in.
Well, that's fucking great.
Isn't the dog?
We had to get a surrogate dog.
Ah. Yeah, it like. It's a We had to get a surrogate dog. Yeah. It's a bit like getting a surrogate wife. You have a relationship with your dog.
It's like, so my dad's dog wasn't allowed in. We held him up outside the window.
But then they had like this communal hospice dog that you had to project your
own dog on top of. It just felt a bit wrong. It's like cuddling somebody else's wife, isn't it?
That's it.
Have you ever seen any animals
act strange or because people would say that animals can sense things that we can't?
Like I do think they can. Yeah.
Have you ever experienced that?
Not personally, no, I haven't.
But my own in our own experience, my brother, when he died, the dog would not leave.
He lay under the coffin the whole time, would not leave, didn't eat, didn't, didn't,
didn't go outside the house.
He stayed under the coffin for two days solid.
So like the dog understood.
The dog was mourning.
Yeah, the dogs, the animals definitely mourn.
They definitely mourn.
Like there's this wonderful little statue in Edinburgh called Greyfriars Bobby and it's
a statue of a little terrier and it's outside a graveyard called Greyfriars and it was a
terrier and his owner died and the dog just stayed there every single day for like seven
years.
You know, the dog just understood.
No one showed the dog that's where he's buried.
It just, that was his duty and that's what he did.
Hold on, I see I had so many wonderful questions from the internet.
What about, how do you bring the family into it?
The family into the process of the...
Into the process, like I'm assuming it's not...
Like when someone's dying, like you've got the people who are going to be bereaved as well, so...
Do you ever have the entire family in the room or everyone, all of you together speaking about death?
Oh, actually, yesterday, just yesterday, I had to go to a house and there was a person who
has an end-of-life diagnosis and everybody, her husband, her children, were all in denial.
These are all adult children now.
They're all in denial.
As in, I don't think she's that bad.
I mean, she looks good.
You know, I don't think... Two of the daughters had gone to meet the consultant, and he explained to them in
very clear terms, it's short time, could be before Christmas.
Now this woman's up and walking about and driving and doing everything that she's,
but her disease is still very progressed.
And so we had to have first, and I kind of try and break it up because it can be very hard for people
if they're all in together.
One will trigger the other.
So what I did was break them down into kind of groups.
So I spoke to two.
And I'm already working with the patient.
So I've been working with her for quite a while.
So she didn't need to be in the first instance.
Her husband, he just says, I don't
want to have this conversation.
And I said, I know how difficult this is.
It's really, really tough for you.
But the reality is that this is what's happening.
And her disease has gone very, they said, maybe Christmas.
They've told her to get her affairs in order.
And she can't do that unless we have this conversation so that
you can support her through this.
It gives the person whose life is ending, it gives them a bit of power.
It gives them a bit of, I'm in control here, I can decide what I'm going to do, what I'm not going to do.
I love doing a thing called a what not to do list.
You know, people have to do this and do that and do that. What things do you not want to do?
You don't want to, you know, who do you not want to have time with?
But so spoke to him.
What is the purpose of a of what not to do list?
It's like it's like a kind of a feck it list.
I'm not these you learn more from the course.
Of course you do.
I'm not going to.
I'm not going to listen to what other people are saying.
I'm not going to do this because somebody else thinks I should do it.
What not to do list coming near the end of your life.
We should have them now.
Yeah.
Never mind when you're coming near than you're right.
But so for that house, the youngest child in the family,
obviously finding it very difficult.
It's not, it would be, it would be unnatural for them to say,
OK, that's fine.
Oh, that's grand. Thanks for telling me that.
Of course, there's tears.
That's normal and healthy.
Of course, there's resistance.
Normal, healthy.
But then when we could all come in the room together
and they could sit, I'm sitting in a chair
a little bit further away, and they're
sitting on the two sofas side by side holding each other's hands
and saying, so we've got some time.
We are very lucky.
We know that your mother still has some time.
So there are some things she'd like to do.
We've discussed them.
She hasn't been able to discuss them with ye yet,
because she didn't want to upset ye,
and you're trying not to upset her.
But now that it's all out in the open,
that woman will run with these last few good weeks
before she actually gets really unwell.
And they'll make the most of it.
Her daughter will come home from where she's working away
and stay at home.
It'll be lovely for them.
And if we didn't have that conversation,
it'll run up to the end.
We all know she's dying, and nobody
got to do or say the things they wanted to say.
How much of what you do as well, are you
consulting with, say, a medical professional?
What I mean by that is, so my own dad, right, he got six
weeks to live. I'd say there was maybe about two weeks of that where he was
present, you know what I mean? And then the rest of it, there's not much he could
have done, you know what I mean? Because he was effectively in a coma. How much,
like, would you consult with a professional and say, right, so this lady here she might have until Christmas,
what's the window for her to do something meaningful here before she progresses into the illness?
Often, like, we'd call them MDTs. I'm not always invited to the MDT. If I'm being honest, I'd prefer to be outside of it,
because then I say to the patient, so what do you know that's happening?
So they get to tell me.
But sometimes I'm included and sometimes a referral.
It's less medical too.
And a referral will come through a GP
or it'll come through a consultant or whoever.
That's fine, I'll go where I can go.
But I like to kind of separate myself a little bit.
Like I've been a psychologist for a long time
and my job I feel is to help empower them
that they finish their life the way they want to,
as best we can.
Obviously, like some people do want to do mad things,
like throw their body into a hot air balloon,
but most people just are happy enough to kind of
go away for a weekend with their family
and do something nice.
Are you shaming my proposed debt?
I'll sort it, I'll sort it.
So it's, it's,
it sounds to me, it's humanistic psychology.
Everything is client led.
And so it should be.
And it should be patient led.
Now I have to be honest and say,
like I have a fine son who's in the medical profession and he they're
actually moving it back to being more person centred, I think.
Wow. I do genuinely think it is.
And it used to be like you wouldn't be able to like I know hospices have changed
a lot for for how people see death and dying.
And it's a home from home and all the rest of it.
But it's still, you know, there home from home and all the rest of it. But it's still, you know, there's still tubes
and all the rest of it.
You said to me, Amanda, would you have all the family there?
A lot of the times when it comes near the end,
the nurse will come in and remove all the tubes
and wires and things, and the family will get to do
what they want to do, and I already have told the family
what the person wants, what the person in the bed
wants to happen. Because there can be simple little things like I want you to say the rosary
or I don't want you to say the rosary. I remember waking up one time myself I was
I was sick which is why I got into this job. I remember waking up from I don't
know what it was, must be some kind of a coma too, I don't know, but and the priest
was there anointing me and and one of my brother-in-law's was beside him and I
literally thought what the hell is that because I was coming round going like
what and there's this priest who I like no no and and I'm lying in the bed going
I did these fuckers think I'm going to kick me clogs like I was only a young
woman but so some people don't want the priest and some people do want the
priest and so it's usually they're very simple requests.
It's usually not an thing too major.
But even if my request was a small, simple thing, at least I'm in charge of my request.
I'm in charge of how this how this show ends.
Do you
something I remember from my dad literally dying like actually because I
was present in the room when he died, helping the person for them to let go
and it was something I think there wasn't a death doula but someone in the
hospice had said to my man you need need to encourage him. When it happens, we let you know when it's happening.
It's important that everyone tells him to let go.
And I remember being young going,
how the fuck, like, what the fuck even is that?
Is that part of your, like, letting go?
Like, what does that mean?
Is it like drifting off to sleep?
For me, I think the letting go is that the body now has died or the body is not going
to get better.
It's the body is surplus to requirements anymore.
And that energy that, you know, that whatever that energy is, that whatever you want to
call it, soul always sounds a little bit fuzzy, but whatever it is, whatever that, that me,
that isn't just my body.
And when that, when it's coming near the the time where the body is going to die, that
needs to go somewhere. And so when people are saying, tell him it's okay to let go,
tell him that you're going to be okay, that he can go whenever he's ready to go, or whatever
that you were told to do, what you're doing is you're saying to him, you don't need to
fight this death. It's a natural progress into whatever.
Might be into nothing, but it's still the next step.
It might be into nothing, or it might be into heaven,
whatever you want to believe.
And to allow them that we are going to be OK, because I've
seen people hang on and hang on.
And you said the avoidance of suffering.
Human beings, we move away from suffering and towards pleasure as often as we can.
It's a human condition.
And when we're dying, sometimes the person in the bed is hanging on and suffering more than they need to,
even if they're not in pain, because thank God now people aren't in pain.
When you say hanging on, is it a physical act or an emotional act or is it a tension? To me, it's a definite tension.
It's a it's a it's a resistance to let go of this body, this bit.
It's a resistance to let go of that.
And you know, if you're younger, if you're you know, if you're afraid to go,
I can see when a person would hold on to why they would hold on.
And then when the people that love you say, it's OK
for you to let go,
we're going to be okay, and you're going to be okay. They have to be okay, because it's
the next step anyway. We can't stop it. We can't undo it. We can't, there's no other
exit. That's it. And so it just helps the person because you're hearing is the last
sense to go. And so I always, I remember being in a house and they were all young adults
and the mother had already died and the father was dying and they were lovely, but they never, they were very young when the mother died, the youngest was only three, so very young when the mother died.
And when the father was dying, they just didn't know what to do.
And to have me there, I'm hovering in the background like a piece of furniture. I'm not in the middle of it. I've already given them all the support they needed before this.
And I'm just reassuring them that your daddy can still hear you.
You can go back up and talk to him again.
If there's anything you want to say, now is the time.
And I'm staying way back.
That's their precious.
Now, I do feel I've become part of the family.
Sure, I could be in and out of houses for a year and a half
or two years.
You know, from diagnosis to death, I could be in note houses for a year and a half or two years. You know, if a person from diagnosis to death, I could be going to note for a long time.
And I grieve. I grieve them as well. These are people that I've had very intimate, very,
very intimate conversations with. And I just love that word intimate because I think helping
somebody to come to the end of their life is extremely intimate. And the word intimate comes from into me, you may see.
So they let me see into them and I get to experience them in a very, very deep, profound
way.
How do you then navigate emotional burnout?
Like do you do see a supervisor?
If you're working my work, I'm a supervisor myself, but you have to see a supervisor.
It's part of keeping the thing safe and that everybody's doing what they should be doing
and having it, that there's an official way of doing things and not doing things.
But for me, we play a lot. Play a lot.
Play as part of supervision?
Play as part of being married, play as part of being a lot. It's just just play as part of supervision. Play as part of being married, play as being part of being a mother.
Just keep it light.
It doesn't. It's not that I don't take people home with me in my heart.
Of course I do. Of course I do.
But it's I know I'm no benefit to them or myself or anybody else.
If I carry all that heavy heart because then I go into the next house and I'm
bringing energy that shouldn't be there.
So it's and I'm fairly good at at letting go of what I need to let go of.
I don't let it go in my thoughts, but I remember them, of course.
So for your own mental health practice, for your own head,
like what are you doing, what's standing to you
with keeping yourself
grounded and present?
I suppose I'm doing the job a long time, which helps.
Even though I've met very new psychotherapists,
very new psychologists who are really good at their job, too.
It's kind of, it comes as part of the work.
You know that it's like, I mentioned to you about energy.
Like our emotions are energy.
And if I'm with somebody who's come to the end of their life
and they're really struggling, or the family all around them
are really struggling, I'm a compassionate person.
And I pick up their energy.
And so I have to do rituals that I do.
I kind of visualize having a kind of a Velcro coat.
And that when I'm leaving that house,
I take off that Velcro coat that all the emotions are stuck to
and I hang it on the nearest tree and I pick it up on the way back again.
And it's symbolic to me, but it works.
But it works.
Geez, that's fucking gorgeous.
Me or the coat?
That's amazing.
So the visualization of that helps you.
You're seeing grief and everything is sticking
and you can take that off and that visualization.
And do you meditate?
Do you want to breathe in the like this?
I I absolutely love holotropic breathwork.
I do it regularly.
And it's just I remember I have a brown.
You have heard of I have a brownie died earlier in the year.
He was one of my lecturers when I was training.
And Ivor was big into holotropic breathwork,
emptied wards in St. Brendan's Hospital in Dublin himself
and Dr. Jim O'Donoghue.
And they trained me in holotropic breathwork.
And for myself, I remember one of them saying at one time,
it's like a general absolution.
You don't have to say it because sometimes there's
too much trauma.
If the person has a huge amount of trauma in their life
and then they come and they have to start to tell you
every single thing that ever went wrong
or where somebody hurt me, that can be re-traumatizing.
Obviously we'd be very careful in dipping in and out,
but the holotropic breath work just helps to lift it all. And you don't, it's like,
you know that thing, the rising tide floats all boat, well the holotropic breathwork lifts
all the traumas. And then we have to go back and pick up on the cognitive things, but people
express, or people say, they feel like there's a lightness in their body afterwards. I have
a young fellow that I'm working with at the minute, and he's had a lot, he had a huge
birth trauma, like very almost-aid birth trauma.
And mother almost-aid was really traumatic for all of them.
And so in his lived world, there was nothing.
There was nothing.
Like he wasn't abused.
The only thing that they could identify was this birth trauma.
And he's like 26, 27, lovely lad.
And talking just doesn't get to it from him.
It just gets no relief.
He gets really tense in his body.
Just the pre-verbal.
Yeah, exactly.
And so if your trauma is pre-verbal,
and I'm trying to make you talk about it,
it feels like you're going round in circles.
You're like, I am not getting relief.
I'm not getting, I don't feel like I'm getting this out.
And for him, the breathwork is, oh, she's
really great now, absolutely loves it coming out.
It is, I find it very powerful.
And
breathwork is like, it's hardcore meditation.
It's meditation, but it's really deep breaths and very focused.
Is it like Wim Hof?
It's a bit like that, but it's actually almost like.
So it's kind of like you, like if anybody,
I'm sure you've all heard of neuroscience, but how the mind and the way you think
about it and how it affects your body and how your body, the feelings, how you think
about these feelings and so with with like with neuroscience and psychotherapy,
we now understand how the mind, as opposed
to the brain, how the mind experiences trauma and how the body remembers that trauma and
stores it in the body.
So it kind of leaks out every now and again when it gets too high.
And so with breathwork and with anything that is nonverbal, so any type of process that you're doing is nonverbal.
Breathing is nonverbal.
So you breathe all day, every day.
You don't tell yourself to breathe.
You don't tell your heart to beat.
You don't tell your blood pressure to stay stable.
All of that happens automatically.
That hind part of the brain controls all that.
And so for this, every system in the body,
when your body gets stressed,
your cortisol, which is one of your stress chemicals, rises. And so when the body gets stressed, your body
feels different than it does when you feel relaxed, obviously. And so when the
cortisol rises, your breathing gets sharper, you breathe higher. Like a panic
attack, you're looking for the breath. Or even not as dramatic as a panic attack,
but you know, just your... A home of anxiety. A little bit of that kind of edgy feeling. And you know, the body starts to give you little a panic attack, but, you know, just your home of anxiety, a little bit that kind of edgy feeling.
And, you know, the body starts to give you little signals.
It starts to, you know, twitch a little bit or or you feel tension in your shoulders
or you are somebody some people as a self to bite their fingers or bite their nails
or pick their skin.
Different people use different ways of doing it.
But in neuroscience, what we know is that you cannot control your heart.
You can't say heart slow down. So when you get a fright or you trauma is re-exper cannot control your heart. You can't say, heart slow down.
So when you get a fright or you, trauma is re-experienced, your heart goes faster. Your
breathing gets more shallow. Your body sends a message to your brain, something's wrong,
something's wrong, something's wrong. And the brain's going, what is it? What is it?
What is it? The body's still experiencing this really uncomfortable feeling. The adrenal
glands start to pump chemicals into your body, cortisol, stress, chems, noradrenaline, and so they're all being pushed into your
body. Your body now feels like something terrible is wrong. Imagine if you're
coming to the end your life and feeling like that. You can't control your
endocrine system. Your stomach actually starts to make acid because of things
you're going to have to fight or run away from something. And so all of
these systems are going and you're wondering why you're feeling nervous or anxious or stressed because all of these systems are going. And you're wondering why you're feeling nervous, or anxious,
or stressed.
Because all of these systems are happening in your body
simultaneously.
And the only one, it's like a domino effect,
the only one that you can actually get in and control
is your breath.
So when we do holotropic breath work,
it's really fast, deep breathing.
And it's kind of like, I explain it to people who aren't,
we'll say, who don't understand neuroscience. It could be, you know, younger people, whatever. Most
of us don't. I didn't understand neuroscience until I learned it. So, you know, I wouldn't
expect anybody else to know it. But when they, when we're doing it, the way I explain it
is that you're breathing really, really quickly and your body now thinks you're in a stress
situation, but you're sitting back in a recliner chair nice
and relaxed. So the message is going to the brain, something's wrong, something's wrong.
And the brain's going, I don't think there's something wrong because he looks really comfortable
sitting here. Maybe we're misinterpreting something. So what you're doing is you widen
this window of tolerance to stress. And it works really well for a lot of people to widen
this window of tolerance so that your system doesn't kick in too early and say whoops something's wrong.
Is it something anybody could learn on YouTube like just from videos?
No. No, you do have to have a coach, do you?
To be honest, not even so much a coach as a minder.
You need something because big stuff can come up.
Look, if I only met you and we'd done five, six, ten sessions, I don't have half
of your story. But so you never can do it on your own. You have to be with somebody.
It's not safe to do it on your own.
That's exactly how people describe the therapeutic use of psychedelics.
Yeah, probably.
You can't just go and do the MDMA on your own. This is not just a thing you take. This
is a whole suite of protection.
So are you speaking about holotropic therapy then?
Well, it's holotropic breathwork as a tool in the therapeutic process.
OK.
Now, I have people at the end of life who love that little bit of relaxation that it gives their body.
So there's different degrees of it, obviously.
You know, we can use like less or shorter sessions or but people always seem to
describe it as feeling much more relaxed in their body.
We do a lot of stuff.
If anyone in the audience or anyone listening wants to do a bit of that,
because it sounds fucking class, like what would we look for?
A holotropic therapist?
Like, you know, it's kind of usually only as kind of a tool.
But Stanislav Grof was the man that sort of, I don't know, he invented it,
but he came up with it anyway.
And he trains people all over the people trained all around Ireland, all over Europe,
America, it's a very popular part of psychotherapy.
But not everybody, like a lot of girls and men trained with me when we did it, but not everybody like a lot of a lot of girls and men trained
with me when we did it, but not everybody uses it.
I just I think if you feel confident in using it, it works so well.
Really does.
And so you look up Holographic Breathwork online, you'll find loads of people that do
it, but it is not something you do on your own.
Absolutely not.
Because you could there could be stuff going on in there that you don't even know.
Because I've heard that about...
It's something... I recommend meditation a lot to people.
And a few listeners early days flagged with me,
you've got to be careful about recommending meditation to everybody,
because some people have body trauma.
And meditation could be very unsafe for that person,
because they may
have been assaulted, they might have been in a car crash and all of a sudden this
shit is coming up because they're doing even a body scan.
Yeah.
And I didn't know about that. I'd never thought about that, you know.
So that I'm guessing that's what you're referring to.
It is. And the thing is some people's bodies, like you said, are not safe spaces.
And so you need the whole therapeutic kind of, you know, the whole relationship
and all the safety nets that are there
so that you can go in and come out,
titrate it, just in, take a little look,
let's see what's in there.
So five minutes meditation.
Like meditation is like the bull's word really, isn't it?
Like really all that you're saying is,
can we just slow everything else down,
forget about what's happened, what's happened before, forget about what's going to happen when you go out the door and you stay here with your body,
your breath and me and I'll help mind you, you don't need to worry, I'll mind you,
and to go inside and just see what comes.
And it might only be a minute or two and then people can, and what you're trying to do,
the whole point of it is that you get comfortable in your body.
If you're comfortable in your body, you're comfortable in yourself.
It does what it says on the 10.
I was using meditation to so that I could be mindful throughout my day a lot.
You know what I mean?
Like one thing I do and I tell other people to do it is
if I'm, like I said earlier worrying about
the future what if or thinking about the past and I want to be in the present
moment I'll pick up an orange oranges are great for this just because of their
leathery and when you pick into an orange it explodes and you might get
something in the eye and it's the smell of citrus. Orange is the, I think it's the most mindful fruit.
And I'm serious.
So if I want to get myself to the present moment,
I will eat an orange and that's all I'm fucking doing.
And every single part of that,
I'm noticing the feeling of the leathery skin,
I'm noticing the smell, the explosion, the taste.
And I'm bringing every single one of my senses to just that orange and nothing else.
And the five or six minutes it takes me to eat that orange, that grounds me.
So and what you're talking about there is coming to your senses.
Your mother says that by no sense, or that was a bit senseless.
And what you're actually saying is that you weren't present, you weren't being in this.
So, comment to your senses is just paying attention to your senses, that's all.
And then you have that sixth sense that you have.
Which, what's the sixth sense?
I don't know.
That's a bit freaky, isn't it?
We all have a sixth sense.
So, you know your normal senses,
so pay attention to something.
Listen to something.
What are you listening to?
What can you feel on your skin?
Is it warm? Is it cold?
And you're just going through your five senses
and then you sit with it.
Just sit with that and your sixth sense will speak to you.
Like you know, I have a sixth sense.
You get that funny feeling about somebody,
you either like them or you don't like them.
I liked you right away.
Oh, thank you very much.
I thought, he's nice enough lad.
But some people don't get that vibe.
Do you ever sit beside somebody on the bus or you're in the queue at the post office and somebody comes too close to you and you're like, that's your sixth sense.
Mine, I'm pretty handy at pattern recognition, but then I got diagnosed as autism.
And can it still be good though?
Yeah, but like, my sixth sense,
I suppose it is pattern recognition.
Like I said, I got a vibe about this building.
I have a feeling if I, whatever about this building,
if I go researching deep into it,
I'm gonna find something class.
I bet you will.
I don't know why, it's just, that's my sixth sense.
You're welcome.
Laura Coleman, thank you so much for... I cut it short there, I cut it short there at the clapping.
There was plenty and plenty of clapping, it's just,
it can sound particularly abrasive on the podcast.
So you'll have to imagine the glorious round of applause that Laura got there.
What a wonderful chat that was.
What a humbling chat to reflect on death like that.
I'll be back next week with a hot take.
Thank you so much to Laura Coleman for that wonderful conversation.
I'll be back next week with a hot take.
Don't know what about.
In the meantime, rub a dog, wink at a swan,
and feel grateful that you're simply alive. That's enough.
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