The Joe Rogan Experience - #2279 - Ky Dickens
Episode Date: February 26, 2025Ky Dickens is a filmmaker and documentarian. She is the host and creator of the "The Telepathy Tapes" podcast. www.thetelepathytapes.com Don’t miss out on all the action this week at DraftKings! Do...wnload the DraftKings app today! Sign-up using dkng.co/rogan or through my promo code ROGAN. GAMBLING PROBLEM? CALL 1-800-GAMBLER, (800) 327-5050 or visit gamblinghelplinema.org (MA). Call 877-8-HOPENY/text HOPENY (467369) (NY). Please Gamble Responsibly. 888-789-7777/visit ccpg.org (CT), or visit www.mdgamblinghelp.org (MD).21+ and present in most states. (18+ DC/KY/NH/WY). Void in ONT/OR/NH. Eligibility restrictions apply. On behalf of Boot Hill Casino & Resort (KS).1 per new customer. $5+ first-time bet req. Max. $150 issued as non-withdrawable Bonus Bets that expire in 7 days (168 hours). Stake removed from payout. Terms: sportsbook.draftkings.com/promos. Ends 3/16/25 at 11:59 PM ET. Sponsored by DK. This episode is brought to you by Intuit TurboTax. Now this is taxes. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Joe Rogan podcast, check it out!
The Joe Rogan Experience.
Shrain by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day!
Very nice to meet you.
Nice to meet you as well.
I really loved your series, the telepathy tapes.
I had long suspected that there was some sort of a way to prove that there's something
going on.
There's no way that that would be a thing for so long, that people would talk about
certain moments where people could read people's minds or certain moments where there was something
that was being exchanged that wasn't verbal, it wasn't facial expressions, it wasn't body
language, there was something going on.
And the telepathy tapes essentially proved it.
Has there been pushback about this?
I know there's a lot of hardcore skeptics that never want to believe. Yeah. I think anytime you're pushing the status quo, there's going to be pushback of course,
you know, but I think the overwhelming amount of emails that we've gotten from families
and others that have a non-speaking child have been, you know, so excited that this
news is finally out there. Same thing with teachers that have been witnessing like you
said for witnessing this in classrooms and in their homes for decades, you know? And
when facilitated communication first came to America, it was the 90s.
And what does that mean, facilitated communication?
Okay, maybe we should back up. I mean, so I wonder, okay, so what the podcast is about are non-speaking individuals who
tend to have apraxia, which is a mind-body disconnect.
And those individuals cannot speak with, you know, using their voice.
Speaking is a fine motor skill, whereas pointing to letters is a gross motor skill.
So spelling to communicate is how many of these individuals
communicate, right? And when the first... Well, and with that in mind, I just want to say one
quick thing, that often people historically have looked at people with apraxia or non-speakers,
and they think that because they can't speak, they can't think, that they're not in there,
they don't presume competence. and none of that is true.
These individuals have a hard time controlling their body, right? And so if you can't control
your body, people make all sorts of assumptions, you know, and that's been really difficult.
And so I think that the subjects in this project who are non-speakers with autism have been
up against all sorts of different battles from people not presuming they're competent, from people doubting their way of communication
through spelling to communicate. And then, of course, it comes out in many cases that these
individuals can read minds, have a plethora of other, for lack of better words, spiritual gifts.
And then the parents and teachers often aren't believed about that either. So it's like there's
stigma every which way. And the podcast is kind of a collision of all these stigmas and really trying to break
down those stigmas and be like, here's the truth. These people are in there, spelling
is a valid form of communication. And yes, many of them say they have spiritual gifts,
which I think we can pretty much validate at this point.
When you say spiritual gifts, what do you mean by that?
Yeah. So when I first stumbled into this, which we can talk about later if you want, when I first kind of stumbled into this, I
thought this was just about telepathy, right, and that there were these
individuals and their parents and teachers are claiming they could read
minds. And as I start meeting more and more and more of these families, and
again like I said teachers, it's not limited to just families, one thing that
they started telling me was telepathy is just the tip of the iceberg. And I didn't know what that meant, you know, what do you mean
telepathy is just the tip of the iceberg. And it's true, because I think whether or not its ability
to see disease or illness in someone and be able to diagnose it before this person knows that there's
something wrong, reading an aura and, you know, saying that they can see a color around not just animals and humans, but plants, being able to speak multiple languages, even
though you haven't been taught them, or playing instruments and knowing music, or being able
to access almost any song and having perfect pitch, being able to visit people in dreams.
And then, you know, I think some of the more just like mind-altering, shocking things for me was
how many non-speaking individuals have said that they are able to speak with people from
the other side.
And yeah, so it didn't just start with telepathy or end with telepathy.
It's a plethora of things.
05.10.14
So do you think that this is an emerging aspect of human consciousness or do you think perhaps
this is something maybe we had before we were verbal that we've lost but that lays dormant?
Like that we don't need it so like a muscle it atrophies?
Yeah, I think that's exactly right.
I mean, I think we all have these abilities.
I think this is all part of us and in the telepathy tapes in episode five in particular we get into animal
communication through telepathy
and a story of elephants that knew when
someone who was like in charge of their big game preserve had died and
They'd walk days to his house and did it kind of stay there for grieving and then would come back every year on the day
of his death. I mean just unbelievably beautiful stuff Rupert Sheldrake has talked at length,
a brilliant Cambridge biologist, about dogs,
experiments he's done that kind of show
that dogs know when their owners are coming home,
and sometimes cats.
So this seems to be part and parcel of the animal kingdom,
right?
And many of us have had that experience of phone telepathy,
where, oh, I was just thinking of someone and they call.
People like to dismiss that as being just coincidence, but just why do people want to
dismiss everything?
That's the problem.
I think the real fear is being a fool.
That's the fear, which is why the problem with any sort of telepathy or any sort of
psychic ability, the
problem is there's so many charlatans and so many people get duped. Yeah. And
it's really common. I mean, it's so common, it's everywhere. You see
these psychic palm reading signs everywhere you go. And because of that, it's in the
realm forever of nonsense. And if you believe in nonsense,
you're not a person to be taken seriously.
So if you're a scientist and you're studying
human neurochemistry and you're studying neuroscience,
there's no way you're going to support this
unless it's just beating you over the head
with overwhelming evidence.
Then perhaps you say, maybe there's something here.
I think that's changing, actually.
And one of the things that we look at in the telepathy tapes in episode six, which we call
our science episode, is this idea of materialism, which I'm sure you've heard of, this idea
that at least for the past few hundred years, that the reigning philosophy around how we
interpret the world is only true if we can measure it and observe it, right? And that makes you seem foolish if you believe in something that
can't be measured or observed, like a siphon on like telepathy or precognition or dreams
being able to communicate with someone or any of that stuff would be thrown out as being
silly. And I think there's been a massive effort to make that true, right? That if you
believe this or you're a scientist and you want to publish this, we're going to dismiss
you or ridicule you just for even daring to ask that question. Research about this type
of stuff has been dismissed because it's materialist, you know, scientists who for a long time run
the journals. But there is something interesting here, which is that
consciousness, we don't know where it comes from, you know. And so what, you
know, the brilliant scientist Dean Radin talks about in the telepathy tapes is
that if you think of materialism as a pyramid, right, and the base of the
pyramid and all the things that have built up our world, which are biology and
physics and chemistry and all those things, those have rules and properties,
and we shouldn't throw those out. Those are pretty much true.
But currently at the top of the pyramid is consciousness
and we can't explain where that comes from
and why it's there.
But if you just take consciousness from the top
and put it on the bottom,
so that consciousness is the basis of all reality, right?
That consciousness is fundamental.
That everything is the product of our thoughts first.
Then we can account for all this stuff.
Then we can account for precognition or telepathy.
And it's not that big of a change.
It's just flipping kind of the order of the pyramid.
And I think that makes a lot of sense.
And so there's been a lot of scientists who have looked into near-death experience research,
who have looked into the research on telepathy, who've looked into the research around precognition,
and said, we can't dismiss this. This is happening. There's a lot of anecdotal evidence here.
There's a lot of things that add up. So we're going to start the Academy of Post-Materialist
Sciences where we will take this stuff seriously, and we will look at the research, and we will
advance science. And I tend to believe that there needs to be a bit of... There needs
to be quite a few funerals, but I think in like 50 to a hundred years,
the scientists that we're gripping on
to the materialist paradigm,
I really believe that that's gonna be kind of like
the flat earthers in the future.
Like I think the scientists doing this
are on the right side of history
because you have to account for it.
Right.
You know?
Who's scoring big in the NBA this year?
You are, with all new ways to get in on the action at DraftKings Sportsbook, an official
sports betting partner of the NBA.
From monster slams to dishing the rock to cleaning the glass, get behind your favorite
players and the prop bets you can make on DraftKings, the home of
NBA player props. Plus, for new DraftKings customers, bet $5 to get $150 in
bonus bets instantly. Take it to the rack with DraftKings Sportsbook. Every point
counts. Download the DraftKings Sportsbook app and use the code ROGIN.
That's code ROGIN for new customers to get $150 in
bonus bets when you bet just five bucks. Only on DraftKings, the crown is yours.
Gambling problem? Call 1-800-GAMBLER. In New York, call 877-8HOPENY or text
HOPENY467369. In Connecticut, help is available for problem gambling. Call
888-789-77777 or visit ccpg.org. Please play responsibly. On behalf of We have to account for it.
We don't exactly know where it comes from and
There's a lot of people that think that the universe is formed through consciousness
Yeah, I mean this is Thomas Campbell's take on things
Yeah, he was a mind-bender when I had him in here. I was like people. What are you saying?
You have to like listen to it three you saying exactly like you have to like
listen to it three or four times then you have to I told him listen let's stop here
we'll do it again because I'm gonna have to absorb this yeah but the concept is that essentially
the universe is formulated through consciousness in some way and that we're
interacting with it through consciousness and that it's not as
Real as we want to believe it is yeah I mean and even if you just basic it down right like this room what came first the room or the thought of the room?
Everything in this room. It was a thought first right everything right everything everything on our planet was a thought first well everything
We've created it itself right yeah, I've always said that that I think that ideas might be a life form
That they get into people's heads and then people
Manufacture physical objects out of these ideas whether it's art and I think that's one of the reasons why we like art so much
Yeah, I mean that that's how this whole podcast started I think. Sure. You know I
was reading that book Big Magic. I don't know if you've read that book. It's
wonderful. Well I guess I should back you know I was doing a lot of
documentary work that was on social issues right that was all like fixing
broken things in our great country and then I had a few deaths in my own life.
And I thought, my gosh, whatever I do next, I want to fix what's broken in humans, because I was in a
complete topsy-turvy thing of how do these great people that are heroes, you know, a police officer
going in and saving someone my other friend was taking care of, they're in housing Kansas City,
and how do they die? So I was going through my own just like kind of grief process
and thinking whatever I do next, I don't want to look anymore, which I was humbled to do
that work of broken social systems. I want to fix what's broken in humanity and figure
out what that is. But anyway, I was reading Big Magic and this is a book about how ideas
by Elizabeth Gilbert, how ideas are outside of us, the creative process comes to you. And it's wonderful in the book,
they talk about songwriters who hooter song, and if you don't grab it, you'll hear that same song
on the radio or just how a story will come to you fully formed. And one of the kind of topics that
comes up in that book too is you don't ask the creative, whatever it is, God, muse, ether, right,
to give this to you. You tell it, I'm going to give this to you. Tell it.
I'm going to do this with you.
It's going to be great."
And so I said that out loud.
I was reading this book.
I was in this moment of just major shift in my life.
And I said, whatever I do next, I want to solve the question of where we're going and
why we're here and what it all means.
And do we have a consciousness?
And does it survive?
And then, and no, I actually didn't ask it.
I said, yeah, I said, I'm going
to do this next. And I didn't know what it was going to look like. But then started reading,
you know, all the things I could in consciousness, tree communication and about near-death experiences
and Ian Stevenson's work and all sorts of things. And then I heard a podcast with Dr.
Diane Hennessy Powell, who was a Harvard, you know, a Johns Hopkins educated, you know,
taught at Harvard scientist who was saying that non speakers
that she'd tested had demonstrated a remarkable ability
for telepathy and reading minds.
And that was like, boom, like lightning just kind of hit
like this is the thing.
And I really believe if something's intended for you,
it won't miss you, you know?
But I think that concept of big magic was a bit of that
of asking, telling the muse,
you know, to...
To guide you.
Yeah. Yeah.
To guide you towards something that can illuminate this issue. So did you have a preconceived
notion of telepathy or spiritual gifts or anything before this?
No, I mean, I think like a lot of people, like the idea of mediums and psychics, it
felt like people that are often trying to just make money off of people in
really vulnerable situations. And I've always believed certainly there's got to
be people who have certain gifts like that, you know
But that the vast majority couldn't be trusted or you know, I didn't think telepathy could be real that seems impossible
it just seems impossible even things like plant communication felt impossible or
I mean, I mean none of that was something that was
Was like my worldview, you know, I was working on you know
Just solving problems around paid family medical leave and making health insurance
more affordable and accessible.
Like it was not my cup of tea really.
And so, which was kind of great because as I tumbled into this world, I mean, I was really
wide-eyed as like, wait a second, have I been wrong about everything?
And that's kind of where I ended up, was like I had to go revisit everything
I ever thought about the world,
because I started realizing our entire paradigm is wrong.
I mean, or a lot of it is.
That was my experience.
So let's talk about what you saw first.
Like what was the first example
where it was like an aha moment for you?
Yeah, so after I heard the interview with Dr. Diane
Hunnessy-Powell, I zoomed with her,
and then I asked if I could go see her and meet her
and talk about this a bit.
Because I thought this could be the next project.
And I just knew it was going to be the next project, right?
So one of the first things I had her do was I was like,
can you just tell me about some of the emails
that come in from parents? And I had her just kind of go through reading some emails from parents. And it was one of the first things I had her do was I was like, can you just tell me about some of the emails that come in from parents?
I had her just kind of go through reading some emails from parents.
And it was one after the other, like I didn't believe this, and I didn't believe my wife,
I didn't believe my husband that this could be possible, but we've tested it, we've tested
it.
People were sending tests.
And I thought, okay, whatever is going on here, these parents don't know that any other
parents are going through this.
They think a singular miracle is happening in their home, that this child can read their
thoughts. And that this is where the story is,
that there's so many parents who haven't been listened to. And so I really thought this was
about parents at first, and then discovered, no, there's been teachers writing about this for
30 years, capturing it, videotaping this phenomenon going on, and scared to come out about it.
And I think same with the families, right?
I mean, what a weird thing to say, this child can read my mind, or this child seems to be
able to do X, Y, Z, things that seem impossible.
And so, you know, my first thought was, okay, I need to see if this is my own eyes. And so, Dr. Powell had just been
reached out to by a family in Mexico who discovered that their 13-year-old daughter was inside.
They didn't think she was, and she was able to communicate. And the reason they discovered
that was during COVID, you know, they were in charge of homeschooling and started being
like, okay, let's see what you know. And bing, bing, bing, she starts spelling, she knows
an awful lot. And I think they were shocked you know and bing, bing, bing, bing, bing, she starts spelling, she knows an awful lot.
And I think they were shocked and pretty soon thereafter she said, I can read your mind.
And they thought, what?
And they would do tests.
What did I just draw?
And she'd say what they just drew, you know, what are we thinking?
And she would write it.
And so-
Do they say what they see?
Or how they see it?
Like if someone writes something down, do they see the word or do they know it?
Well, I think that's a really good question and you know, we've done a few experiments that you know again
I'm not a scientist like the experiments I was doing for the film
I mean which is gonna be now a film but the
Podcast was kind of me just trying to understand like proof of concept what is going on here, right?
And and I can only say what spellers have told me and there's been quite a few spellers who say,
I can see through someone's eyes
or I can hear through their ears.
And others who seem to have a merged consciousness
with someone that they're very close to,
it would be a father or a teacher
or a communication partner, father or whatever,
where like we did some experiments with one mom
where we'd show an image to her.
Her son, who was sitting across the room, would all of a sudden start writing what the
image was.
But what was so fascinating is sometimes the mom wouldn't even know what the image was.
So at one point she thought it was paint.
No, no, she thought there was a food fight.
It was ketchup and mustard, and he wrote paint.
So at that point, it's like she's not obviously sending a thought, right?
He seems to be tapping in the second, the images in her own mind.
So for us, it was a big question of, is this just sheer telepathy?
Because a few parents have told me, no, this is bigger than that.
It seems like a merging of consciousness of some sort.
Yeah, in a bizarre way.
If the mother doesn't know what it is and the child does, that's strange.
Yeah, it's really fascinating.
And, you know, but I also, one of the stories that I loved goes back, so Dr. Rupert Sheldrake,
the Cambridge biologist who's in this project, he didn't believe in telepathy either.
I mean, I think a lot of scientists, right, don't believe this stuff right away either.
And he had a,
you know, a senior professor that he really looked up to, Sir Rudolf Peters. And he was
knighted by Queen Elizabeth for being such a brilliant scientific mind, right. And the
Sir Rudolf Peters was in like the tea room at Cambridge one time and telling young Dr.
Sheldrake, young Rupert here, that he just heard of a blind boy that he tested, who obviously is blind and can't read an eye chart.
But if his mother is looking at it, he could read it.
Whoa.
And that's how Rupert Sheldrake fell into this world.
And that boy was diagnosed with being blind,
but also at the time what they called severe mental retardation,
which now we don't call it that.
But who knows what this young
individual have if he had apraxia or what was going on if he had autism.
Well, because autism and blindness, it's a huge impediment, especially nonverbal autism and being
blind, like how do you learn anything? So you would assume that there's something wrong with
the child when there's just a lack of the ability to communicate. Yeah, I mean
with non-speaking individuals with apraxia, they are in there. They're so
smart. It's just that mind-body disconnect and not being able to, you know. What do
they think causes that? Do they have an understanding of what it is? I, you know, I
don't know. There's so many wonderful experts out there looking into this, and I don't know what causes apraxia,
but I do know that there's a lot of supports
to help individuals who have apraxia to communicate,
and the world is just making it really difficult
for these individuals.
Have you ever seen this young blind boy
that uses echolocation, and he can ride a skateboard
and move around.
How bizarre is that?
It's cool.
I mean, you know, in some ways you think of like echolocation or being able to see through
infrared is like a sixth sense, like a sixth sense that we don't have, right?
But it's like a sense some other creatures get around with.
So it's like what we're talking about here is almost like a seventh sense, right?
It's something beyond that. But I just, there's something so beautiful about that, right?
That if you, if humans are so creative, that we will find our way to get around the world and find
our ways to communicate. Also, when you're missing a sense, your other senses are stronger. This has
always been a suspicion. I think that's been proven. Is that correct? Yeah.
That people are better at hearing things if they're blind or seeing things if they're
deaf?
Yeah. Yeah. I think that is absolutely true. And I think though, as far as, you know, individuals
with apraxia go, again, like it's mind-body disconnect, there's so many of the spellers
I've met who don't know they had a body at first. They can't feel their body. You know,
they want heavy boots to know where their feet are or heavy necklace to know where their
chest is. And I think not being in your body, not knowing you have your body, leaves you
to live in this consciousness space more, right? This world of thought where we can't
imagine that. We're so bound to our body. We have these dissociative boundaries where
it's like, you're Joe, and I'm high.
So I think that's what heightens a lot of this for them, is just not feeling as grounded
into their bodies.
06.
In the wackiest of conspiracy theories, when people talk about the government's connection
to alien intelligence, that they recruit these non-verbal autistic kids because they're the
ones who can communicate with aliens.
I don't believe that.
No, I don't believe it either.
No, it's the wackiest of conspiracy theories.
But the idea being that if you were the government,
you would look for someone who is extraordinary in that they are more open to this ability to interact than we would be.
They do not have the burden of feeling foolish.
They don't have the burden of societal constraints that we've kind of culturally put on the idea
of alien life being able to
communicate with them. Yeah I mean this is I have received a question around you
know could the government utilize these individuals? You're not discussing the
first thing you think about people think about that extraordinary yeah the
government like the X-Men yeah like how will the government utilize this and manipulate it for their own gain? That's what everybody worries
Yeah, and it's a fair worry
I mean it is a fair worry and you know, like we try to be very protective of of the families and make sure that
They're safe and that they're only out there if they want to be out there and you know that type of thing
But and even they know what that means. Yeah, that's the problem. You say you want to be out there
Do you know what that means? Right exactly,'s the problem. You say you want to be out there. Do you know what that means? Right.
Exactly.
But I will say, I mean, every non-speaking individual
with these gifts that I've ever met won't use it for bad
or nefarious means.
They're interested in love.
They're interested in connection.
Right.
Yeah.
Of course.
Yeah.
Well, the problem is if they were used and didn't
know what they were doing
You know, they would know they'll know they can read your thoughts and they know it's up They know it's a better than anyone. I think you know, you're saying
When you
First start was there stages of acceptance for you with these ideas? Yeah, what was the first stage?
I mean the first stage was I think I
Never I never had the barrier of whether or not they're in there
You know, I worked I helped start the inclusion program in my high school and I've worked cared for people
You know with varying abilities my whole life so that I knew they were in there
but I think the next thing for me was the telepathy and and and
When you see it and when you talk to enough parents who are saying, all you need to do is go see it.
It's not like, does it show up or will it appear?
It's like for the parents and teachers who report this is happening,
if you go work with a speller, you just see it.
So that was pretty phenomenal.
And then the first person we saw being able to do it was this girl Mia.
And she was still in the early stages of learning to spell to communicate.
So if she was being touched, it often helps first with the wrist and then here and then
here and then on the head and then often then there's no touch at all, right?
It's just like learning that body and learning those supports to control your motor.
So Dr. Powell was like, no, scientists will take this because she was being touched.
And I think a lot of us in the room are like, wait, people think she's her mom sending Morse
Code?
Like they plan, I mean, of course, that's ridiculous.
It really is.
But then the next individual could do it across the room and wasn't being touched. And, you know, anyone
that we saw thereafter wasn't being touched. So that was pretty remarkable. And I don't think touch
actually, I think telepathy is really cool if you're being touched, you know, but, so telepathy was
the first one. And then I think the second one was the language stuff and a lot of parents
saying you know we have no idea how but she's speaking Portuguese and no one
in the house speaks Portuguese or people talking about you know this has been
documented yeah yeah yes yes yes yes yeah it's quite common actually these
are nonverbal kids non-speakers yeah non-speakers yeah so what is the
difference between nonverbal and non-speakers well I think nonverbal kids non speakers. Yeah, I'm speaking. Yeah. So what is the difference between nonverbal and non speakers?
Well, I think nonverbal is this idea right like that you're
Not able to make
Like language, you know in a way where like speaking it's just like they can be verbal they can communicate they just can't speak it
Okay, just can't speak it. Okay without the supports of a communication partner like, you know that is
without the supports of a communication partner like, you know, that is, the goal is to type independently.
Do they make noises?
Yeah, I mean, I think especially with apraxia, there's often a lack of body
control,
voice control, so there is like a
beautiful soundtrack that I've come to love of non-speakers that will often be
like
some grunting or just
lack of body control.
And actually, I think if someone sees a non-speaker out in public, one of the most loving things
you can say is like, I know you can't control your body, I know that's not you.
You know what I mean?
Because the person in there might want to be doing X, Y, Z, but just cannot control
their body.
And imagine how frustrating that would be.
Yeah. imagine how frustrating that would be. So these people, they're nonverbal, and when you say that they can speak Portuguese, they
understand Portuguese.
Do they write it?
How does this manifest itself?
Yeah.
So, I mean, there's one young girl I'm thinking of in particular, but there's this again,
this has come up now with, I don't know, 15 non-speakers that I've met. But the girl I'm thinking of, her, you know, she will
work during the day with a paraprofessional and a spelling coach. You know, there's a,
you know, the education system, there might be two or three people in a room and three
people were in the room this day. And she started spelling in a language and they didn't
know what it is. So they looked it up and it was Portuguese, and then she
started spelling in Spanish, and they were like, this is wild. And she also said she
knew hieroglyphics.
What?
Yeah. And then they were like, well, how do we test this? Because if we know the answer,
she'll read our mind and know. So they had to just-
Which is wild already. Like, you have to worry about this kid reading your mind. It might be bullshit. So they had to like look up pictures of hieroglyphics
and not know what the pictures were representing to be like, okay, here's the feather. I mean,
I don't know what a feather on top of a stone or whatever the picture was of. And here's this
picture and this picture. And then she identified them them and then they looked them up and they were right. Wow all of them 100% accurate?
Yeah. Wow. Yeah. So and I'm not saying of course not. What the hell is going on there? Not every um. What is that?
Well I mean. That is that's beyond bizarre. Did you give her a cuneiform? I mean I
wasn't there for this. I you know her mom reported it to me and it has the
email that she received from the staff. And so, you know, the staff is just like, this is what
happened today. And, you know, because these individuals are spelling to communicate, it can
take a lot of time, it can take a whole work and effort to get that information out. So anything
that comes out usually, I mean, a good spelling coach will ask this child first, right, is it okay
if I share this with your parents or is this private between us or whatever? But if they
say it's okay to share, they will write a letter home and this is what happened. And
that was in a letter home. This is what happened today.
This episode is brought to you by Intuit TurboTax. One thing I've learned from doing this podcast
is the value of having real experts around. Whether it's someone breaking down complex
science, health, or even philosophy,
having the right people makes all the difference.
That's exactly what TurboTax does for your taxes.
Because now, taxes is matching with a TurboTax live expert
for your unique tax situation.
Your expert is backed by cutting edge technology
that cross checks millions of data points
for absolute accuracy.
And while they work on your taxes,
you can get real time updates on their progress
and get the most money back,
all while you go about your day,
which means less stress for you
and the best possible outcome for your return.
It's 2025, it's time to file like it.
Now this is taxes into it
TurboTax. Get an expert now at TurboTax.com.
In our session.
Your child reads hieroglyphics. What the hell?
Like what does that mean? Is that the Akashic record? Like is this child like pulling from
all the information that's in the ether? Like Like, how would you be able to read a dead language that, I mean, what percentage
of the human population can read that without AI, without assistance? It's got to be tiny.
It's remarkable. Tiny, tiny percentage. I mean, from a scientific perspective, and this
is one of the things that there was a professor, Bernie Ridland, who first, I mean, from a scientific perspective, and this is one of the things that there was a professor,
Bernie Ridland, who first, I think, came up with this idea.
And then I know Dr. Powell kind of expanded on it,
which Bernie Ridland first saw this kind of gift
in non-speakers, I think in the 70s, I mean, a while back.
And was like, ESP should be considered a savant skill.
And Dr. Powell has talked about this as well.
So savant skills, right, are accepted by science.
This idea that like, how do you know the language,
or math, or this or that,
when you haven't been exposed to it,
or haven't been educated with even maybe
the most simplest music skills,
but now you're playing a symphony, right?
So savant skills is being able to really excel
at something that you haven't been taught.
And savant, there's people
who are born with the savant skills, and also sometimes you can be an accidental savant,
so you get hit on the head.
Yeah, I read about a guy who got assaulted and all of a sudden you do complex geometry.
Yeah, complex geometry and stuff like that. So what's wild is that the materialist scientific
point of view accepts savant skills. We don't know
where they come from, we don't know why, we don't know how people can know this stuff,
they haven't taught, but we accept them as these real big question marks as it's real.
So what Bernie Ribblin said and later Dr. Powell was like, ESP should be considered
a savant skill. These people know something and we don't know how they know it, but they
do. They haven't been taught it, they haven't been exposed to it. And that could be thoughts. It could be knowledge about the future. It could be knowledge about
language. And this is what the whole hope is about the telepathy tapes, right? Is that people will
start to put money behind this research. Because for so long, research around this type of stuff
wouldn't be funded because it would be just dismissed. It's impossible. It's impossible.
It's impossible. And one of the moms in the telepathy tapes who I love so much, her name is
Manisha, she talks about her son. She goes, Akhil is the data. You want to look at the data. You want
the data. Look at my son. He's the data. And some of these parents are wanting, desperate for answers.
They're not in the question of if it's happening. They're wondering how it's happening. And I think
I'm in that part too. When the people that are just, is it possible? Is it possible?
I think for most of us in this world, it's like, yeah, you're like 10 steps behind, man. Like,
it's possible. It's not a matter if, it's why. And that's my hope is that this can, there's like a,
the chains will be like, you know, let off the scientists.
These children that can read things,
are they typing it out like on an iPad?
Are they writing it physically?
How do they do it?
Usually, so there's different forms
of spelling to communicate.
Often there's like a letter board, right?
Sometimes it's a stencil letter board
that you poke a pencil through,
so you really know when you get that letter
and it's really satisfying to like get the pull poke through.
Sometimes there's like just a laminate board where you kind of point
to a letter. Some individuals are typing into a spelling kind of app on an iPad
or there's different spelling like AAC devices. Yeah and then and then
there's some individuals who end up going to the QWERTY key you know the
typical keyboard that we all type with on a keyboard. So there's varying
levels of ability in terms of using your body.
Yeah. Using your body. And the thing I think why spelling has been so, um,
you know, there's such a stigma on spelling and I feel so bad for individuals
using spelling cause they're in there and they are communicating,
but people have said, Oh, but you need the support. So these can't be your words.
Right. Like, like for a spelling partner, let's say, oh, but you need the support, so these can't be your words. For a spelling partner, let's say,
you have to learn to be a communication partner.
You have to learn to really understand the mind-body
disconnect and what's going on with the non-speaker in front
of you.
And sometimes their hand gets lost in space,
so it's good to pull the board away and put it back in again.
Or sometimes you have to cue them, go for it.
OK, get that letter, because that will help with their motor planning, right?
So those supports are critical, but people will look at those supports and say oh well that means they're not typing in independently
But to me that's as wild as saying oh you need reading glasses. You can't read
No, that's a support to help you read you can still read if you've reading classes, and that's how I think of the communication
There's still no influence on the words or
letters being chosen. No, no, no. And I think one of the things, so, but there,
the stigma I think that really started for spelling was facilitated
communication. Actually this is like the first thing you ask, we're going full
circle. So for a long time there was just no hope of getting, you know, we're going full circle. So for a long time, there was just no hope
of getting people who weren't verbal non-speakers out. There just wasn't. And then all of a
sudden, facilitated communication came along. And it was developed, I think in Australia,
I think. But this was ideas of, you know, put some pressure on someone's wrist so they
can really feel where they're at in space, right? Like, they'll be able to spell.
And it was a miracle.
I mean, it was all over the news.
This was great.
And some of the first parents that were using facilitated communication started reporting.
There's telepathy involved.
And this was at Syracuse University in the 90s.
Syracuse knew about this and started kind of burying that information.
And there was a lot of like kind of, you'll be let go if you're teaching this and you're talking about this. So there was kind of bigying that information. And there was a lot of like, kind of, you'll be let go if you're teaching this
and you're talking about this.
So there was kind of big coverup.
So this was new.
This is not new that this was going on.
But then there were some claims of sexual assault.
There's awful things that happened
where what was being claimed didn't happen.
And so people started blaming facilitated communication. Oh, well,
maybe they're pushing their hand or doing this or doing that. And I think for a lot
of people who train in facilitated communication, you're using your hand to put pressure so
the individual knows where the body is in space, but you're not pushing their hand.
But there probably are some cases where that had happened. Well, anyway, so then it got
kind of just stigmatized, right? It's pseudoscience. It's not... And then, so spelling evolved
into these forms where it was like, no touch,'s pseudoscience. And then, so spelling evolved into these forms
where it was like, no touch, do not touch.
And so many of those spelling groups
now are helping individuals.
And the big tenet of this is you cannot touch them.
And that's where spelling's at now,
is that you learn to communicate,
and there's no touching involved.
But I'm one of these people that thinks
like whatever the individual needs
to help them communicate, it's okay.
If you need a little touch so you know where your arm is,
or sometimes it helps you go faster if there's a little push,
like I think go for it, you know,
help these individuals get out there.
Right, this touch is not guiding them
towards specific letters.
This touch is just an affirmation just to help them,
to help them relax, to help them connect.
Yeah, and it was really on set sometimes,
because every once in a while, some parents
hold the board and hold it there for their child.
And we would use these dry erase markers on the screen
to be like, is the board moving?
And it wasn't.
It would be really interesting to get them
in front of some scripts that are very difficult to read.
That's why I brought up cuneiform and Sumerian and maybe even that crazy Voynich manuscript. You know what that
is?
No.
The Voynich manuscript is a book that is of an unknown language.
Okay.
And it's highly detailed and they don't know what it is. They don't know the language. They don't know if it's a fraud
Oh, look at this. This is the voynich manuscript
They don't know when it emerged. They there's a lot of suspicion that someone
Created it and tried to pass it off and sell it as an ancient language in a book
But then some people disagree with that
because they think that the way the words are constructed seems to be in some sort of
a uniform way. It's not gibberish. It's not nonsense. But they do not know what it says.
Obviously, I don't know jack shit about ancient languages, so I'm not the right person to
be determining who's correct and
who wants it to be correct. So they're saying that.
Wow. I have never heard of that.
What is the current state of... Yeah, let's see what it says. Whether they think it's
real. Is there like a synopsis on what people think is. There's facsimiles. Interesting.
Okay. University of Bristol subsequently removed a reference to
Cheshire's claims from this website. What is the website? Cheshire published its
translation in the fold-out illustration in 2023. He claims it depicts a volcano
theories that it places a manuscript creator near the island
of Volcano, which was an active volcano during the 15th century.
However, experts in medieval documents disputed the interpretation vigorously, approached
for comment.
Lisa Fagan Davis gave this explanation.
As with most would-be Voynich interpreters, the logic of this proposal is circular and
aspirational.
He starts with a theory about what a particular series of glyphs might mean, usually because
the words proximity to an image that he believes can interpret, okay, so they don't buy that
this interpretation of it is real. But they're pretty sure it's a language, which is just
fucking insane. Let's scroll up a little higher. Is there
any debunkings of it? These are different people that have made interpretations and
they seem to no one really knows. No one figures it out. Various discussions. Yeah. Wow. Imagine
if you can get that in front of a nonverbal kid and he's like, oh, I know what that is. I mean, that'd be pretty wild. It'd be pretty wild.
Yeah, Jesus wrote this. Oh, he says he's coming back in August. Like, whatever it is. I mean,
this is the fact that the child can read hieroglyphics is insane. I would love to see,
like cuneiform or Sumerian in particular. We had an ancient language scholar named Wes Huffon and he was explaining how a lot of these interpretations were of like the Sumerian text, which is the oldest version of, you know, a lot of these like biblical stories.
In fact, he was like, I can't read it. He goes, I can, I can read all these different languages, but this one is so different than all the others and it doesn't have anything that's like it like a lot of these other languages you can find
similarities in the way they're structured the way the sentences there's
none of that with Sumerian it's like this is a wacky language yeah he's like
I can't read it and he was brilliant yeah so when you talk to a guy like that
who's humble about it right but also like well-read. Yeah. And he's like, I don't know what's going on.
What does it?
Give that to the kid.
So interesting.
Yeah.
I mean, it seems like there's a lot of opportunity
to really get into that with these non-verbal kids
if you find one that is there more than one that
has this ability to do this?
I mean, I can only comment on the people I've met,
but I think of all the people that we're
talking to a lot, you know, for the project and now the film. Yeah, I mean, it's definitely
more than one. I mean, at least I know 15 or 20 who can, who seem to know various language
they haven't been taught.
15 or 20.
Mm hmm.
Wow. Yeah. And one of the earlier children that Dr. Powell was studying, this boy knew really a kind of
odd language.
It was like Russian and Japanese, and I think he was five or six and could just speak in
different languages and knew different languages.
It's absolutely remarkable.
Wow.
Yeah.
And is there even the most out there theory about what's going on?
I mean, this is the thing, right?
There hasn't been a lot of research around this phenomenon.
And I think I can only go again off of what spellers have said.
I mean, one thing is that they say that there's a neurology behind language,
right? The current, the most baseline language is not with words. Words are these 3D objects
that we attach to these thoughts and feelings and that is the thing that they can understand,
which makes sense. That would be what telepathy is, right? If you're not using words.
Well that is our version of telepathy. We make noise with our mouth, and then you can read my mind.
Right.
Yeah, kind of.
Sort of.
Kind of.
I mean.
In a clumsy way.
Yeah.
But if you think of prayer, right, that's telepathy.
If people who come back from a near-death experience,
and they say they have these communications with someone,
you don't have a body, that's telepathy, right?
Like if a medium is talking to someone
or getting messages from someone who's passed,
like that's telepathy. So it seems that the baseline, to me, like all of this has proven for me
that we have a soul or there's at least, if that word is triggered into someone, that
at least there's a conscious body, there's a consciousness in each of us that doesn't
need a body. And so I think the language thing is like, we've put words over this thing,
but the telepathy, the baseline is there no matter what.
And if you can understand the baseline
of what's being communicated, the words don't matter.
Does that make sense?
It does, yeah, it does.
It's hard to grasp, but it makes sense.
Are you aware of the history of research in Ayahuasca?
I mean, I know what it is, but yeah.
One of the more interesting aspects of it
is when scientists first discovered it
and discovered its properties
and they did experiments on it,
they wanted to call one of the ingredients telepathyne.
But due to the rules of scientific nomenclature,
they realized that it had already been named
harmin.
So this harmin is one of the ingredients.
It's in one of the plants that's used to make this brew.
But when the scientists explored this and started experimenting with it, it was somewhere
in the early 20th century, they realized that they could read each other's minds
and that they were communicating
and that they were having a shared experience
that seemed to be completely mental,
but independently they all verified the exact same thing.
And so that's why they wanted to name it telepathyne,
which is a way more fun word than harming.
Way more fun, yeah.
But this idea that we need something to access this dormant part of
What is human consciousness? Yeah, and I think that type of stuff can really help right? I mean people
I think what's cool is that a lot of the research on
You know psychedelics is kind of converging with this stuff right now around telepathy
and the non-speakers.
I think a lot of people have had these experiences
on psilocybin or on an ayahuasca trip or whatever
where there's this realization that we're way more mental.
There is a non-physical world that is out there.
Yeah, there's something.
And this work and Thomas Campbell's work,
and there's a bunch of people who are considering this now,
which I always wonder, like, if you
get an enormous number of people that
have a shift in the way they view reality itself,
like, what impact does that have on reality? Yeah, I mean, I think that's a big in the way they view reality itself? Like what impact does that have on reality?
Yeah, I mean, I think that's a big thing, right?
And I keep thinking, you asked about the pushback
around this, and what's interesting is it's not just
from skeptics who don't want to believe in telepathy
and that the non-visible world is real,
but also from people in the spelling community
who don't want people to mention
telepathy out of fear that it's going to foil their efforts to make this like standard practice
in schools.
In fact, some of the teachers and others who've been involved in our project have been getting
letters from the IASC, like a spelling group saying, don't talk about telepathy or you're
going to have your accreditation taken away.
Why?
I don't understand.
Why would that mess with spelling?
I think the fear is that if you...
I actually don't know.
I mean, because most of the people I'm working with,
almost all of them, every single one of the people
I'm working with sees this as happening in their homes,
in their classrooms.
And it's not just teachers and parents and ministers and rabbis and parapsychologists
and speech pathologists and occupational therapists.
These are all the people reporting it, right?
And for them, I think the thing is truth is never harmful.
It might be difficult, but it's not harmful.
And what this truth means is that we have to change our systems, right, of education.
We have to change how we think about things.
And I think there is a deep fear of people
having their darkest, deepest thoughts exposed.
That's probably not comfortable for the government,
for people in control, for people who are controlling
things with money.
Oh, I think that's common, whether we like it or not.
Yeah.
But why?
I think this truth might be really uncomfortable for some,
but it's so important to get out there.
You can't
accept and love someone as a whole being unless you can see and know all of them, right? And the
only people I feel really in service to are the non-speakers who haven't had a voice and all the
people loving and supporting them or who are saying, this is real, we want this out there.
And so the gatekeeping around this has been massive. I mean, yes from the science world
but also from the spelling world.
Why from the spelling world? That's what I don't understand.
I think there's so many challenges of people saying, oh because they're using these supports, these words aren't their own.
And then I think there's this conflated idea like, oh if they know they're people with telepathy,
they'll think their thoughts aren't their own either.
Oh, if they know they're people with telepathy, they'll think their thoughts aren't their own either.
And it's a weird idea because just because you're talking to me doesn't mean that I don't
have my own thoughts or words, right?
Like I can read a book which thoughts are coming at me.
It doesn't mean I don't have my own thoughts.
So you can hear thoughts, and that doesn't mean you don't have your own.
I mean, so it's like putting too much together that I think is talking about
celeb, but he's not going to foil spelling. But some people believe that to be true. And
it just doesn't make any sense to me. Yeah. Like why would any, I don't understand why
spelling would even get involved in this. I don't know. I mean, like spelling is universally
accepted as being important. Well, it's no, but this is the problem. Spelling is universally accepted as being important. Well, no, but this is the problem.
Spelling is not.
I just talked to a parent the other day who
said, I've been trying to get a communication partner
with my daughter in school so she can contribute.
And the school system will not pay for that.
They're like, nope, you cannot have a spelling communication
partner.
Because there's a funding issue.
Well, no, there's a group called ASHA,
the American Speech-Language Association, who accredits speech-language pathologists,
and they say that spelling is pseudoscience, and I don't know how communication could be
called pseudoscience. What? And so, if you're a speech-language pathologist, and you want
to teach spelling in schools,
that's considered like, nope.
Wait a minute.
Why would they say, I don't understand, what is the argument that spelling is pseudoscience?
This is such a controversy that it's just maddening.
I think, again, it's because of those supports, like because you might need a partner to spell,
it's considered, oh, well, you're not spelling independently.
So spelling is pseudoscience for nonverbal people,
or non-speakers, I should say.
Well, it's not, but Asha is saying that,
which is making it.
And they're only saying this because of the touch,
the ability to touch people while they're doing it?
Well, most of these individuals aren't being touched.
I think that the problem is that no one's presuming competence.
So this is why it was confusing. You're saying spelling in regards to non-verbal
people. I'm sorry, yeah, okay, spelling, okay, I should restate this. So,
spelling is kind of the catch-all phrase for pointing to letters to
communicate, be it on a letterboard or an
iPad or even a keyboard like what we're used to with a computer.
So they're going by this old concept that it's impossible to have any sort of psychic
ability. So if you're proving psychic ability through spelling, this is obviously bullshit
without any examination of it.
Yeah, I think that's a good summary. a good summary back to what we were talking about
Before that they don't want to be foolish, right?
So that this is a compounded issue, but one thing that's kind of I thought this was fascinating is that
Any type of like alternative form of communication has gone through immense battles to be
validated like oh gone through immense battles to be validated. Like, oh my gosh, sign language. I think in
the 1800s, there was a conference in Milan where everyone's like, we cannot teach sign
language. Like, this is, people need to try to speak, you know. Sign language went through
battles for, I mean, over a hundred years to try to even get accepted as a real language.
And it wasn't until the 70s or 80s when that happened. And then Braille, Louis Braille who invented Braille, the people at the school where he invented it was like,
you guys can't use this. We don't accept this. And we don't believe you can read by touching
dots and we don't believe you can type by poking holes. That's impossible. That seems
nuts. So when they did, they would do these tests with Louis and other students to be
like, okay, you write one word and you spell,
you know, and you read it with your dots. And they did. And then they'd say, it's fake.
They planned it. They pre-planned the words. And it wasn't into multiple, you know, variations
that finally Braille was accepted. And now we're seeing the same thing with spelling
to communicate. They need a communication partner. Just like to read, you need glasses.
It doesn't mean they're not communicating on their own. They just need someone to help support their motor control.
Got it.
So you're just using the term spelling in a different way.
Yes.
Most people are accustomed.
That's why I hadn't wanted to clarify.
Yes, yes, yes.
So it's super confused.
Yes.
So that seems like that's on them.
I mean, if there's evidence that it works,
like they should be brought up and people should say like,
what you're doing is a disservice, like a huge disservice for whatever reason, for your own ego, for your own preconceived
notions.
Well, yeah, I mean you think about it, right? For now, you know, decades, if you have apraxia
and you're a non-speaker and you're considered you're not in there, people will treat them,
put them in school systems where they're trying to teach them to like behaviors that are impossible if you
can't control your body, and then often teach them over and over colors and shapes and teach
them like they're not getting it, that they're not smart. So they've been robbed of their education,
they've been robbed of an entire livelihood. So to admit that we've been wrong about this
entire population and educating them wrong, I mean, that's a lot of reckoning. That's a lot of wrong. And ABA therapy, which is now what
kids go into, is a multi-billion dollar industry. And I think that they profit very much so
from having kids go into this type of therapy. And I think ABA therapy can be helpful for
some people. It can be, you know, but for a lot of non-speakers with apraxia, it's like
traumatic, because you're taught...
What is ABA therapy?
It's behavior therapy.
And that's what insurance will cover if you have a practice.
Insurance.
You get to the root of it.
The industry.
I do think it is.
I think there's a huge financial gain.
ABA therapy and ASHA, and I think it's all in bed together.
Money fucks up everything.
It does.
But if anyone listening to this, the number one thing
is that if you think of a human rights violation, right,
that non-speakers aren't allowed to go spell in schools
to communicate, to participate socially,
because these are individuals with ideas and thoughts
and career hopes and want to date and want to have friends
and want to be involved.
And yes, they can't control their bodies,
but they can communicate and to be leaving them out
because, oh, we can't afford or we don't believe
that you should have a communication partner in school.
It's so, it's just mean.
It's a human rights violation, I think.
It's bizarre.
Yeah, I mean, that's, yes, it's also very bizarre.
And it makes sense when you connect it to insurance
and money and in an industry.
That's where it gets gross.
They're against the competitors, which is probably truth.
Yeah.
Because if spelling, if you could be, if they'd say, hey, we will approve for spelling to
be covered by insurance, every family could go do this.
Right now you've just spent thousands of dollars, and go to a conference, do an online thing.
It's not cheap, it's not affordable,
it's not easily accessible.
I mean, it can be depending on where you live, right?
But like, but it's not easy.
That would be a lot more money going away from AVA therapy.
Right, of course.
God, it's always the root of it all.
You get to it, there's someone who's profiting
and doesn't wanna stop profiting. Yeah. Yeah. And the whole industry of a bunch of people working and yuck. So
you first recognize that there is some sort of an ability. When do you start expanding
your idea of what children can and can't do, what they can and can't
see? Like when does it get to where you're at now?
Like spiritual gifts, when do you start accepting those kind of things?
Yeah, I think the corroboration of person after person after person was really helpful, you
know?
Do you remember like the first one that made you reconsider or consider?
Well, okay, so the telepathy was definitely that, okay, that became pretty quickly and
it was really funny too as how like the people working on this, like on my crew and my camera
guy and stuff, my DP Michael, like would quickly, we were all kind of like, okay, this is happening,
like you'd get almost bored seeing it, it like because became so common and so easy that like that's a lot telepathy
Quickly became unimpressive, which is that's so not so wild to say out loud, but then it would be
Like I remember Houston who's a beloved individual
Both in my life and also in the project and his mom as well
he he had this relationship with stones where he could feel like the energy of crystals.
And Katie, his mom, is an evangelical and didn't put much stock into any new age thing.
And I think she went to get a massage and they gave her like a bag of crystals and stuff.
And she was like, come on, and kind of put those in her bathroom upstairs behind one
door and you know. And Houston came home from school, like ran into the primary bedroom and then went
to the bathroom and found the rocks and like was so excited and put them in lines next
to his bed and wanted to put his head next to them. And he could feel the energy coming
from these stones. And I always thought, okay, people believe in stones and maybe they matter
because people believe in them. But like I didn't actually think they had energy of like healing gifts and here's Houston
going feeling the stones. So that made me think, what? Okay, maybe there's something
here. Enough individuals saying they could see oras around plants and animals and people.
So that was something I started being like, okay, this is happening enough and enough
that I believe that. And then the language was the next thing and that was pretty remarkable. And I'm not saying every non-speaker has these gifts. I'm just saying the people that I believe that. And then the language was the next thing, and that was pretty remarkable.
And I'm not saying every non-speaker has these gifts. I'm just saying the people that I've
met that have been a part of this project, and there's an awful lot ado. And I think
probably the gifts change per person too, right?
How often do you see the language thing?
You know, I should send out another question error, but probably every five individuals.
But that's a rough number, but it would be interesting to survey.
Are there any other data points that would indicate that someone would be more likely
to have these language skills? Is there any factors about these individuals,
like the differences in their conditions or the environment?
Well, this is one thing that has been really remarkable, I think, especially since the
Solopathy Apes came out, is how much belief and just like acceptance of these type of things matters for them to show themselves, right? So
I was talking to a parent the other day who's not in the telepathy tapes of someone I've met
through this and she said, look, my son after the telepathy tapes came out, you know, he's about 19
said, I need to come out to you. I can also read your mind. But just never felt comfortable saying
it because didn't think his parents would respond well, right? Oh. And another teacher was telling me, look, now that this has come out, like I've realized
this to be a truth in her clinic or classroom, she will do 10 minutes for thought sharing in the
beginning of the day where they can all talk telepathy and hang out. And she said it's like
the one and the only times when they're all quiet and they're just thought sharing. And she said that, you know, now the telepathy is out, more and more parents are like being
told this and, you know, accepting it.
Because when I fell into this world, before the telepathy tapes was out in the world,
almost every single parent or teacher I met was like thinking this was an individual miracle
happening alone in their house.
They couldn't tell anyone.
Even sometimes the spouses were fighting.
I met one parent once, not in the telepathy tapes, but, you know, I met her in their house. They couldn't tell anyone. Even sometimes the spouses were fighting. I met one parent once, not in the celebrity tapes, but I met her in the
journey and she said, my husband wants to take my child away because he thinks I've
lost my mind by saying that this is happening.
Oh, Jesus.
So, you know, so now that it's out there, I think it's a... It's just the thing about
it. If you have kids, right? Like if you believe in your kids, I believe you, I believe in you, it makes a difference.
The placebo effect.
Right, of course, sure.
We know the placebo effect works.
If you believe in something, it makes a difference.
So when you say to a non-speaking individual,
like, I want to know all of you.
I'm excited to know all of you, even if that means that nothing
you can tell me is going to scare me or make you love you less.
I think that's a cool way to approach anyone really.
Yeah, certainly.
I think skepticism and cynicism is probably also contagious.
You probably feel that negative doubting energy, which is very suppressing.
If you're already nonverbal and you're already like dealing with a lot of other stuff like that
Negativity on top of it. You'd probably not want to even try right? Yeah. Yeah, there's a shame
Just negative feelings. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah, what do you?
Do you think this is something that you have I
Do you
Do you think this is something that you have I
Think we all have it. I mean, I've you have you tried to encourage it in yourself or have you tried to explore it? Um
Well
Because I would imagine yeah, I was doing this work I'd be like
Yeah, yeah, and I And for sure. And I will, you know, I often pray at night.
And sometimes I'll also just beam out
thoughts to some of the non-speakers of my life
and hope they catch them, you know?
And you know, they're loving thoughts usually, of course.
And then there's been a few times where I'll see a non-speaker that maybe, you know, I've
come to know and love in a dream and they're either communicating something to me and I'll
write the parent in the morning and say, can you ask so and so if they were trying to communicate
X, Y, Z at all or, you know, were they trying to communicate with me last night is usually
what I'll say.
And they'll say, oh, yeah, they wanted you to know blank, blank, blank, blank, blank,
and it will be what happens.
But that's only happened in dreams, not in real life.
I mean, dreams are real life.
But yeah, so I think the more people are open to this
and practicing it, it's there, you'll get there.
And a lot of teachers are able to get it back,
two-way telepathy, where they can start
hearing their students back. Ooh. And you know, there's a teacher,
and I love this story, because I heard her on a podcast, actually. And it was sent to me,
I was like two years into my journey. And this teacher thought no one else in the world was
going through this. And she said, there's a student, and he's telepathic, and he can read
my thoughts. And then all of a sudden, I started being able to hear him back. And I'd be cooking dinner and I'd hear him.
Or, and he would tell me things, he'd just pop into my mind.
And he was younger, so she had to set parameters,
like you can't come into my mind all the time.
But she said that in the classroom then,
they started being able to teach, just do the whole thing,
the whole lesson without talking.
She'd ask him something in his head, he'd start typing it.
She'd ask something else in his head, he'd start typing it.
And that was something that, head, he'd start typing it, she'd ask something else in his head, he'd start typing it. And that was something that
like a lot of teachers have expressed that or speech pathologists. And I've
often wondered, why is it easier for the educator, you know, instead of the parent?
And I think it's because parents put so much stuff on our kids, right? Like if I'm
watching my son play basketball and he's not boxing out and he's not doing this, I'm like, oh, good, oh, good, I can't even watch, you know?
But if it's someone else's kids, I'm like, oh, they're five, they're just learning, you
know? I have no care if anyone else's kid is doing this. But so I think with our kids,
we put all this baggage on them even if we're not intending it. Like the energy is so great
where if it's just free and you're just wide open and you're just ready, I think some cool bond can often happen between, I mean between anyone, but certainly at
least what my experience has been more educators than parents that goes into
this two-way thing. This teacher, did they explain what the sensation was like,
like hearing the words in their head, like how did they receive these
things?
So at this point, there's a lot of teachers,
so I have like a little bit more data points on this.
And for her, she was hearing like a voice in her head,
very clear, you know, very clear.
Was she hearing that she interpreted as the child's voice?
Was it a child's sound?
Yeah, yeah.
And that's what's so cool is for some of the individuals
who've kind of gone through this will say,
you just know it's their voice, even though they don't have a of gone through this will say, you just know it's their voice,
even though they don't have a voice in the real world,
like you just know it's their energy imprint, right?
Like this is their voice.
But then I've met some teachers who are like,
know what comes in as like a visual package, if you will.
Right?
Or one of the most beautiful things I heard
from a mom in England, and I think her story is great
because she knew this was going for years, was scared to put it out there. She finally did. I'm not getting any
younger. I'm putting it out. And then of course there's a lot of parents from England that
were like, me too, me too, me too. This is happening to me. And she once explained it
to me in the most beautiful way. She said, like, if you say the word with a word, Thanksgiving,
you've just said the word Thanksgiving. If you send it telepathically, you receive the
smells you receive sleeping in your childhood bed again, like your crotchety uncle who's mad about that, like the game of, you
know, the sound of the football game, maybe snow, you're this person walking with a pie,
like the prayer you say, whatever it is, all the things that make your experience that
comes to you.
And there's no misunderstanding what this means and feels and is, and it's this whole
expansive idea. there's no misunderstanding what this means and feels and is, and it's this whole expansive
idea. So I think she receives things that way.
Wow.
Yeah. It's really cool.
It's so cool, but it's also because of the cultural restrictions that we have put on
the idea of telepathic communication, even while you're saying this.
I'm so fascinated and I believe it for sure. Part of me is like, shut up. You know what
I mean? It's like that part of you is strong. And I wonder if that part of us, unfortunately,
because of all the charlatans and because of these the cultural restrictions on Just the concept of telepathy. I wonder how much of that holds us back
Because there's some things that you do know and you don't know why you know them
You know, and if you're a person who goes on instincts, you'll follow those instincts and you go
I have no idea how I knew that was the right thing to do. But it was. Yeah.
Yeah.
Yeah. I mean, look, I think one thing is experiencing something.
You just believe it, like I said, and I think anyone who has engaged with, walks
into a room with a non-speaker going to do this, which from my experience has
been quite a few, it's not
hard to see. It's pretty easy to witness it. And so when you experience something over
and over and over again, right, it's like, are all these parents and teachers all around
the world and speech pathologists and principals and ministers and rabbis and everyone who's
witnesses lying, did they all come in this great conspiracy to decide that like we're going to trick the world or they're experiencing something and
telling the truth. And the first one is out there. That's like the most impossible thing to imagine.
The other thing I want to say too is like there's a motivation for someone who's a charlatan, right?
You want to make money off of someone or something, especially when they're the most vulnerable,
you're going to exploit this and etc, etc. or it's for your own ego, your gain or career
or whatever.
You know, to date, because non-speakers have not been able to have the resources that they
need to spell and engage in society, they've not been able to have a career yet.
I mean, some have, but very few, or make money on their own, or, you know, be in the popular
crowd or have some cool whatever.
And so what's to gain?
What is to gain?
And it's also takes so much energy often to spell out something.
I can't imagine that you'd spell out a lie.
I mean, there's nothing to gain in this entire population talking about this in silos all
over the world.
Right.
And also very few people engage with nonverbal people. So
for this to be this very bizarre sort of strange phenomena that's happening with
these people, you would have to be in that experience with those people to
even be able to appreciate what's going on. Yeah.
I think most people, you know, we're so accustomed to talking, we're so accustomed to typing
things out and communicating the way we do normally, that we don't even think about
what the experience is like for both the parents and the child, and that this is a completely
different way of living. So whatever
these innate abilities that we may have, of course they would be the ones who
would have them. It kind of makes sense that they would be the ones that would
be so tuned into us, whereas us, we're sort of probably drowning those
thoughts, even if they do exist, we're drowning them off with language, with
cultural expectations, with social media, with news.
Yeah, with thoughts.
Yeah, with everything.
With all this, we're bombarded.
We're never even alone with our thoughts anymore.
Right.
We're just bombarded constantly 24-7.
And, you know, I mean, this is the number one criticism about social media
is that it's shaping your mind in a way that you're not even asking it to.
You really don't have agency over it.
You're just constantly being bombarded with data.
And that data, whether you like it or not,
even if you're objective, it's changing the way
you interface with the world.
These people aren't experiencing any of that.
I mean, I think they're probably experience,
I think they have so much input coming in
that it can be overwhelming.
But right, it's not informing their, yeah.
I mean.
They're not engaging.
Yeah, they're not engaging.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, it's really, it's really remarkable, you know.
Well, beyond, right?
Yeah.
Because it changes the way we think about human beings.
It changes what our potential is.
I've always thought
that it was an emerging aspect of human consciousness, but then as time has gone on, I think I start
to think probably more than that. It's probably as always been there. Animals have weird abilities
that we don't understand, like the ability that birds have to navigate.
We don't understand what that is. We don't understand how they're doing that. But we
know they do it. You know? And they have also... There's some ability that animals have to
read electrical signals, to read magnetic signals. Like, what's going on there? What
are they doing?
You know Rupert Sheldrake again who's in the project, he's the biologist from Cambridge,
he talks about something called the mental field and that was like a good handle for
me to start to understand how this could be possible. And so by that, we know that fields
can exist beyond something and we take it as part of science. Like we know the earth
has a gravitational field. You can't see it. You know it's there, but it's real.
And we know that magnets have a magnetic field.
You can't see it, but it's there.
And so his theory is that our mind
has a mental field that extends outside of the brain.
And this mental field can overlap with someone.
And that a great example of the mental field, if you will,
would be when you see a murmur of birds or a school fish,
and they're all turning at the exact same time. They don't bump into each other. They're not like having concussions left and right the bird ones the wild
It's wild. It's like they do it
It's almost like they have a school of fish is essentially the same thing
But in the water and that water and yeah, and it's like they have one mind, right?
It does feel like one mind and so this this beautiful idea
It's not it's not it's just out there.
And one of the things I came across that I absolutely adored as well was that Mark Twain,
he had, he coined this term mental telegraphy. And what he was responding to was kind of
what we think of as phone telepathy, but that someone would write a letter. Let's say he
wrote a letter to, I'm just gonna make something up, like great Aunt Margaret, right? And he hadn't written to her in seven years,
and he postmarked it on March 5th. Well, you know, maybe two weeks later, he got a letter
from Aunt Margaret post March 5th. And that would happen a lot in the time of letter swapping,
that at the same time, both people thought of each other, they hadn't written to each other
a long time, the letters were postmarked on the same day, you know what happened the same day,
and there was such a concrete evidence there of, wow.
And so he wrote a lot about that.
He thought that was fascinating, you know?
And like Upton Sinclair, who wrote The Jungle,
you know, wonderful author,
he wrote a book called Mental Radio,
where he was trying to do telepathy experiments
with his wife.
And she would think of something or vice versa,
and they'd draw it out.
And he had done this so many times
that he talks about, this is real.
I know this to be true, because I've experimented it,
and heard I can thought share.
And so it's like we have examples of this
throughout recent history.
But I definitely think if you go back to many native cultures,
I mean, even the Vikings, the Druids, whoever,
like none of this would be shocking, right?
They're not gonna go try to prove this,
this was part and parcel of being human.
I think it still is, but to your point,
it's just been buried by the noise
that we've filled up our lives with.
Yeah, like our feet aren't the same shape anymore
because we don't walk barefoot.
You know, our feet have atrophied and gotten withered and twisted and weak.
And that's one of the reasons why people
wear barefoot shoes, right?
Because they want to engage their toes.
And if you don't, your foot atrophies and becomes weird.
It just makes sense that your mind
or these abilities of consciousness
would also atrophy because they're never used.
Because it's so easy to communicate with words.
And also you're dealing with other
people manipulating those words and trying to decipher whether or not this is true or not.
Yeah. Yeah. And I mean, you know energy, right? You did martial arts and stuff. So you understand
like if someone's energy, how it can impact you. And I think that like most of us have some
sense of like you walk into a room and someone just like, they're killing you. Or like if you're really, you know, I think energy is a real thing.
But I think as far as like these gifts go or whatever, like telepathy, you know, we've
all had that experience where someone's like, oh, I just knew the second they died.
Like I felt it.
Like I fell to the ground in my apartment and I have no idea.
And then I got the phone call or, or the, my aunt came to me in a dream last night said I love you and I'm always here and
whatever and then like the next day they get the phone call their aunt died and
there's so many stories like that we hear just an everyday life right sure so
again like it's just if we sat back and really thought about this this isn't
wild this is part of the human experience right and the non-speakers
are just the great skies.
Yeah.
It's really weird to look at it in reverse though for me because like I said, I did think
it was an emerging aspect, but now I think it's probably not.
It's probably something that's been buried by our technology or our progress.
We think it's progress.
It's easier to communicate with people with noises and say anything, but we're probably
missing this thing that used to be a part of us and it comes in these little blips,
little weird waves, especially heightened anxiety or heightened, you know, anytime you're
stimulated in some sort of a way, which makes sense why with psychedelic drugs, which dissolves
the ego,
you would have more of those.
Right, right.
This is...
Right.
So have you tried to expand your ability in any way?
Have you tried to meditate and try to find where that is
inside your consciousness?
In the beginning, I think, when I was starting to go into this, I was meditating a lot and
doing a lot of stuff.
But right now, I'm so focused on just getting the story out that it's like all my time is
put on that.
And I've kind of put my own stuff aside for a little bit here.
But meditation, I think that's the number one way to help open up anything mental.
And meditation, like, 20, 30 years ago was considered kind of fringe and out there, and
the idea that it could benefit you.
Scientists looking into that were kind of like, oh, this guy's kind of off the...
And now those people were right.
The response has been insane.
Like the telepathy tapes shot to the top of the charts, like everybody was talking to
me about it and sending it to me before I ever wound up listening.
Is that, it's got to be gratifying in some sort of way that like at least people are
responding to this and they're very excited about it.
Yeah, I think so.
And I think, I mean, definitely it's gratifying.
But you know, the story behind that is pretty remarkable.
And that's, I think, one of the things that was most gratifying,
because I never intended to make a podcast.
I was trying to make a documentary of this.
And then the documentary became so big that I was like,
oh, maybe I have to make it as docu-series,
pitched it to a bunch of streamers and stuff.
And I think people loved it.
And they were like, oh, this is such a good pitch.
And oh, my gosh. But like, ah, it doesn't fit our mandate. like it what is it's not true crime. It's not this is not that and so
Everywhere we pitched said no everywhere we pitched and I remember going home and feeling devastated because I thought this was the most important news
In the world, how could anyone like this is this needs to get out there and thinking it's the end of the road
I can't afford to go do a documentary of my own
I can't do this and can't do that. And I was just like, you know, and I thought this could be a good podcast, but I never
made one.
So then it was sort of like, this will be my final pitch.
Like hopefully someone will notice and then we can get the film funded.
And so I made the podcast as just like a desperate like Hail Mary, like someone listen to this,
please and fund the documentary.
And then it like went crazy.
And it was what was so funny too is when I first started telling a lot of families and stuff about the podcast,
they were like, I don't know if that's a great idea because spelling is so you have to see it to believe it to know that they're really not touched and that they're really communicating and telepathy you have to see to believe like none of this will work as a podcast.
And it was just that lightning bolt again, you know, like, no, no, no, this is it, this is it,
you guys, like, this is it, like, I just know,
it's gonna be great.
And they were like, uh, you know?
And so the fact that it did what it did is just humbling
and I think so well-deserved for the non-speakers
and those parents and teachers who were brave enough, right,
to tell their stories finally.
Yeah, I'm glad you decided to follow that instinct
because the podcast is the perfect way to do it
because podcasts are easily shareable.
So that's how things really get out there.
Someone tells you about it, you tell other people about it,
you go on a podcast, tell people about your podcast,
and that's what starts it.
Yeah, I mean, so and I think the medium too is so,
I never realized what a special medium it is
because you're talking directly into someone's ears.
And you're just in their mind like and just can talk to them for
a few hours and this was a story that we needed some real long yes you know
exploration also it's fascinating and that's what you really want out of a
podcast other than humor you want it to be fascinating yeah you you want it to
lock in and excite you. And that certainly
does that. And I think most people want to believe.
And I would not have put my time and effort and money into this if it wasn't real. I mean,
it is real. And people don't have to take my word for it. They could just go start working with a speller.
And again, not all spellers, I think.
Maybe, I don't know.
Who knows?
But I think these are gifts are pretty easy to see
if you start engaging with a speller.
Well, it certainly seems like it.
So has the film started?
Where are you at right now?
So our first day of filming was yesterday, which was really exciting.
Congratulations.
Yeah, yeah.
And so we, yeah, we're off to the races.
We have five non-speaking members of our production team, which is awesome.
Oh, wow.
So cool.
Like two are specializing in like working on graphics and depicting what things that
they talk about look like, like the chat on the hill.
I don't know if you've heard of this telepathic chat room
where non-speakers hang out.
We can come back to that.
And like the realms where maybe they get information,
or just even what it means to see auras
or to see stuff like that.
So we have two graphics kind of advisors
that will be working with the graphics house on that stuff.
We have a scientific advisor
who's gonna help us figure out how to best do the telepathy tapes with the scientists that we'll be working with the graphics house on that stuff. We have a scientific advisor who's going to help us figure out how to best do the telepathy tapes with the
scientists that we'll be working with, and then two-story kind of consultants. So it's
really cool to all five of these individuals, I believe it's the first paying job they've
ever had. So that's kind of, it's just cool having them on our team.
Oh, that's very cool. So what is this chat on the hill? OK. So that was one of the harder things to wrap my head around.
When I first met Katie in Houston, Katie said,
Houston talks about this telepathic chat room
where he can go hang out with his friends.
He can kind of tune into the telepathic chat room.
And he teaches there, too.
And it's a place where they can commune and talk and encourage you to. He teaches in the telepathic chat room and that and he teaches there too and it's a place where they can
commune and talk and encourage you to...
He teaches in the telepathic chat room?
Yeah, Houston's like really special.
He really is and he's and I think there are different roles that this person might talk
about plant energy and this person might talk about this and I've heard this down from...
Well, let's just back up.
So...
How many people are in this telepathic chat room? Well, I don't know, but, well, I'll get to that answer.
Let me just, so, because I think that's an interesting thing.
So Houston started talking about this, what he calls the talk on the hill, which is this
telepathic chat room.
And then I met his good friend, John Paul, who's also kind of based in Atlanta.
And John Paul would go up to his room and put four pillows on his head.
And his mom was like, he's on the hill.
And this is what he does to kind of get everything out,
all the sounds of the house, so we can really concentrate
and get there.
And she said he really has developed
a beautiful relationship with his girlfriend on the hill.
And I'm like, what on earth?
So I didn't know what to make of it,
only I knew that it felt very real to these parents and these individuals. friend on the hill. And I'm like, what on earth? So I didn't know what to make of it,
only I knew that it felt very real to these parents and these individuals and people were
talking about it in Atlanta. So I thought, okay, this might be an Atlanta thing, that
these individuals are doing this. They don't have to be in the same room, the same zip
code that they can like connect. And on the day I met John Paul, he was on the hill at
one point. And I asked that question. I said, how many people are in the hill right now and I think he wrote like four thousand something and I was like
Holy cow, it seems like a lot. He's like well people are really excited about the documentary right now
So everyone's tuning in to find out like what's happening with this
so I was like whoa and then and then I
Just like buried that in my heart is not great
This is something that is real in Atlanta and then I was talking to like the next big, whoa, again, telepathy tapes was not out yet. I met a minister in
Arizona who had like the largest youth, like special needs youth ministry or something.
And I was on Zoom with him because he was like, found out about the telepathy and found
out about these gifts. And there was a person in his congregation who could predict the
future and see things happening in other spaces in the world. And he was just, you know, I think we were connecting to be
like, okay, yeah, you've seen this. Okay, let's talk about this. And he was kind of
going through his list of what he's witnessed with the individuals in his ministry. And
one of the things he said to me was, I was on Zoom the other day with another young individual
or another individual from Minnesota, these two to connect. And
they start talking about something called the hill. They go to this place called the
hill. Have you ever heard about this? And I almost fell out of my chair. And then maybe
like a few months after that, I was talking to a teacher and she goes, you know, some
of my students, have you ever heard about this? They talk about going to some place
called the hill. And one of them talks as he goes there to learn about time travel.
And the other one likes to talk about someone from Norway, who talks about the bees and
beekeeping and bee stuff. And at that point, I mean, my head is exploding, just like, wait,
it's like real? Like, geez, you know? And then there's a father in Israel who I have
talked to a lot about this over the years, and he's kept
really good track too of like how telepathy has been buried in the spelling community
and in the education community and what's been going on and how teachers are being fired.
So he's fascinating. But one of the things he told me, he's like, oh yeah, we have a
separate hill in Israel where a lot of the Orthodox, like Jewish folks go and they have
their own hill. And then I would get some emails and be like, you know, there's also a hill in Arizona and Florida, like there's
different hills. So it's a mystery. It's a magical mystery.
But they all call it the same thing.
Yeah. And then I've also met, like, after the telepathy tapes came out, one family wrote
me and said, hey, my son has said he has telepathy, no doubt there, but he can only do it with people in the room, but he's never been to the hill. How does
he get to the hill? And I thought, I don't know, I guess ask another non speaker who
maybe can teach you how to like dial into the right frequency. You know, I'm not exactly
sure how that works, but it's really, it's, it's awesome. You know,
now is there one hill or is there many hills?
I think there's a few hills.
And have they verified that people
who are communicating in this hill
are actually communicating with these individuals?
Yeah, and in fact, that's one of the storylines in the film
that I'm really excited about.
Like, one of the subjects is a young girl who's always
felt pretty isolated.
You know, it's hard sometimes to make friends if you're not able to communicate school or
whatever.
So, but she was bringing up names and has brought up names that her mom was like, you
know, they're not in her school, they're not in our periphery, they're not in any of our
social stuff.
And then once the telepathy tapes came out, these Facebook groups sprang up of families that were kind of going through the stuff and in that process
she found I think like four of these individuals that her daughter was saying
she was really good friends with on the hill. And they also say they go to the
hill. Mm-hmm yeah yeah and so we've like corroborated all these points in this
girl's life. Have you tried to corro actual distribution of information actual communication? Mm-hmm. Yeah, you've done that
Mm-hmm. Yeah, it's yeah
I mean that's of course like you have to imagine for everyone in this world all the families that I'm close to in teachers and
therapists and stuff
It's still remarkable. So anytime someone says something we will try to validate it
Like this person just said they saw this person the hill. Can Can you validate they were there? And then, oh my gosh, yes. What did they talk about? This
was said and this was said. Hey, this person says that person is on the hill and talking about blank.
Oh yeah, I can verify that that person teaches about that on the hill. So, like, it's not like
anyone is taking any of this just in stride. Like, where you just, you know, I think there's still
that human nature, like you're talking about that like even
The parents and teachers and me and the people on the front lines of this are still always trying to very
Validate it like this happened was that true did you get that same thing?
And then there's that moment of like oh my god like that's happening with all of us all the time to that mind-blowing
Wow, that's just you know bore out. It's remarkable when it happens.
The hill thing is next level.
It's next level.
And why is it the hill?
Why do they call it the hill universally?
Well, Houston named it the chat on the hill.
He named it.
How do the other kids name it?
They're all saying it as well though, right?
They're all saying the same term?
Yeah, but I mean, just like, you know, someone named this cup and we're all calling it cup,
right? I think like it just spreads.
So you think that child, Houston, he named it
and then everybody else accepted that name?
Yeah.
He didn't hear it from someone else?
I mean, he might've.
But that's the question, right?
What is the name?
Like why on the hill?
Well, I've asked people that and one individual is like,
it just feels more like a hill of thoughts, like just this
mound of just thoughts and energy and being.
And so-
I wonder what they're seeing.
Well, we're working on that for the film.
That's why we have these two graphics non-speaker advisors, so they can work to make us understand
what it looks like to them.
And then actually, once the telepathy tapes was done,
I started releasing something called the talk tracks where we
like keep going with answering some of the questions.
And one of them was this young man who reached out after episode two.
And he's like, I want to help or volunteer for you.
And I was like, go work with some non-speakers.
That's going to be the best thing in the world.
And he witnessed the telepathy right away.
He witnessed a few other things.
And he ends up in the first talk tracks episode getting to the hill. And his
story is really beautiful as to how as a neurotypical man he was able to do that. But people need
to listen to it because it's really cool.
So he figured out how to get to the hill.
Mm hmm. Yeah. Yeah.
What does he describe it as?
Well he said it's divinely protected, that there seems to be-
Divinely.
Mm-hmm.
There seems to be some sort of guide there
that you can't just go in,
like Halliburton can't go rip it off.
There's like,
it seems to be guarded,
and that only people with good intentions can go.
And I think, I mean,
I hope people don't try to start going there.
I really, really don't know they're gonna non spin
Oh, I know it's like one of the pains actually for me
Is that like oh and putting this out there like but I do think the non speakers are in charge there
It's their space is a beautiful space and and and I don't think anyone can just get let in you have to really be
Open open but not just but have but have a good intention. Right, completely pure.
Pureness and love are a big part of this.
And this person who's typical, regular person got in there.
Had they had any experience in the past with any form of telepathy before this?
Well, the reason his story is so beautiful, so again, he's in episode one of the talk
tracks and what happened is he was diagnosed
with a really rare autoimmune disease
and then stage four cancer.
And he kind of realized, I need to save my life,
I'm gonna die if I don't learn to control my thoughts.
And he was able to cure himself.
And he sent me scans and the cancer zone was all gone.
But I think that attention to thought and how thought can change your world and dictate
what happens in your world really did something in his brain that allowed him to live in that
mental space. And I think that helped him. I think that really helped him get to the
Hill. I mean, he talks about more of how he got there.
And it took a few times and for him it was all audible. It felt like static and certain voices.
But then he said, he did a few tests.
Like there was one of the students he works with.
He's like, I knew exactly who it was.
And I could hear their voice.
I just knew it was their voice,
even though I've never heard their voice,
but I just knew it was their energy.
I just knew it was them.
And he's like, so I gave a test and I said, I'm going to tell you this
person's name and this person's name and this person's name and, you know, gave them kind
of a bunch of information and said, when I see you next, you need to tell me this stuff.
And then when he saw that person next, they wrote it, they spelled it out for him.
Whoa.
Yeah. Yeah. So I do think the people experimenting with this have their own deep desire to get it right and try to validate stuff, you know
It's hard just to take on face value. How do you know if it's real or if it's in your own mind?
Yeah, but the weird thing is like if this does I mean
I'm sure you've opened up a lot of people's minds to this and
Again if this expands and then we all agree
that this is a thing, and that this is a possible thing,
and then people start trying to figure out what it is
and develop methods to try to tap into that,
this could be a profound change in just society as a whole.
Yeah.
Yeah, and I think, the thing I hear the most, right,
is people are afraid of their thoughts being out there.
But what's kinda cool-
What's going on in your head that you're so worried
about your- Exactly.
Well, that's- How about clean your brain out?
Exactly. Clean your brain out,
you're not gonna be afraid of that, right?
Yeah, what's going on in your head
that you don't want everybody to know?
Totally. Like, what are your terrible gonna be afraid of that. Yeah, what's going on in your head that you don't want everybody to know? Totally.
What are your terrible thoughts?
It's interesting, because when people say that, I do,
because we all have certain stuff that,
who cares if someone knows a thought,
it all happens to us, right?
You're worried about having something in your teeth
or something, or accidentally passed gas, and whatever.
That type of stuff, I think, who cares?
That's just being human,
right? But when people are that terrified, it's like, what the hell is going on with
you?
Yeah, I think it's the concept of it, too. And also the concept, I think there's the
thought that if someone can read your mind, that you're more vulnerable, that you can't
protect yourself. Like, if you're like, oh, this person's creepy, let me get away from
them. Oh, you think I'm creepy? You know, like that kind of thing.
Like that you won't be able to just like avoid people.
I do think you have some control over it though.
And again, I can only go off of what I've heard from others.
But like, one of the teachers who's been just she's been such an advocate and fighter in
this world for years trying to point to this.
And she said the first experience she ever had around maybe not the first but one of the most cementing
experiences was she was gonna go visit a former student class and the night
before this is wild the night before she went out and picked like Swedish fish
and you know some donuts and you know I forgot what else pretzels or something
and so she comes in to give him his favorite snacks and forgot them in the car.
But she went and she sat with him and talked with him.
And right before she was leaving the classroom,
he took out a pen and drew like a donut, a fish, you know,
and kind of drew the things that she,
and it like rattles her to her core.
Like she knew what she was thinking that night before.
And now that he's graduated, she still works with him just on a volunteer
basis for the sheer joy of just being with him. And she asked him years later, how did
you do that? And were you remote viewing through me? And how did you know at that moment? And
he's like, well, once you were thinking of me, that was like my invitation to come in.
Like I won't just crash into someone's thoughts. It's like I have to be kind of invited in by like,
you know, like the thought.
So I do think that there's a way to kind of control it.
And I know that the teacher that was having the student
jump into her brain a lot, the younger man,
she said like, you need to stop that.
Like, I will invite you in when I want you,
but you can't just come into my mind whenever, that's not appropriate, you know?
Right, right, right.
And so I think every individual is an individual, right?
I mean, how this stuff works is probably different for each person, but I don't necessarily think,
you know, what many spellers have told me is, like, good energy allows them to swap
thoughts, like, good juju allows them to do that.
Being invited in, being open to it, it doesn't feel like they can just go into like, you
know, the person running for sentence thoughts and be like, ah, actually, you didn't fund
them, you know.
Right.
The problem is, like, what if people get really good at that?
Like, what if it expands, and then people are just entering
into your thoughts all the time?
I think technologically that's gonna happen anyway.
You know, it's one of the things that Elon has said
about this Neuralink device that they're enabling.
He said, you're gonna be able to talk without words.
Yeah, yeah, but here's the thing too, right?
It's like, again, I think most,
almost every non-speaker I've met, their concern is love thing too, right? It's like, again, I think most, almost every
non-speaker I've met, their concern is love, unity, right? And so if your thoughts
are other people and your thoughts are loving and about unity, it's not scary
then for other people to be reading your thoughts. You're gonna be caring about
other people, hopefully. The real thought, the real scary thing is that there are a
lot of people out there in this world that do not have thoughts of love and
unity. Right.
They're damaged, hurtful, evil people.
Yep.
And they want to destroy everything around them.
Yep.
And that those people could acquire this ability.
But would they be able to?
Well, that's...
I don't...
This is the thing.
It's like, has there been any evidence that evil people have been able to acquire this
ability?
I would say what I have found, and even talking to scientists about this, that the baseline
for this is love.
There's a wonderful neuroscientist named Julia Mossbridge, and she has studied precognition.
And one of the things she does in these precognition tests is be like, how much unconditional love
do you feel for yourself, for other people, for the device you're taking this test on?
And the more people feel love, the better they do. And one of the things that I've heard from so many
non-speakers with disabilities that the baseline is love,
that love, love, love is like the thing
that unlocks this stuff.
What do they describe love as?
Anything that unifies.
I've heard that over and over again.
What's love?
It's anything that unifies.
Wow.
Isn't that the best description of love ever? It is. Anything that unifies. Ah, wow. Huh.
Isn't that the best description of love ever?
It is. It's a really good description.
So, and that was, yeah, very specific.
Anything that unifies.
So it's almost like they're tapping into some laws of the universe.
Or laws of the universe or laws of reality that we kind of know by trial and error.
But we don't, we don't, I mean, all you need is love.
You know, this is always, love is a ubiquitous concept.
It's like something that everybody always agrees
is very important to life and happiness.
But we don't necessarily practice that culturally
or as a society.
Yeah, I mean, but you go back to like all
the ancient religious teachers and thoughts, right?
So much of it's about love and unity and we're all one
and you might not realize this, but we're all one.
And it's been interesting,
like there's a big question mark right now
on how to do these tests and how to prove it.
And when I brought that up to a few non-speakers,
one of the questions is like,
why do you need to prove this with instruments?
Like the biggest spiritual gift,
the most fascinating one is love.
That will cause someone to jump into choppy waters
and save someone and risk their own life.
It's had mothers like have so much adrenaline
they can lift up a car and save their baby.
Love is the superpower.
And it's like that's, it's just, it's true.
And they're like, why aren't you trying to measure love?
And it's like, okay, good point,
but still people wanna measure telepathy.
And then that brings up the question of like,
of okay, well, is it best to do it in a lab situation
that can be really stressful,
that can be really stressful,
that can be filled with a lot of skeptical people and throwing that energy at you?
Or is it better just to go into your environment, take off the lab coat, learn to spell, go
check this out?
And you think of like really good scientists like Jane Goodall, who when she wanted to
understand like a culture of, you know, how the chimps were working, she didn't bring
them into her lab.
She went and like lived in the jungle for months,
you know, or you want to go look at the lightning bugs
that light up in unison in Vietnam.
I don't know if that's going to work out for you.
If you bring them back to Berkeley
and put them in some building,
you probably have to go sit in the jungle
and wait for them to light up in unison.
So it's like, is it smart to be trying to test the stuff
in our way, in our labs, or is it better to
be like, I'm going to go chill out with you in your living room and see how this works?
The reason why to test it with instruments is for skeptics.
So once we've all agreed that this is an actual phenomenon, this is a real thing, whatever
this is, this is real, the best way to test it is really with consciousness.
Yeah. Yeah. And you know, I think about this a lot, like the skeptics, because again, like
I've said, the families and teachers, the people who, the people are like, let's just
move the science forward. We know what's happening. We know, now we need to know how, not why.
Right? And, and I've thought about like how skeptics can hold back that research in science
and like how much time do you give to them versus like just move on without them. And I was thinking about in the term of like in the olden days,
right, like if a voyager was going out to discover new worlds and people, you can't
go find something that worth this flat and you're going to fall off of it or out there
is a blah, blah, blah, blah. And someone comes back and it's like discovered Iceland, let's
say, and it's like, oh, my gosh, you would not believe it. Like geysers are coming out
of the earth and there's black stone beaches and black sand beaches
and Northern light, you know, whatever they're explaining.
And they come back and some people would be like,
wow, let's go explore it and find out more
and, you know, draw things of it.
And some people might be like, don't go with them,
don't go, don't even try it, they're making it up.
It's not real, that couldn't exist.
You're gonna die if you go.
And I feel like the scientists,
or the skeptics now are those people on the shore being like, there is no Iceland. Don't go look. And you're
gonna blah, blah, blah. And it's like, that's such a, it's such a weight to forwarding thought and
research. And this is such a cool, exciting new frontier.
Yeah. Well, the thing is, is like, there's levels of skeptics. There's people that are just objective and they're like I need data
I need to see something and then there's people that it doesn't matter what they see they're never gonna believe right and those are the weird
Ones because there's a lot of people out there that are self
Proffessed skeptics. Yeah, those are the ones that are the problem. Yeah, like they call themselves skeptic, right? Okay, right
Well, how about just be objective?
Right.
Well, don't just be skeptical.
Right.
Because if you're completely skeptical and you're always looking for a negative, you're
going to be biased by your own preconceived notions.
Right.
I mean, if you're only skeptical, you're a close-minded believer is what you are.
You're not open-minded.
Right. You're as dogmatic as the next person who just believes their beliefs and won't look
any further at this is it. Like, that's not skeptical.
Well, that's atheists.
Right.
And a lot of, for a lot of, well, I mean, there's different kinds of atheists too. There's
some that I would just, I'd say they're self-professed atheists with a really more agnostic than anything. Yeah. Yeah
Yeah, but I would say I mean I would say I'm skeptical every time I hear something
You know my can I be that's gonna be like we got to go test this
I don't know. We got a fine. Okay, we got tested four or five more times, but like be an open-minded skeptic
I don't even think that's just objective right because you hear about something completely novel and you're like, okay
What is it? What is that?
Is this bullshit because you know bullshit the bullshit's real
It's a real thing like that's why skeptics are important or at least being skeptical is important because yes
There are people that tell you if you join my cult you will you'll write experience bliss and happiness
We all give up our money to the guru and he has sex with all of us, but it's great like what?
We all give up our money to the guru and he has sex with all of us, but it's great like what?
So skepticism is important it is important it keeps you from getting hoodwinked it does I mean yes open-minded skeptical Right, but this is the problem with not having the ability to read minds
Right is that people can deceive you and you can't really tell and some people are terrible at it for some reason
Mm-hmm like some people just fall in line with the wrong crowd
over and over and over again, and they never get it right.
Yeah, yeah, that's so true.
You have to be skeptical.
Or you have to be able to read people.
And what is reading people, though, right?
There's people that I've met that right away,
I'm like, this person's broken.
I gotta get the fuck away from them.
There's a famous story with my friend Brian,
Brian Callan, who's a hilarious comedian
who always has the worst friends, always.
And one time he showed up at this show
that we were doing together with this gal that he was dating
and I met her for five seconds
and he'd always had the worst girlfriends.
They were always just disasters.
I go, get rid of this one, please.
I go, trust me, you gotta move.
He's like, what are you talking about?
I go, dude, she's crazy, this one's broken.
And he's like, no, no, no.
I go, dude, I am telling you right now.
Turned out she's a meth head, he didn't know,
she wound up being a prostitute.
It was off the charts, but she was pretty
and he just thought she was friendly to him,
and so she was fine.
And I read her right away, I'm like,
oh, everything's wrong here.
And he's like, how did you do that?
I'm like, I don't know.
I just knew right away, you gotta get away from her.
And he eventually one day ran into her
after they had broken up, she was street walking.
What?
Yeah, like that crazy, yeah.
Poor thing.
Poor thing, yeah. But it was like, like I was like that one's gonna drag it down
Like get out of there. Yeah, but I knew I don't know how I knew yeah
I mean, it was a simple exchange like hi nice to meet you. Nice to meet you too. Like
Fuck's going on here. It's like all my spidey senses. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah and
It's not normal. it's not normal.
That's not normal, that's not every day.
It's not like everybody I meet.
Like some people I meet are like, something's off.
Right, something's wrong with you.
Yeah, just you have to be able to go on
some kind of instinct, we all know.
And a lot of it is sort of pattern recognition.
A lot of it is prior experiences with similar,
the way similar
people engage with you. Right. And you're like, oh I've seen this before. Yes. Like
this is a con man. Oh I've seen this before. This is a this and this is a that.
Yes. But sometimes, sometimes it's just like this is a bad person. Yes. This one's
broken. Yeah, yeah, absolutely. So yes, I think having some degree of skepticism can be good. Yeah, what emotional tells you it's gonna get some objectivity
Yeah, objectivity to recognize that people that are deceptive are real
You know and there's people that have ulterior motives and these ulterior ulterior motives
you might not understand and you got to be able to
you might not understand and you got to be able to throw everything through a filter. And unfortunately, until we can read minds, you're kind of going on these like, did you
hear that?
I think I heard something.
That's really what it's like when you meet a person.
It's like there's something, I don't know.
You being paranoid?
I don't know.
And then you can convince yourself that you are being paranoid when you actually, you're
not.
You're actually accurate.
And you're like, oh, you're being silly.
No, you're not being silly.
You should have followed your initial instincts.
Right, exactly.
And I think that's what has happened with materialism being such a, for years, is that
anyone who believed in anything would be made to feel silly, right?
Oh, you're so gullible or you're not smart.
Like, intellectual people certainly don't believe in ghosts or God or whatever.
You know, put anything in there that you can't measure.
Right. Yeah, exactly. The secret.
And so that's been effective.
No one has to be ridiculed and dismissed and made to feel silly.
I mean, even editing the podcast, like I was so certain.
I'm like, okay, well, episodes one through four, there's a lot of science.
This is great.
The one that took me weeks, like I was in turmoil over was having to like put out into
the world that like the teachers were hearing telepathy back because I'm like, no one's
going to believe this.
This is so hard, but it's like you can't censor it.
This is what people's experiences and the whole point was like put out the voices of
people who've been completely dismissing and ignored.
Also if love is unifying, the love of a teacher and a student is absolutely real.
Yeah. Again, it's a special bond. Especially really good teachers.
Oh my gosh. Really good educators have like this spec because they really genuinely just
want to help. Yeah. And when someone's a genuine and you're a child that's
vulnerable and confused by the world around you and you're nonverbal and
there's someone with genuine love for you, like it kind of makes sense that
those would be the people that bridge the gap. It's interesting because I saw my
best friend for college this morning and her husband was there and he was like,
why is it so many women in the podcast that have telepathy? Like, can dads do it?
And whatever. And I was like, in fact, the first person
Dr. Powell tested the telepathy test with,
this girl was adopted and she had the best telepathic bond
with her father, you know?
And I know a young man in Israel whose best telepathic bond
is with his father.
And another, you know, so yes, it does happen with dads.
But I think there's more women who go into teaching
and more women that do caregiving.
Right. And so that's probably I think there's more women who go into teaching and more women that do caregiving.
And so that's probably why it looks like more women, but I don't think it's like a gendered
thing that mostly women have this.
I think it's whoever is in that loving, open...
Yeah.
I think men are generally more inclined towards brutish thinking and ego and like silly ways of viewing the world. And then also preoccupied
by their status in life and what that means to, you know, them and their worth as an individual
and all that stuff is a massive impediment to any sort of like real love. You're just
so self-focused.
Yeah, that's very self-focused. Yeah, and that's
definitely a male trait, especially in this capitalism society where you're constantly
trying to achieve a higher level of status. Yeah. And no one's satisfied, including billionaires.
Yeah, right. Exactly. Yeah, which is just the nuttiest thing of all time. I know. It's
like, what is the point? You won the game. I know. The game's over. Spread it out, man.
The game's over. You should, like it out, man. The game's over.
You should, like you have this crazy opportunity
with all this money.
To help so many people and lift up like all of America.
Also, why are you still just chasing numbers?
Right.
In a ledger, cause that's what you're doing.
Yeah.
You've got lost in this weird game.
I actually cannot comprehend that.
I cannot comprehend it. I wonder if you could if you were super wealthy, maybe
Yeah
I mean and if you went down that path the thing is that the one thing would be if you're super wealthy by some divine
Intervention or someone just gives you money right, you know like some crazy billionaire who's like a telepathy tapes fan
They're dying and on their will they say, listen, Kai, you
seem cool.
I'm going to give you $2 billion.
Like, what are you going to do with it?
Yeah, it's different.
But if you went and tried to earn it and so your whole life you were focused on these
achievements, like I want to have this and that and I want to be important.
I want to be able to influence political parties and I want to be able to influence political parties, and I want to be able to fly in my private jet
No, I wanna I want an island. You know you get crazy
Yeah, and then you're never you never have enough because you don't want more more more
Yeah, and then you're around people like we were talking the other day
Also, my friend Brian has a friend who's worth like three billion dollars
And he feels poor because he hangs out with these guys that are worth 50 billion dollars.
I'm like, that's so crazy.
But that's the world that you live in
when you're only thinking about numbers on a ledger.
You've gotten caught playing a game.
You're playing poker, you have chips.
This is all just quantifiable numbers.
Well none of it matters, too.
It's like, who cares?
Also, here's the real number.
You got 100 years if you're lucky.
That's the real number.
And if you're 60 and you're fucking big,
you're almost at the end, buddy.
Right.
Like, what are you doing?
Well, and I always think about the impact
you're going to leave behind.
Like, what's your legacy?
Like, you had a big boat.
I mean, who cares about that?
Right.
What does that mean? Are are you gonna be the person well
when he died he had so many things I aspire to be like William right yeah I
mean there's a lot of people that are like that and they think about old dead
rich people being boy he really nailed it he killed the game you know and
that's you know that's the thing that they have focused on unfortunately this
is the problem with financial institutions,
because if all you're doing is trying to acquire more money,
well, that's your game.
And your game is just do that.
And then as you get bigger, you eventually reach a point
where like, hey, hey, hey, hey, hey,
you kind of control everything.
You control natural resources.
You control land.
You control building, housing,
transportation, you have everything. This is not good for everybody else. It's not good for
everybody else for one entity to have so much power and only be concentrating on numbers.
Right. Yeah. Yeah. I don't know where that comes from. I mean, I guess if you grow up really rich,
maybe that's it. Or maybe if you grew up without anything.
It's a competition.
It's a subversion of what it's initially supposed to be.
It's like when you put mandates on officers
achieving a certain amount of arrests in a month.
Or even arrests in general, right?
Or prosecutors, right?
What is a prosecutor's goal?
To win.
Right.
There's the competition.
The competition is I provide evidence
that this person is guilty.
The defense provides evidence that he is in fact innocent.
And we sort it out.
And if you're just trying to win the game,
well then you're a corrupt prosecutor
because then you withhold evidence
that might exonerate that person.
Or you don't allow DNA, or you
don't, there's, and there's a lot of that.
I mean, I work with a guy named Josh Dubin, who's a friend of mine, whose, his whole thing
is freeing people that are unjustly accused.
And he's, we just because this podcast, a bunch of people are free right now.
And the shocking stories that you hear about corrupt prosecutors, where these guys get
caught and it turns out there's hundreds of people rotting away in a cage that are innocent
because of this one corrupt person.
And because they played this game of just trying to win.
And this is the same game.
It's the same game of acquiring numbers, whatever you're trying to do.
If that is what your game is, your game is just numbers.
I mean, it just makes me wonder if like people believe there was more, right?
Like if it wasn't just like you've got this one shot and you're just going to hear and
like tackle the numbers and be super rich and whatever, like would making a difference
and make it because it does feel like, yeah, oh, Pollyanna, like we're going to just, you
know, yeah, love each other. But like, but if you really believe that there was something
more, right, that like you had a higher purpose here, that you were more than just your body.
I think I mean, I think if you believe that to some degree, you're going to act differently.
Yeah, you're more focused on difference than acquiring numbers of money. Yeah, it's just
hard to get through people that are completely lost and obsessed.
When someone is completely, say a gambling addict for instance, they're very hard to
get to because they're completely lost and obsessed with this thing that they become
addicted to, which is all numbers.
Gambling is just all thrills and wins and losses and numbers.
It's all just, I bet 100,000 on the game
and I'm like, I think I got five points on the spread.
They cover the spread, then I win,
and then I'm out of the hole.
And then it's this roller coaster ride.
And so it's very difficult to get to those people
that are lost in whatever the game they're playing is,
whether the game is gambling addiction or financial addiction, whatever it is,
if you're lost in a game,
it's very hard to get to those people,
especially if they don't have love in their life.
And so if all their status is acquired by numbers,
by achieving this and pulling up in the brand new Mercedes
and wearing the fine suit and having the expensive watch
or whatever it is
that your thing is that you want to show up with.
And there's, in this world, this especially today,
there's all the lures and trappings to pull you into that.
And you can never get enough, you know?
You can get hand-purchased, I mean, hand-created this
and rare that and you know rare that
and a limited edition that. Oh did you get the new one? Oh and then you know
you're lost. It's just yeah it just doesn't fill you up. I think it empties
you out more really in the end. Right but what it does do oddly is it promotes
technological innovation. So keeping up with the Joneses and materialism one
purpose that it does serve, oddly,
is this constant push towards newer and better things,
which I think is also part of the purpose of human life
in some sort of a strange way,
is that we are pursuing technological innovation
above and beyond everything.
If you could see us objectively,
if you could see us outside of culture,
outside of language, if you were an alien race
and you're observing this weird species,
like what does it do?
Well, it keeps making better stuff.
That's what it does.
It keeps making better stuff.
It puts all of its resources into making better stuff
and it's obsessed with acquiring better stuff,
even though it has a finite lifespan.
It never recognizes, or rarely.
It's an odd and beautiful thing
when someone recognizes they have a finite life.
Yeah, yeah.
I was just thinking about that, what you were saying,
and I was thinking,
God, but then every four years, the aliens would be like,
oh, but then they pass a torture on the world,
and they go and they compete in games.
And the whole, and for like one small two
Week period they're all playing these games against each other and then they like put the torch out and go home and right metal
That's a bird
People that are playing the game who where everybody wants to see them
They don't get any of the money the money is all by the commercials and advertising and networks, networks in
the organization where they profit in a tune of billions of dollars and literally pay zero
to the athletes, which is so gross. Another disgusting subversion of this whole thing.
So the purity is in the athletes, especially if you're competing in a game that has no
financial future. Yeah. Now, if you're the world curling champion
Whatever it is, you know, whatever some goofy ass fucking Olympics, right? There's no
There's no up. You're just trying to be the best at this thing. And I think like if you can
Achieve something that makes you feel really good about yourself, right? I think there is a worth in that
Beautiful. Oh, yeah
But and that's's where sports can
come in, right? That the underdog can win and you can work together and blah, blah. That's worth
stuff. I think that's really beautiful. You create something that's beautiful. But yeah, just buying
something is not cool. I mean, what does that do? That's not cool. Creating something is cool.
Achieving something is cool. It's also one of the weirdest attractions
Yeah, attractants about social media. Yeah is what the stuff that people are showing you they have
I know you know which is like you can get a lot of followers by having great stuff and like look at my stuff
Look at my house. Look at my car. Look at my jet. Yeah, it's like the people go wow
And you see like millions and millions of likes. Yeah, these videos
It's really because kids like they love the YouTube videos now
Like my son will watch like hot wheels like people being like this new hot wheels
It goes do do do do and then you want to make these hot wheels things and I'm like what is happening right now?
You're like basically doing an ad for hot wheels, you know, right?
It's just like I would have never wanted to watch kids unbox hot wheels
I mean or Barbies or whatever like none of it, you know boxing things are strange. Yeah, it's like techno porn
Yeah, you know you're watching someone do something you wish you were doing. Oh, I wish I had that on yeah
That's it's so weird. Yeah, but it's you know, it's also very strange when you think about how many people are
Tuned into that where you never would have expected that in the past
Like there would never be a television show on NBC where someone unboxes stuff you'd
be like no one's gonna watch that but meanwhile put it on YouTube and millions
of people will watch that stuff so there's there's a part of it that we
didn't anticipate yeah I don't know I hope it'll be a pendulum because when
you brought up television I thought well that replaced the dance hall right
people used to go dance and hang out before there was television. Like, you'd be out doing something, and how cool.
Or go out to the diner.
But they also thought the world was flat.
Right.
Exactly.
It's like, it just benefits to all this ability
to communicate as well.
The problem is when it's centralized.
Right.
The real problem with television is that television
has advertising, advertising limits, which you can say.
And because of that, we censored language,
right? Because advertisers didn't want you swearing on television. So the way people talked in real life, they never talked on television. Right. Yeah. And,
you know, and so that got subverted. True free expression got subverted by
advertisement. Well, and that is what is cool about that world we're living
right now, right? Because like YouTube and Twitter, X or, you know, whatever, Blue Sky, all the things, podcasts,
I mean, people are free to kind of speak and talk
and share.
Not necessarily on Blue Sky.
Maybe not.
I bet I could get mad pretty quick,
which is some simple scientific facts.
But, you know, I mean, there is a democracy
to information now where I think, like,
stuff that could never have gotten out there 20, 30 years ago when the
gatekeeping of like you were saying advertising and all that was so extreme. It's just changed and
that's awesome. Profoundly. Yeah. And in a way that I don't think we even appreciate because we're a
part of it. Right. I think it's one of those things we've become accustomed to checking the news on
your phone when you wake up in the morning and friends sending you things.
Oh my god, did you see this?
And cool things too, great music.
And so many things get shared, like your show got shared to me.
I don't even remember who shared it to me,
because so many people did.
Because I don't remember who the first person was.
Well, and I think that's the thing that is cool.
We actually have evidence of what
this democratization of information looks like.
The UAP phenomenon has become so much more mainstream.
People are talking about it.
Like, things that could not have been shared or spoken
are now out there.
Same with psychedelics and psilocybin and going
on ketamine trips or whatever.
All that now is just common knowledge
that this can be great for healing PTSD or depression
or whatever. The with the lepathy
You know, I mean channeling whatever it is like all these things especially tic-tac. You're like, holy cow
This is so I'm glad you brought the UAP thing up
I hate to interrupt you but because I think a lot of the what we're hearing is nonsense
Yeah, I mean I think a lot of what is being shared, especially publicly, like, there's too many voices
that I think are either intelligence assets
or are disinformation experts that are doing it on purpose.
And there's too much of, you know,
the same feeling that I get, you know, like when I said I met my
friend's ex-girlfriend, I was like, oh get out now. Yeah. There's a, I have that
feeling about the UAP thing. When I hear people talk, nothing seems real to me.
Yeah. When I talk to people about it, there's not one, I mean even when people
tell me their own personal experiences, I believe them. It does not register as
real.
That's so interesting. Something registers as being nonsense. There's something, maybe
not nonsense, but maybe way weirder than what they're explaining it like. Like non-physical
interaction that they are reinterpreting as like physical interaction. Yeah. That there's some disconnect between
their work. Like if someone tells me an experience, like here's a good example. My friend Steve
told me a harrowing experience of them being attacked by a brown bear in Alaska. And when
he tells you this story,
first of all, I know it's real because I know
multiple people who were there, they were all there.
No one got hurt, it was very fortunate,
but they got charged by a grizzly who ran through
their tent, one of my friends was on its back
for like 10 yards.
Like it literally plowed through the people
and he wound up like riding its back for like 10 yards before he fell off.
Wow. Yeah, it was just like I mean it can cover 10 yards in a second.
Yeah, and the whole thing was just insane chaos and the way he describes how your
reptilian brain completely takes over. The fear is so
overwhelming and different than anything you've ever experienced
before. I know it happened. When he's telling me this, I know it happened. When these people
are telling me about talking to aliens and all of that, I'm not getting nothing out of
them. I'm not getting nothing. I'm getting a flat piece of paper.
Yeah, there's no fear. There's no charge. I don't know what it is. I don't know what
it is. I just don't get anything from their story. I hear it. It's interesting. But I don't get anything that lights any bells.
There's no bulbs go off with me. I just sit there and go, wow. Okay, so what were you thinking? You
know, and I'm asking them questions, but I'm not getting nothing. Yeah. So that leaves me, because I know that for sure the government has technology that they
do not want the general public to be aware of for reasons of national security or whatever
it is.
Or you know, money has been pushed through to finance things and they lie to Congress
and they have to keep lying.
Whatever the reason is, that's real. There's most certainly black ops programs that the general
public is not aware of. That's always going to be the case. If you have those,
what better way to hide them than in plain sight and with a bunch of people
that are air quote whistleblowers that go out and tell everybody about all
these experiences, they're not of this earth, and that's what I would do.
If I was the government and I wanted to be super sneaky,
I would have a bunch of my really clever agents
go and whistle blow, tell some stories,
talk about people that have been abducted,
talk about all these different things.
And then on top of that, there's real experiences.
So I think there is something because it exists throughout history, just like telepathy exists
throughout history and ghosts exist throughout history and religion exists.
There's something there.
There's something there that's distorted by our very slippery grasp on truth.
Yes.
Yeah. I think that's a very true assessment.
Yeah. Yeah. But there's also just too many stories from hundreds of years ago
that are incredibly similar to the things that people are talking about today.
Yeah. That's the stuff that's interesting to me. Like Jacques Vallee. Exactly. I just
finished his third book. Yeah. I mean.'s the mind, but he's great because he's not a believer.
He's very skeptical about a lot and highlights a lot of the bullshit to the point where you're like,
okay, what's true? Yeah, I mean those are the people you have to trust though. The only ones,
the only ones you can trust because there's too many people that are out there telling you,
I know what's happening, we're about to experience a contact
the all the people the Joint Chiefs of Staff have been notified and like those people I don't want
to talk to like you shut the fuck up you don't know anything there's no way you know you're just
taking advantage of this very weird moment in time where people aren't sure but there's all this
discussion this phenomena and you've grifted yourself to this.
Right, exactly.
And there's a lot of those people out there.
There are, yeah.
And it's clickbait and it's this and their profit.
Yeah.
Because they're gross.
No, but the true intellectual people is looking at the consciousness side of this.
I think they're fascinating.
That's what's going on here.
I think that's where it is.
Yeah, it's a conscious.
I mean, that's why I wasn't into the UAP stuff until people started
saying to me, like, you should at least start looking at some of these great thinkers, because
a lot of this has to do with consciousness and what are we and why are we here and like,
what's a hyper object? Right? Like, a lot of stuff that I'm like, what is going on? So you
start reading about it and understanding, okay, like, where things might converge is an exploration of consciousness. Yeah.
And our consciousness is confined by identity.
It's confined by so many different things.
So many walls that we put up and ego and blinders and self-delusion.
There's always just weird things that we have in our mind
because we don't necessarily have a very good direction book of how
to be a human. Right. Or what we're just limited to by our vision, right?
Like if you were to talk to a dog and be like, hey, does this dog know
about calculus and does it know about like, you know, whatever, electoral
college? Of course not. Like there's no way, there's no universe in which a dog
would know about that stuff. But it could smell a cat four blocks away. You ever see a dog just like this?
No.
They have insane noses. They can smell individual ingredients in a hamburger.
Wow. That's so fascinating.
And a bear is like 10 times stronger than that, which is bananas.
Amazing.
They can smell human beings hundreds of yards away.
Just a whiff of the wind, and then all of a sudden,
like, oh, people, let's get the fuck out of here.
Well, and that's like, we don't have that.
But like a dog doesn't have XYZ, what are we living in?
We might not be able to see half of what's there or conceive
of it.
Wave your hand above an earthworm.
There's no idea what's going on.
There's no idea what's going on.
It doesn't need to.
Lives its life underground. Those senses are not necessary. Right no idea what's going on. It doesn't need to. It lives its life underground.
Those senses are not necessary. Right. So that's the mystery. Yeah. And our senses most likely
have atrophied. You know, that's the real thing is that, you know, there's a lot of talk from,
you know, ancient, whether it's ancient religious texts or of contact of something communicating with you that's not physically
there. And you got to wonder like, was this really common for people? Like there's so
many descriptions of being contacted by something that's not there. Like, was that before language
normal? Yeah.
And was it physically someone contacted you
or was it in a mental space, right?
Were you in this thought world?
Almost you were astral traveling or whatever, right?
That's the question too is, can you
be experiencing something in your mind
that's not happening physically?
And I think that question is pervasive in the UAP world
as well as in this telepathy world. Right, it's the is pervasive in the UAP world as well as in this like telepathy world.
Right. It's the birds flying around in unison like somehow or another they're tuned in to some
some pattern that they never collide. How do they not collide? I mean that's like so spectacular
that you're literally hundreds of feet above the earth. If you collide you get knocked unconscious.
You're both dead and no one collides ever. and they're going fast. I mean imagine like why would you do that? Like what?
What benefit?
Evolutionary benefit what natural survival benefit would there be in a bunch of you flying around in weird patterns in the sky?
Like look at that. That is so so beautiful I've heard is they just look
like a bigger thing so it's that's gotta be it right monster that doesn't scare
off fish they go right to is a big thing well that's the problem you know when
tuned to see that big thing they're like fuck yeah look how crazy that is I mean
it's but why would that be a benefit to like being a bigger thing that would make you a bigger target
I don't I mean it's just so weird
It's so weird like no one's fallen
No, no, I think I'm gonna have falling and doesn't look like art
I mean it really is like an elaborate dance. Have you ever seen wolves hunt? No, they communicate
We don't we don't know what they? No. They communicate. We don't know
what they're doing. We don't know how they do it, but they decide. Telepathy, man. Yeah.
Yeah, there's something. Because they flank animals. They know how to do it. They know
to chase animals into canyons, and then they get on the other side of it, and they capture
them when they're trying to escape. It's telepathy. I mean, one of the teachers that I've come
to love so much,
and she was also in England, she said
that the first time she realized something like this
was going on, she was working at a school where the individuals
weren't speaking.
And she saw people of a bunch of her class playing at recess.
And she's like, it was a fully orchestrated game.
This one needed to go here, and this one needed to go here.
And they were doing this.
And she's like, but they weren't speaking.
And I was watching this through the classroom window.
And I thought, they are communicating through telepathy
because how else do, this is a huge organized game. And she watched over and over again and then she
thought in her head like, I want to be in on this. I want you all to teach me. I want to get in on
this. And then one of the boys started, she'd start hearing him in her head, like if he had fallen down
outside or couldn't find his lunch money or you know, something happened
Skinned his knee and she would hear him and like would know where to go find him and she was like, oh my gosh
Like he's this is starting to work and then oh, yeah, and then like one of the students
Mothers died and she became and the mother said to this teacher
I want you to really take care of my son as he ages
He loves you.
He really respects you.
And she's done that his whole life.
And now he's a grown adult, and they still communicate.
But she's like, now he communicates with me
telepathically.
I'll get these huge visual packages.
And sometimes I think, first, did this come from me
and my making this up?
But it will be an update on someone
from you know that they knew both 20 years ago and she'll be like that can't be that
this guy's suddenly a priest he was so unreligious or whatever it was there'll be something that
makes no sense and she'll go look it up on Facebook and it proves to be true. So you
know she'll constantly have to double check things and she yeah I mean so it's it's remarkable
but I do not doubt that the wolves are probably using telepathy
Yeah, I think chimpanzees do it too
I think they all have roles and they know what role to play and they just sort of like lock in on this task
Together and somehow or another communicate like they lay in wait. Yeah, they know when to wait. So weird. It's so cool
Yeah, it's so cool. I mean
It's so cool. Weird.
It's so cool.
Yeah, it's so cool.
I mean, imagine if one day we can figure out through technology to access minds of animals
and see how an owl thinks.
Like see like what is the process in their mind when they lock on to something?
What is a predator thing?
Does a prey animal know when it's being watched?
Yeah.
Yeah.
Sometimes.
I mean, there's been that book.
Trust me.
Yeah.
I'm a hunter.
They don't.
They don't always know.
They don't know at all.
No, sometimes they don't know at all.
That's so, how far away are you when you're?
Sometimes like 50, 60 yards
and they have no idea you're there.
Wow.
And they're, you know,
but a lot of times they're distracted too because they're in the rut, so they're mating
and they're distracted, which is a rude way to hunt them.
But that's how people hunt them.
It's like the worst way to hunt someone.
I mean not always.
There's a lot of animals that are not in the rut.
But like white teal deer, elk, primarily you hunt them That are not in the rut. But like white teal deer, elk, primarily, you hunt them when they're in the rut.
There's some animals, though, that are very, very difficult to hunt.
And one of the reasons why is you don't hunt them when they're in the rut.
Like mule deer.
Mule deer are the most clever and the most aware of all deer species because they're
constantly being pursued by mountain lions.
So they're always like, what the fuck is that?
They're like, always on edge.
And they have an uncanny ability to get out of the way.
They know something's there, and they're like, fuck this.
And they just bounce out.
Yeah.
You got to sneak up on them when the wind's blowing.
You got to like, people take their shoes off
to creep up on them. So tactical. Yeah. Well, you have to be. Yeah. Because you have to,
especially bow hunting. Yeah. So you have to get ideally you want to get within inside
of 60 yards. Yeah. That's really what you want. Especially a mule deer is not that big.
An elk is a much larger target. But a mule deer is, you know, big ones like 300 pounds.
You got to get pretty close and they fucking know something's up. Yeah, you know something's up. Yeah
You're staring at them and they just like
You know, they're just doing in yeah, there's also I don't know if this is real or not
But there's a company called hex and they make these they make clothes that block out your
they make clothes that block out your electrical signal.
And one of the things, like it's very hard to discern whether or not it works with mammals,
but it seems to work really well with fish.
So there's a lot of video evidence
of these people putting these hex suits on
underneath their wet gear or their scuba gear,
and then going in the water and being able to get like right
up close to fish, they don't even know what the fuck is going on.
And they couldn't if they didn't have the suit on?
This is their assertion.
Okay.
Now obviously they're selling a product.
Yeah.
Very controversial in the hunting world whether or not these things are real.
Some people 100% believe in them and there's a bunch of evidence that people wear them and then they sit in a field and turkeys like get right next to them. And
turkeys have incredible vision. Turkeys have better vision than humans.
Yeah. Huh. I'd like to know more about that.
Yeah. But the really compelling stuff to me is the water stuff because they do it in the
water. And the idea is that prey animals have this electrical
some sort of
Signal that they're giving off. Yeah that these animals can pick up
That's really I'd like to learn more about that. That's fast
Well fish have a thing called a lateral line. You ever seen that line on the fish?
So that lateral line is interpreting movement in the water. It's interpreting.
So yeah.
A filmographer, he says it lets him get closer to anything.
Really?
Yeah.
He's just showing different.
So this is, the problem is, obviously this is a commercial.
Right.
Right, and the problem is, you know, these people believe it
and I don't know if they've done, like,
how would you do a double blind study with this?
Right. You know, would you do a double blind study with this you know would you?
You're you're dealing with yeah completely different fish completely right time. Yeah, you know there's a what did that fish experience?
Yeah, just experience a shark 30 minutes ago. What do you you know what's going on?
I think you know a lot. Yeah, and I don't know if they've done that because I think they're just trying to sell the this thing
Yeah, may or may not work, and it's because it blocks out your magnetic field is that what supposedly what is what is their explain?
explanation for what it does
Has something to do?
Well, the human body is essentially an electrical system, right?
so it kind of makes sense that we would give off some sort of a
visual representation or some senses that we don't
understand.
Just as electromagnetic patterns or something like that.
What is it?
Google Hex Suit Debunked.
Google that.
HEC suit, HECS suit debunked.
I wonder if anybody's ever tried to debunk it and say that's nonsense
I know a lot of people that don't think it's that works
Yeah, they don't wear them, but I know my friend John Dudley who's one of the best hunters in the world
He wears it every time he goes hunting really yeah
Fascinating he thinks animals can't see him as well when he wears it so interesting
I mean if he believes it works, and that's like you know sometimes the
The act of faith is more important than the fact of it, right? Sometimes. Maybe. I don't know.
No, I think the fact is more important because if you're doing both things,
if you're doing if you're you're doing everything correctly,
but one thing does give you like camouflage works.
We know it works because there's something about the way animals see.
They essentially see movement and line detection.
So to see the frame of a human being
clearly. If you're wearing black and you're standing there and you're a bipedal thing,
they're like, oh, fuck that. That's a person. Let's get out of here. But if your lines are
completely broken up by camouflage and you stand still, they don't see you. They see
nonsense. They see the woods. They see, you know, you blend in. Yeah, yeah.
And that's why camouflage doesn't have to look like leaves and sticks.
It can just look like patches of black and stripes and tiger stripes.
Right, that makes sense.
Yeah.
Yeah, it does.
It does make sense.
I mean, that's why animals and nature have that.
Yeah.
You know, I was watching this thing where they were explaining what animals see versus
what we see, why tigers
would be so beautifully colored, because the animals don't see that color for whatever
reason, but they do see the lines and the lines completely blur in with the grass because
animals see in black and white or in a weird sort of shade.
Interesting.
Have you found anything about hex suits debunked?
Just tons of anecdotal evidence few videos people though a good point is like how did Fred bear do it?
How did he get so close to stuff? That's just their example though? You know the original hunter right those guys all
wore like final shirts and
Doing odor blocking yeah that odor blocking shit doesn't work
Yeah, I have no real no one did like a study and made it by the way if you have odor blocking the animal smell the odor blocking
No, what the right? Yes? Yeah
Fucking weird smell there's no way we smell so bad. Yeah animals. There's no way they smell us like we smell skunk
Yeah, that's so interesting. Yeah, you know you could smell skunk that gets killed like five blocks away. That's how they smell us
They know we're in the neighborhood. Yeah
Yeah, so I don't think that scent stuff does anything. I mean, maybe it blocks a little bit
So maybe it helps a little bit maybe I mean you're looking for every little edge because you're
Essentially competing with the survival instincts of something that has existed in that form for 1,000 years,
or excuse me, a million years or more.
Right, you're walking into an environment
you're supposed to lose in if you're hunting an animal.
Yeah, the only reason why you win
is because you have a bow and arrow,
or you have a rifle,
and you know which way the wind's blowing.
That's the big thing.
It's like if you get winded, if they smell you, it's over.
Like the whole thing is the wind has to be in your face.
So if you're looking at the animal,
the wind has to be coming in your direction.
If the wind hits the back of your neck, it's over.
You feel it.
You're like, oh shit.
Cause they'll smell you instantly.
Oh, a hundred, they're like, what the fuck this?
And they're gone.
Wow, really?
Instantly.
Wow.
Yeah.
A hundred yards away, they just start running.
Really?
Oh yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
What if the wind was going like perpendicular?
No, it has to go to them.
That's why they always find themselves,
they always bed down in a position
where the wind is coming straight to them
towards any threats.
And then the females will line up
and look in the other way.
So they'll look towards the way where the wind is going
and then everyone will line out so the wind comes to them and then some
will look in the opposite direction. And try to keep their eyes open.
But again it's because they're dealing with cats. It's a fascinating sport though.
It's so tactical, not just like the
physicality of it and the wind and the environment,
but just like the mental strategy.
It's also bizarrely psychedelic in this weird way.
When you're there, the world doesn't exist.
And when you see these animals,
you connect with them in some sort of a strange way.
And you're trying to like almost not exist.
You're trying to like give off nothing,
which is what cats do when you see them creeping up on things.
They're not like, oh, motherfucker.
Yeah, right.
They're not growling.
They're like locked in.
Just locked in almost like non-existent until they go.
And then the whole thing is like,
I got to be able to move quicker than you can run away.
Right.
Yeah.
That's such a cool sport. Yeah. It's a weird, but it's whatever these animals are
experiencing with each other is probably some form of telepathy as well. You know
how do they know, like how do wolves know to work together? Is it just trial
and error? Like it seems like they have roles that they like predetermined roles
like one of them will chase them down the other one will be laying in wait. They do stuff together. They coordinate. Yeah some strange way
You had that wolf woman on your show, right? Yeah
Fascinating. Yeah, so interesting. Yeah, but she was most afraid of people
Yeah, rightly so. Yeah, how many people get killed by wolves every year versus people? Yeah. Yeah people are way creepier
Yeah, yeah wolves are just real. I mean clear not simple complex obviously, but clear and what they're trying to do
They're trying to eat and survive and that's that's their job. Yeah. Yeah
Well, this was a tangent wasn't it? Yeah. Yeah, we got a lot of tangents
But that's the beauty of
the human mind. It is, I love the human mind. It does go on tangents. Yes. I think that we're all sort of trying to
understand why we view the world the way we do and how much of that has been
projected upon us by culture and society and how much of it is things we understand
innately, how many things we can't prove but that are a part of this world that we live
in.
Right.
And I think what your show has done with the telepathy tapes, and I'm sure what the documentary
has done, is I think more important than anything, open up this possibility to be explored,
and recognizing that it's real,
and that these preconceived notions
that we've held onto for so long are probably erroneous.
We probably have screwed ourselves
by latching on to the idea that this is it.
This is all that we have and this is the
way to live life and yeah put your suit on and go to work. Right yeah. I can't
imagine working in an office. Yeah I mean I think it's a pendulum's
shift. I mean the whole world is opening up right now right? I mean there's just
like so much is happening I think that people are challenging these preconceived
old fat. Oh I might have some coffee now
No, I said no earlier now I'm now I'm into it cheers
Yeah, like your mug with a third eye
Really? Okay. I'll bring it home. That's cool
So I can't wait to taste your coffee see how strong it is pretty good
That's great. Shout out to black. It's perfect. Yeah, it it is. It's pretty good. That's great. Shout out to Black Breed Coffee. It's perfect. Yeah it's good. It's great. So what is your hope for this
stuff? Like in your most ideal scenario, how you're obviously your
show has been received in a tremendously positive way. And people are super intrigued and really popular.
So that's great.
So more discussion.
But in an ideal scenario, what would you like to happen?
OK, I think there's three things, right?
I think one, baseline for people to presume competence
in non-speaking individuals or someone
who can't control their body.
Don't think just because they can't speak
doesn't mean they can't think.
You know?
Yeah, they're in there.
Right.
And then I think the second one is certainly to try to get spelling validated in schools,
right?
Like, it's almost like telepathy in a way, operated as a Trojan horse to get people to
acknowledge and notice these incredible individuals and just take note and help them.
So I think getting spelling validated and affirmed and make it accessible in schools, that would be the next thing.
And then I think the third thing is, I mean, truly a paradigm shift. I mean, I want people
to know, because I've come to what I feel like is believe this, right? That there is
a non-physical world that's real. Our idea that consciousness is at the tippy top, that's
the result of this physical world, I think is incorrect. I think consciousness is at the bottom of it and
started everything. And with that in mind, consciousness then, we're so much more possible.
It can survive our body. We can communicate without our bodies. We can see into the future,
maybe into the past. I mean, whatever it is, anything mental we're capable of, and that helps us explain a lot more. So the paradigm shift, I think, is really cool if it can happen. And a lot
of people have been working toward that, you know? I mean, so I'm just like a tiny bit in a large
puzzle of huge giants have come before me. But I think that if this is going to help more people,
like, just be aware of the system of what is called, again, like this materialism,
which is the idea that it's only what's real can be observed and measured. If we can get
people to realize they're living in that system, that system was constructed and it's not necessarily
the truth. So don't be embarrassed to talk about stuff, to research stuff, to ask a question.
You shouldn't be ridiculed and dismissed just because the system tells you you should be.
That concept is just so hard to grasp.
If you haven't read any of Tom Campbell's stuff or haven't considered this or listened
to Rupert Sheldrake talk or your show, it's like it's so hard for people to grasp that.
Yeah.
Tom Campbell blew my mind.
I mean, he is like, poof.
You see with Rupert.
I got a lot of text messages from buddies after that, like, what the fuck, dude?
I'm so confused. Yeah.
But this is what I will say, because I actually had a friend that when I was sort of like
going through my own thing, she was just like, if you just start reading about some of the
stuff, just reading it, you'll find what you're looking for.
Like, there's so much there, whether if you start reading about near-death experiences
or Ian Stevenson or Tom Campbell Campbell, and any of this stuff.
It's just like, boop, boop, boop, boop, boop.
And people are researching this, right?
It's not like this just happened.
This has been going on for a long time, these questions.
So once the documentary's out, what do you hope to do next?
Do you have a game plan?
So we just started working on the doc.
I'm hoping that will be done and wrapped up early next year.
Maybe we'll familiar with South By, we'll be back hopefully.
I mean, who knows?
And so after that, then we're going to do an impact campaign where you take a documentary
around and you screen it with a panel.
So that'd be cool.
It'd be non-speakers and we can get people from the Department of Education there or
whatever in different cities.
And then hopefully that will make an impact, get people into the Department of Education there or whatever in different cities. And then hopefully that will make
an impact, get people into the rooms talking to whatever.
And then after that, we have a really long-term goal
where we want to try to work with a few foundations
or maybe start a foundation to open centers that can,
if you can imagine, something maybe
like the size of an REI in every city where non-speakers can go
and get physical and mental and
spiritual supports and spelling help and education or whatever, you know, there's physical therapy
that can help and for respite care for these parents who are working 24-7 to take care
of these individuals and it could just be a beautiful thing but then there's so many
academics to what you kind of noted earlier like that might want to work with non-speakers
who might want to can you help me decode
whale language or figure out how to stop blanching the coral reefs or whatever.
So if there's, you know, I know non-speakers who want to work in plant medicine, who want
to work in this, who want to work in XYZ, but I think the most important thing is these
centers maybe could vet those individuals, make sure these academics learn to become
a spelling to communicate partner and be backgrounded to make sure they don't have some nefarious goal.
And then this could maybe create opportunities for spellers to make money, to have a career,
to really contribute in these meaningful ways.
So that's our goal, is to create these centers that can both nourish and support non-speakers
and their families, but also allow non-speakers to engage and use their intellect and abilities
to have meaningful careers.
That and more, right?
More people coming out, more people understanding it, more people grasping it, more people accepting.
And then this sort of changes the level of cynicism. So it changes the
level of negativity and it opens up the acceptance of this stuff and then maybe
we learn more. Yeah, yeah and it's just I mean in history too people would look at
deaf people or blind people before and think they're not in there especially
deaf people it was just like oh there must not be in there no one thinks that
anymore it's ridiculous to think that. You know but we're doing the same thing
to this population.
So yeah, I mean, there are some of the most
brilliant individuals that I've ever met.
And actually I talked to a teacher
right before I left here today.
And she was talking about her student
she just had a conversation with.
She said, in middle school or whatever, high school,
what did you learn that whole time?
What did you learn in school?
Well, he was being taught like he was little.
And what he answered was patience.
I mean, just so beautiful, so wise, right?
He wasn't crapping on it.
Like, I learned nothing.
They kept telling me animal colors and this and whatever.
Like it wasn't anger.
It was, I learned patience.
Wow.
Because us, you know, our stupid system
that has made these individuals out to be like,
they're not smart, has taught them, has failed them when it comes to education.
So I just thought that was a beautiful answer.
And so in line with how wise and kind and thoughtful so many non-speakers I've met are.
Yeah, it's a beautiful answer.
That's a good way to wrap this up.
Kai, thank you very much for being here.
And thank you very much for your series.
It's really incredible.
And I can't wait to watch the documentary and I'd love to have
you back on whenever it releases.
Yeah, wonderful.
I'll bring some parents with me.
I'll bring a non-speaker with so you can see it.
I'm going to bring Katie in Houston and your mind's going to go...
Okay, let's do it.
Telepathy Tapes, it's available basically everywhere.
Spotify, Apple, whatever, right?
Wherever you get your podcasts.
Wherever you get your podcasts.
It's really incredible.
I loved it.
All right, that's it.
Thank you very much.
Thank you, Joe.
Thank you.
Bye, everybody.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.
Bye.