TrueLife - The Machine We Built To Serve Us
Episode Date: July 20, 2025One on One Video Call W/George https://tidycal.com/georgepmonty/60-minute-meetingSupport the show:https://www.paypal.me/Truelifepodcast?locale.x=en_US🚨🚨Curious about the future of psych...edelics? Imagine if Alan Watts started a secret society with Ram Dass and Hunter S. Thompson… now open the door. Use Promocode TRUELIFE for Get 25% off monthly or 30% off the annual plan For the first yearhttps://www.district216.com/🎙️This #transmission is #illegal in most #dimensions.Not because it’s wrong —but because it’s #true.Tonight, we’re #summoning two #oracles disguised as men,ripping a hole in the fabric of #consensus #realityso wide you could drive a dying #empire through it.First —Simon van der Els, PhD:a #molecule-whispering, neuro-dimensional #codebreakerwho doesn’t #study the mind —he dives into its #screaming abyssand pulls back #symphonies#composed entirely of your forgotten #wholeness.He’s what happens when the #periodic table takes #mushroomsand remembers it’s #God.And then —Zachary Marlow:Zachary Marlow isn’t just a #filmmaker —he’s a #gardener of #visions,a #soul-rooted creator #cultivating beautyfrom the compost of #collapse.and brought #bootleg #footage of the next #civilization.He’s #cinema’s last shamanand #capitalism’s most elegant #nightmare.Together?They’re not guests —they’re a #psychedelic Voltronhere to dismantle the #machine,reboot your DNA,and #whisper anarchist lullabies to your domesticated #soul.This #episode is an #exorcism disguised as a #dialogue,a Molotov cocktail lobbed into the banquet of #inherited #power,a divine joke told by the Tricksteras he pisses on the #blueprints of empire.So if you’re here for #career #advice or #brand #alignment,get the hell out.But if you’ve ever heard a whisper in your spinethat says “this world is a bad copy,”then lean in.Because tonight…we #time #travel naked through the ruinsand call it resurrection.https://lnkd.in/gAFfH4fhhttps://lnkd.in/gveuMiAN🚨🚨Curious about the future of psychedelics? Imagine if Alan Watts started a secret society with Ram Dass and Hunter S. Thompson… now open the door. District216 become a member today! https://lnkd.in/gQHiQHXdMarquee Event:https://lnkd.in/gx3YEYW3 One on One Video call W/George https://tidycal.com/georgepmonty/60-minute-meetingSupport the show:https://www.paypal.me/Truelifepodcast?locale.x=en_USCheck out our YouTube:https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLPzfOaFtA1hF8UhnuvOQnTgKcIYPI9Ni9&si=Jgg9ATGwzhzdmjkg
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Darkness struck, a gut-punched theft, Sun ripped away, her health bereft.
I roar at the void.
This ain't just fate, a cosmic scam I spit my hate.
The games rigged tight, shadows deal, blood on their hands, I'll never kneel.
Yet in the rage, a crack ignites, occulted sparks cut through the nights.
The scars my key, hermetic and stark.
To see, to rise, I hunt in the dark.
fumbling, furious through ruins
maze, lights my war cry
born from the blaze.
The poem is Angels with Rifles.
The track, I Am Sorrow, I Am Lust by Kodak Serafini.
Check out the entire song at the end of the cast.
Ladies and gentlemen,
welcome back to the True Life podcast.
I hope everybody's having a beautiful day.
Hope the sun is shining.
Hope the birds are singing.
I hope the wind is at your back. A quick note for everybody out there. Check out District
216. It's like this premier incredible psychedelic club. They're taking members right now and
they have what I think is the future of psychedelics and education and entertainment. That being
said, let me jump in here. I got two incredible guests for you today. And let me bring in my friend
Simon over here. He's a molecule whispering neurodimensional code breaker who doesn't study the mind.
dives into the screaming abyss and pulls back symphonies composed entirely of your forgotten
wholeness he's what happens when the periodic table takes mushrooms and remembers it's god
simon thank you so much for being here today we should have zach jump in here a little while but how
are you man yeah pretty good especially with that intro so thank you again it's always fun to hear
what comes out i'm doing pretty good man yeah yeah i think uh um
We'll see if we can, we'll get into that.
But I, it's been now a week or a bit more than a week since I went on a Bufo journey.
And that was the first time for me.
And that was a pretty, pretty mind-bending and warping cathartic experience.
So I'm fresh out of that.
And I'm currently in the south of France with my girlfriend at her parents' place,
checking out nature and just being outside most of the time
enjoying the wildlife here.
So that is great.
So in general, I'm doing great.
I'm looking forward to just having a meandering conversation.
So let's start there, man.
A recent Bufo experience.
Like, you're fresh from it, man.
Tell me about it.
Yeah, so the main, for me, I've been thinking about doing that
already for like five years.
I didn't have any experience with DMT.
Still done.
Only with ayahuasca and psilocybin, mushrooms, these kind of things.
And what I noticed always, with the ayahuasca, also with the mushrooms, even high dose,
always I will be still quite centered.
So there was this sort of core, I think, to my ego structure or to my sort of sense-making capacity.
that would always be there, observing, let's say, what was going on.
And that is both a strength and at the same time a weakness.
Because one of the main things is why I sort of stepped into the path that I'm on now
or the things that I enjoy exploring now.
It was out of necessity, out of sort of existential depression and sort of quite having feelings
about the state of the world, but also just the state of my life and how I pictured things going.
Yes.
And one of the main culprits, as I started figuring this out,
but I've been on this actively, I think, for seven years, six years,
was my own sort of map-making mind.
I would call it an inner aspect of me,
which I would call, I think the emperor archetype,
that is just so exceptionally,
good at mapping, but also controlling because that's the main reason why it wants to map.
It wants to control things.
I'm always active.
I was always active with that part.
And even if I would be very relaxed and calm, I would still notice like I'm putting
fencing around my experience.
Even though that fencing are hidden by some trees or they're all the way across behind
the hills, I know that I'm putting down fences and I'm limiting my sort of
being in the moment experience and it would also just express itself very strongly in um
channeling or restricting emotional release easy emotional release and again for my practice that is
quite a strength because it also allows me to when i work with people to channel hello zachary
Zachary
I was just
talking about channeling and
you know I felt a pulse
That's what happens here
And you know
I changed the channel
Well done man
Well done
Simon's just filling us in on this
He had a recent Bufo experience man
He's just getting into like
How he got there and what's happening man
Let's see what you got
I got
I was talking about the
reason why
and the main reason is that I've been interacting with an inner aspect, which I would call the emperor,
the sort of supreme ruler for left hemispherical dominance and controlling mapping reality, my inner world.
And I noticed that it's mainly due to anxiety, due to heavy fear that is happening,
but it would also block my access to any fear.
So I would have no clue what was going on, but living life mostly quite depressed.
But having that on top.
And I noticed with ayahuasca, I had some grueling ayahuasca journeys where I was just for five hours straight just lying and moments of dying, let's say, but just combat between whatever this emperor was and ayahuasca.
And it's not a lot directly happening.
Oftentimes I get a lot of.
things happening after those kind of experiences.
But yeah, that kind of put me on the path of thinking about Bufo.
That was like my main idea, like, okay, if I truly want to experience an ego death
where any sense of resistance will be just pushed through within seconds,
that's Bufo or 5MEO DMT.
So I was sort of had that open, that option, and the timing was,
was great. And so it came on my path and I experienced it. And I had just a complete whiteout.
I just remember like inhaling and my peripheral vision fractaling, hearing this super loud rushing
noise in my ears and then just gone. And then I woke up and the tyrant, the emperor,
immediately reasserted itself and thought that I was in some sort of black magic ritual. So I
I was looking at the practitioner or the ceremonialist like, oh shit, this is bad, juju.
And so, but it didn't stick that projection and then it flipped back on me.
And then I just had to vomit, like fom it a lot, balming my eyes out.
And it was like a complete birth that kind of happened.
So I'm still sort of picking the pieces from the whole experience.
But I've been noticed like something has been a major sort of notice.
sort of note has been reached through this experience and now there's no particular need let's say
to have the emperor in place as the one who's controlling everything so but i've noticed a massive shift
in everyday presence and yeah less need for control or less fear all that stuff is sort of
way less so great thanks for the buffo it's amazing in
amazing experience.
You know what I like when you set that up there?
You talked about a little bit before, and I know because I read lots of your work, that you're
a huge fan of Ian McGillcrest, the right brain, left brain.
And we talked, you and I have talked previously about the world that we're kind of living
in, how it seems to be dominated by whether it's the capitalist view or it's the ceramic
model of the universe view, where you go out there and you create all these things that
happen on some level.
And I think that kind of takes us into some of Zachary's films a little bit.
Do you think that maybe these things are connected when you go into these altered states
of awareness, we see what is possible and we get sickened by the world we're living in
because we become aware of how built up this framework is that's just not serving anybody,
man. What do you, what, where should we take that? Zachary, what are your thoughts?
First time I did DMT, I was in a little tiny trailer in Northern California. And it was like,
it's like in an HP Lovecraft story where he describes like being in an ancient tomb or something.
Yeah. Like just this, this hoary, terrible event.
emanation, this
holiness. Like, every time I've held
DMT, I'm scared.
Yeah. You know, and I took
it and I
didn't like blast off. I've never been able to do that.
But I felt like
my body was a profound
limitation on my spirit.
And it was just like the soul was like trying to get out.
And I was, I became very aware of that.
That there's a spirit that is
not the body and that the body
is a interface for
and I just remembered like being on the floor of this trailer
like these dudes like hey yeah you should do more dude
and I'm like I'm good I'm good I'm good
and we fear that
I think we fear the truth
we fear the reality of
what is going on beneath the surface
of what's really underneath the hood
and the
that extends
you know
outward into the layers of projections and illusions and hallucinations that are our culture,
that are the sort of dream states that are mapped to our neurochemicals and to our dopamine
circuits and to our cortisol that are materialized to us through structures like money
that make us feel like we're being chased by a cheetah if we don't have it.
And that continually validated through other people saying,
what do you mean there could be another way of being this is it what are you talking about
stop questioning it stop doing that it's like um when i i mean my my life has been a psychedelic
for a lot of other people you know to take them on these journeys to these other places like even
just like my instagram stories where i'm like hanging out with tribesmen in africa you know or like
i'm taking train journeys across europe like that's kind of frustrating to somebody who's stuck in a
life that doesn't feel like it's theirs and
that they are contenting themselves with their artificial fireplace and, you know, TV that's
catered to their sensibilities, you know? And so when we take these substances, these, you know,
numinous dream magical artifact, you know, spells, we, we get more in touch with that real thing
underneath us, which is scary and human and vulnerable. I did a Bufo in a cave about a mile from
here with my fiance and a shaman named Ehud and we did the hape first which i fucking hate hate
it can't stand it it's awful for me it's like the most painful unpleasant just and i was like
puking my guts out and then we took the DMT and it was like very beautiful and calm and serene and
loving and i just remembered uh putting my head in my my partner's lap
and and saying like I'm going to throw up and she's like you can throw up on me and I just knew that
moment that like oh this is this is my woman this is my this is my wife and it just it really showed me
that and before that I'd been afraid of that I'd been afraid of engagement I've been afraid of marriage
because my parents marriage fell apart and because our civilization has created these weird
relational constructs of ownership and control that you know even another huge
human being can become an object that is contractually obligated to you.
And all this is metaphysical arrangement.
You know, it's all metaphysical.
It's all spiritual in a way.
And yet we forgot, we forget that.
And it's, it's scary to realize that.
It's scary to step back into that.
It is visceral.
There is a visceral feeling of disgust and revulsion that comes over you when you come back
into Walmart.
After, you know, experiencing your godhood.
After experiencing, you know, the, the infinite, boundless reaches of imagination and possibility and conscious creation to go and sit in Denny's and know that the food is poison and that everything around you is made of oil.
And that, you know, it's just like there's so many layers to it.
And I don't really know where to bring this full circle into something that's positive and co-creative.
I'm not really sure what the theme of this show is,
but it's our adventure to ritualize that discomfort
and own it and understand it and use it wisely
so that we are making ourselves uncomfortable with the onecidal behaviors
and roots and cultural conditionings that we're sort of wired into
so that we can gradually dispossess ourselves
and leave the body of the body.
I love to hell Teres McKenna says that.
The body.
the body is a prison but yeah we we can free ourselves from from the comforts of our systems
of the comfort to not have to think about our destiny from the comfort to have to don't have to
question the meaning of life because there is no meaning of life from the from all the false
comforts that everything is figured out and all you have to do is just just submit yourself
to predictable suffering every day and everything's going to be fine and in the afterlife blah blah
blah, you'll be able to retire.
It's shedding ourselves of that so that we can come into a true reality that is uncomfortable
to get there.
It's like we're squeezing through a birth canal.
But once we get out to the other side, it's a glorious meadow with flowers and birds
and infinite possibilities and infinite uses.
I love it.
I know both of you guys, when I look at some of you guys work, you both talk about the
meta crisis, but I can't help but sort of draw a through line through this idea.
idea of purging and then being disgusted and then you're in the power to create stuff.
I think both of you guys are doing that.
Like, is that what do you guys see where we are right now?
It's like we are constantly in this purging phase?
Are we waking up from this, this idea of like, holy shit.
Like, what are we doing to ourselves?
Are we coming through that thing or are we going to get stuck right here?
What are you guys thoughts, man?
I'd like to chime in a little bit.
Yeah, please.
Specifically because Zachary mentioned oil and oil.
is quite fascinating.
So I did a little bit of a,
or I've been coming in and out of this idea
or this, yeah, it's more of a feeling intuition.
Trying to make sense of what oil and our use of oil
is on a more Gaian scale,
Gaian consciousness scale.
And if we think about it, oil, like this,
compressed hydro, fossil hydrocarbons is death on a massive scale that hasn't returned to the circle of life.
So it's compressed mass, yeah, mass death of a lot of unicettular organisms.
The coal is also trees, other beings, other creatures.
And these occurred over many cycles in the planetary.
Bless you.
Bless you.
over many, many cycles on the planetary history.
So many moments of mass suffering, I'd say, which haven't been, which weren't bioavailable.
So they went subcontainian, they went subterranean, but let's call it subcutaneous in the layers of the earth,
in the body of Gaia, without being touched, without anything happening to it.
And then Homo sapiens at one point figures out how to, A, access oil, but also B, use it on a mass scale and then build all these different products of it.
I have all this things of gasoline, just everything that oil is.
It's not only, I think, oil consuming.
It is like we craft with oil.
So we shape a world based on oil products and fossil, fossil carbons.
Any time I stepped into heavy trauma release, either in ceremonial setting with plat medicine or with breathwork or with sort of other methods, shamanic work,
oftentimes if I tune into the energy of whatever is congealed around that boon, that sort of compressed energy that wasn't.
wasn't transmuted or wasn't part of life just yet.
That feels oily.
There's like a film of undeads around it,
like frozen in time, and then all this coping structures
are developed around it, and that is the stickiness.
That, to me, feels like the contagion or the,
the, that heavy fluid.
But anyone will tell you who has had
many of these sort of cycles where you step into a process of transmuting, whatever pain is there,
and at the end, coming out in a sort of post-tragic mindset, learning to see like what does this teach me,
what are the nutrients that were present there, or what is the energy that was captured there,
and that I just used to transmute whatever was inside of it, to re-appreciate that, learn from the process.
I think Gaia is in a certain sense in a massive, massive trauma resolving state and at the same time being re-traumatized as we are in a human-induced mass extinction event.
So it's the humans injecting all these hydrofossil carbons, making them bioavailable again in some forms.
In other forms, they're not bioavailable.
They're plastics, microplastics, all these other kinds of chemicals that aren't being.
being taken up on a planet.
But it's causing this, this state where everything is coated with sort of
undeth.
And well, I feel like a lot, I feel and look at the state of the, let's say the human world.
I think people are trying to keep up while at the same time also.
But I can't help to think on a planetary skill that this is really part of a
part of a process that was already set up, let's say millions of years in the past.
Let's not be fully deterministic with that, not necessarily set up for this moment, but we are in this moment and we are doing the transmuting.
And I'm very curious how that might resonate with the both of you or if that makes any sense to you.
Yeah.
Well, I can just say that, oh, go ahead, George.
No, I was just going to throw it back over to you.
I think that anything, a model built on extraction can't do anything but extract.
A model built on suffering can't do anything but create a product or service of suffering.
I was going to throw it that way.
But what are your thoughts on that, Zachary?
I was going to say that oil is a one-time pulse that is we treat as a flow, but it's really a stock.
It's a finite property that is.
you know, not going to come back.
And I think about when we discovered that,
we discovered this unbelievable power to, as you're saying,
literally reshape the world, you know,
by allowing these sort of fossil servants to work in ways we could not.
That like a barrel of oil contains the work of so many humans working night and day.
and the material science and the the plastics and the ways that this this material is embedded into probably just about everything we're looking at right now.
There's plastic on the keyboard.
There's this pen is made of oil.
It's all made of oil.
I mean,
and that right there is a mind fuck to just look at the world around you and see that everything plastic is made of oil.
And on the one hand, you know, hemp plastics can replace.
all of that, that there are other hydrocarbons if you put two,
two atoms together basically, I'm not going to try to pretend I'm like a scientist,
but I'm not.
But yeah, we can substitute all of that.
But just think about the fact that we got a genie's wish and we turned it into this.
We used that wish to turn the world into anything we could imagine and we created the Mall of America.
You know, we created the New Jersey Turnpike.
I often use jet skis and leaf blowers.
I'm like, yeah, we have this incredible resource,
and then just we're going to do this with it.
But then we also create like the Taj Mahal and like beautiful works of art.
Like if you look at oil painting, like there's cases where we've used it to make the world much more beautiful.
I'm not saying I love where we are at right now, but like, is it a,
a lack of imagination is it greed is it selfishness is it the human condition like the fuck are we
doing it's a it's a lack of information and a lack of foresight and restraint and imagination and
vision the tajma hall when was that built i don't know man i should probably know that but i don't
i'm gonna i don't know i'm gonna get something the 1600s 1600s yeah there you go well before
fossil fuels and yet look at what look at what we're building with fossil
fuels today. You know, these, these cubes that that just pop up completely. It's worse and brutalist.
Yeah. Yeah. It's like I've seen these incredible carvings from like Sri Lanka, from India,
of these buildings that like every bit of it, every facade, every edifice is sculpted with gargoyles
and characters and gods. And you look at the doorknobs in the past and they're, they have angels on
them. And yet today, we have the power to 3D print and to mold things out of natural materials and out of
earth. And we have like machines that can like blast water that can like sculpt stone into whatever
shape we can imagine automatically, like which we could create with a 3D virtual rendering and then
recreate these things. And yet we don't even advance those technologies because it's more
profitable for this abstraction of being able to extract money out of false scarcity to have a whole
construction crew waste their time and sit around it.
It's just, it's all so absurd.
But yeah, the basic thing is that we could have turned the world into anything with with the
gift of oil, which we should be grateful for in a way and realize that we did not appreciate
those gifts.
And we allowed systems that we didn't understand and powers and principalities and
effectively entities to direct our design thinking because we weren't thinking as cathedral builders
we weren't thinking about the world that we're designing as something permanent or even as something
fleeting we're just seeing it as something that we're sort of mindlessly iterating toward
numerical goals not meaningful goals I love that that brings up this idea of healing as subversion
You know, when we talk about changing systems, but what if healing itself is the revolution?
Simon, how does wholeness threaten power?
And Zachary, how does art make systems obsolete?
Nice. I like that.
I think I can circle back to the beginning.
That's something that Zach was saying.
And also in response to sort of my Bufow experience is experiencing a wholeness that directly,
sort of becoming aware that we are.
are more than just a body or that we are more than just a job or just a gender or just any
role that we play, any, any upscaling towards wholeness where we become aware of that we are
a lightening field, that we are a soul and potentially a soul. I'm saying potentially we are a soul
that's incarnated many times over time, many different bodies, many different ways of being,
maybe also places not here, not earth.
The more we become aware of those different skills of awareness, and that is wholeness, I think,
is yeah, that's destabilitating for any systems of control, any systems of power,
because those are mainly built at keeping, let's say, consciousness and awareness low,
as in if you are constantly afraid of death, for instance,
afraid of pain and suffering because you think or you know
or you've been told or have been indoctrinated
that this is the only life you have.
And that all life in the past was misery and hardship.
And this is the best one that you're going to get.
And so you should be happy because you're lucky.
Then you're going to try your damn best
to avoid any hardship, any pain and any suffering.
While at the same time, if you become more and more aware
or, let's say, conscious of this more aliveness of a field,
this presence of a field, a soul, you can call different things,
but I think many cultures, even in, well, I'm seeing us as coming from Western European descent,
that even in Western European cultures, there was this consciousness around having a soul, right?
And there was this other other sensibility.
And well, then you had the eternal heaven and all this kind of stuff we could go into the Abrahamic religious talk about.
But yeah, I'm feeling more and more that it's becoming quite apparent to me that, yeah, living in these sort of systems
of control and it actively dampens, let's say, the aware part of us. It's built on frictionless
interaction as driving a car here and there and highways and work and blah blah. All these
all these interactions are made to be as frictionless as possible and as unconscious as possible.
While when we become conscious, we start to experience the friction of being in a body and
interacting with the body and interacting with other people and interacting when it hurts
when other it physically hurts to me if other people I care about aren't physical or aren't
let's say consciously there especially if you are consciously there and want to express something
or want to resonate want to make contact and it also I feel like it hurts to walk around
very consciously and be an active participant in this whole
this whole charade.
As I was talking about sitting at,
we don't have a Denny's here in the Netherlands,
but we have similar kind of establishments, I think.
So to feel that.
So I think wholeness isn't,
well, being able to experience wholeness or sitting with homeless
or feeling oneself being whole within,
and that's doing the internal work with all the inner aspects
and seeing if you can get a coherence where you don't,
exile parts of you. That creates more capacity to be here. And that also creates, I feel,
and in my experience, creates the capacity to look out and reach out more to create wholeness
within family structures, to create wholeness within friends, community, but also
homeless within non-human world, non-human nature, to feel more embedded as this body is a
I like the phrase, this is a rented thing.
It's a, it's a, the molecules.
I've got to step out for just a sec.
I'll be right back.
Yeah.
All right.
Then I feel like the body is a rented thing.
So we pick up all these molecules and we build up our vessel from this.
And it's connected to everything, right?
And especially, I often focus on really earthly existence because we are doing, we're currently
human beings.
and this is an Earth show.
It's useful to remember or to picture other kind of information and states of being.
But it's all about bringing it here and bringing it into this thing,
so that this thing is an anchor and that can evoke or express those energies
or whatever that information.
And in that sense, if you become way more,
or if you become more and more conscious of inhabiting a body,
inhabiting it consciously,
you'll also become more and more aware of any time
you start to experience suffering, friction,
and especially if it's designed suffering,
if it's designed friction,
and if you notice it,
when you look at how systems are constructed
or not necessarily constructed,
how they sort of were developed.
Yeah, you can't help,
but start to become cross and try to do things differently and not want to sort of step into that
that state. I often think about, we've talked about the superorganism and that is a term often used
by Nate Aiken's on his excellent show. I think Zachary is probably familiar and probably
as well, George. It's the great simplification. And he talks about the super
organism. And I, when you look at ant colonies, ants are super interesting, right? How did
ants evolve? Because if you have, first, let's say you have individual insects. If you see a
beetle, beetles don't swarm, right? But if you study the behavior of an ant colony, you can even
do that, let's say at home if you just have ants around the house. But if you watch a documentary
or really put on the behavior that they they are capable of as a swarm that is of a different order
of that what they will be capable of individually and again then i feel like okay have the
humans been in some stage in development in civilizational development have we been
here hijacked is often like a loaded term but has a
a has a hive consciousness been projected on the earth as a sense like an ant superorganismal
consciousness is projected on a group of ends as something like that occurs and is are these
systems that we're often fighting against or if you talk about the matrix and all this kind
of there are many different frameworks how you can relate to this i i try to look at it from that
perspective of like, okay, it's a superorganismal consciousness that runs like a cloud computer of
sorts and that tries to hijack, let's say, our physical bodies. So we're competing within,
let's say, for sovereignty of this, of the, or our sort of biomechanical or yeah, whatever interface
we have in this reality, it's competing with us. And, um,
as I think Zach was also telling it to begin
and what you have here in the main line
when the myth collapses.
What happens is that superorganism
structure is actively debasing
and deconstructing the
sort of bases it needs
to survive like a cancer
at some point kills the host
and then there's nothing to grow on anymore.
So it's kind of like
where
where yeah i sometimes get the feeling of consciousness being dipped down
in order to be sort of subsumed in these superorganismal structures and they have the development
of ideologies and these kind of things also feel very clearly to me structures like that
and is this this coming out the other end is becoming let's say
yeah more fully aware of that reality but also of the
this sort of more metaphysical reality of how much influence does thinking and imagining and
collective fieldwork have on reality. And I think quite a lot. Probably that's the main thing that
interacts with metaphysical layers or substrate of reality that we construct it from. But this
competition with this Molog, Waitiko or whatever you want to call it.
But I think that's one of the big struggles that we're in.
And then I think wholeness is indeed a,
is an active move to see if you can step above
that kind of programming within us.
Yeah, first off, thank you for that.
Sometimes I get lost in the world of wholeness
because it seems on some level,
if you look at us like some hive mind,
it almost seems like a cast system
And like all of a sudden we find ourselves in this caste system where there's no social mobility.
And like that's kind of where I think we are on so many levels, at least here in the Western world.
Like there's no social mobility on some level.
So you have to go out and create a parallel economy.
You have to go out and create this thing.
But then you run into the problem of maybe the hero's journey again.
You know, what do you think, Zachary, as where we are right now as like a wholeness, as sort of a fucking caste system we're in?
more in how do we think ourselves outside of this box man it seems like you're doing some stuff
with that with all the work you're doing well first i just want to say that a simple definition of a
superorganism is a organism whose children are raised by someone else and i'm thinking about the fact
that uh we are definitely a super organism in that capacity and we're not just a super organism we're
like super mimetic because memes are raising our children literally um the television
raises people we send our children into a box we call school and someone then mass produced
manufactures a consent for a whole program of identity and and history and consciousness creation
that is basically an automated memetic process where there's an idea a story that is being
pervade that raises the person and shapes them and molds them more than
then their parent, and that becomes the parent.
And so civilization and society, as we know, it becomes our parent.
I don't really know what the question was.
Something about wholeness.
Yeah, I mean, it's like the whole cycle of singularity into separation,
into becoming, like the Big Bang or however the universe began as a nothingness.
becoming somethingness, nothingness being whole, something becoming a separation of that.
And then all of us going from a unified consciousness into a separated individual consciousness
so that we can go on this sort of journey back into the wholeness, into the group,
into the collective as a process that evolves through the journey, through the hero's journey.
I think that was something about the prompt for this conversation was about a hero's journey.
And I think that that archetypal structure of story is about that process from wholeness to individuation and then back into the whole.
And Western civilization, as we know it, is just hasn't finished the story.
It hasn't finished the cycle.
And so our story that we are authors of insofar as we assert our imagination and choose to write the next chapter rather than just the past.
or the present moment, man,
to really be able to think in futures
and to create our future
does absolutely entail creating a parallel economy
and a new structure
and a new superorganismic, super mimetic process and culture
that can raise people right
and raise AIs right as other expressions of our consciousness.
And so the process of,
you asked about art and about, I think,
filmmaking. Um, these are mass produced ideas, mass produced trips. A film is a mass produced
numinous experience, um, that before would have been spoken around a fire or would have been
scribbled into a book, but a film is, is, um, not scarce, uh, in the way that a book is even.
You don't have to hold it to have it. And, uh, it's this experience that in the internet,
like the video that we're watching now,
it exists in perpetuity as long as the servers that are hosting it
and the channel that is playing it is out there.
And so we have the imperative and opportunity to reshape the system that rears us
and that shapes our consciousness and that brings us into wholeness out of our fractured state
by recreating that culture and by spreading.
it and sharing it and repeating it and reifying it, which is a fancy sociological term for when you
repeat something so much it becomes true. We reify, you know, the value of the dollar every time we spend it.
We reify the the preeminence of politicians and nation states because other people think that they're
powerful. We think that they're powerful. And so it's it's like it could be a crazy practice like
circumcision or something that you just eat it enough that.
it becomes like oh yeah that's normal you know human sacrifice oh yeah well we've got to make sacrifices
to the gods uh or that won't happen that that that's the sort of moloch thing molloc is about child sacrifice
sacrificing the future for the present sacrificing you know the long term for the short term
trading in tomorrow for today that's kind of what a our separation and fragmentation represents
but also in the spirit of wholeness um our story needs that the story the story
story needs a fracture. It needs a separation. It needs a point where we leave the unity and the
wholeness of an unbroken culture that no one can even see because they're inside of it. And so
to be jettisoned out of that, as I have been, as I assume you have been, and as anybody
dancing with psychedelics and films and great art and psychedelic rock and all these things
that bring us out of that, that shatter the wholeness, the totality of that story.
That is get up and go to work and seek meaning and look for love in a self-referential sweetheart.
All of those things are sort of made whole when you break out of them in the discomfort of a new story
and of the reunification of the identity, of re-identify.
with something bigger than yourself,
which is that meme that that supersedes you,
that goes further.
That is the transcendent identity
that goes beyond the individual body
that the psychedelic is there to help you escape from.
Or that is the paradigm of the metabolism
or the sort of like dopaminergic reinforcement systems
of money, growth, followers,
all of these very interesting, just that I'm thinking out loud,
that are like expressions of the body politics,
dopamine cycles and neurochemistry that are reinforcing these things
that may not be true in the same way that somebody who goes
through a life-altering trauma,
their neurochemicals are keeping that story going,
even if it's not happening.
In our way, likes and followers and numbers and dollars and customers,
All of these numerical things are like the sort of the neurological chemistry that keeps these artificial stories going.
And we need to create new reinforcing mechanisms and feedback loops and flood the good, happy chemicals in new directions so that we can reinforce a new story.
You know, on the surface level, like it looks like everything is just collapsing and is going to ship.
but maybe this is what birth looks like.
Maybe this is what a new myth looks like.
Maybe this is what we're going to look back on.
Those are the best times ever.
That's when we created this whole new world.
You guys, I know it's so easy to fall into like the doom scrolling
or to fall into these patterns of everything is cracking and crumbling.
But is it possible that we're living through like the best time in history right now?
Might if I jump in there, Simon?
I was just telling this to a kid I've been mentoring since he was 15.
that he is in the best time to be alive to be himself.
Not in the fact that there are more slaves on this planet than ever before
or that a child dies of hunger every five seconds
or that we're destabilizing the fucking oceans
and that there are mass, die-off events all across the blue dot
or the fact that people are destroying themselves
in addictive cycles to compete to destroy their planet.
themselves, but the fact that he's here and we're here at the moment where we have the
recognizance to make sense of that and we have the technological capacity and the critical mass
all over the world as it's not yet organized to be the ones we've been waiting for and to
actually step in at a transformative juncture in history where the old story is breaking apart
and we can become the characters and the authors of that new story.
And I'm sorry, I have to go pee again.
Yeah, no worries, man.
What do you think, Simon?
Yeah, no, I love how we worded that.
It's also kind of how I look at it.
I sometimes get this image of that overshoot.
You can also picture it as a sort of a launch or something.
Right.
That overshoot is almost like a rocket
and then the amount of energy that needed to get lift off.
There is maybe this brief moment of weightlessness.
And in that weightlessness, we might have the opportunity to seek a new attractor state, like a new, almost like if you picture like you're on a planet and you leave the gravitational pool almost.
And maybe there's another planetary body nearby.
And then if you overshoot, let's say from being in the bounds of this one, then you become attracted to the other one.
So you snap into another, let's say,
consent to state.
And I'm not talking about physical planets here,
but more about, yeah, coherent world views, coherent stories.
And maybe it is superorganismal patterning,
like a different type of hive consciousness,
maybe one that is life aligned and then life with a capital L.
And then I'm thinking more about,
well, all the non-human denizens that we also depend upon,
but which also have a right, or right is in the wrong word,
but also are here and deserve to be here.
And also deserve to continue on changing, diversifying,
and all this kind of things.
And so it's, it's, in that sense, it pains me living in this time,
because in that sense, it feels like it's one of the worst times.
because we are seeing many things die and experiencing things,
many, many other creatures and life forms perishing at a very fast rate.
And at the same time, indeed, as far as we know,
the human species hasn't been alive in these kind of numbers on the planet.
And as the old contextual coherent stories are dying,
sort of modern stories, city, states, empire, religious beliefs, even old religious stories.
There's, of course, there's a lamentation about it, there's pity in it, and there are beautiful
stories that might not be retold. But at the same time, it's that what
what secari was talking about is if these cracks appear within these sort of almost watertight
stories then water starts to seep in and then maybe you could swim upstream through the incoming
water and find yourself in into the outside of this story being reminded of oh what the hell was i
in inside of and where are we and the more people we find together is that we can start
sharing more stories.
And I think stories and ways of seeing the world
and these are as much created
as received by us.
So I think these are things that move through us
and through us as sculptors,
we might be able to, well, again, channel certain stories
and then they start to live here.
And as they start living here in this physical reality,
they start to evolve and being shaped
but the conditions here.
And I think that we are living also in a period of time
where we are in heavy informational overshoot.
And at the same time, that's also a boom,
because that means that there's quite a lot of different information
and different ways, different ways of being,
of thinking, of sensing that we can inhabit and invite
and through that invitation and see what's to come through.
And well, there's also a kind of.
quite a bit of joying that because I if I speak for me personally one of the main things I was
heavily depressed by my deepest points was like is this it just the general feeling of is this
it am I just going to continue life as this within a structure like this as everything is crumbling down
yeah then I'm yeah that doesn't sound like a like a deal to me and then when it starts
opening up like no this isn't it you there is actual special special
for authorship and for change and shifts and just doing we're also living in a time where yes
there are a lot of systems of control but there's also a lot of personal freedom in just
weird ways of expressing oneself and getting in contact with other weird people who are expressing
themselves i love it i want to drum we got some people coming in from the chat right here this one
comes to us from pria from toronto and she says what's your favorite lie humanity still believes
Thank you, Frya. That's a beautiful question.
Zachary, you want to take that one?
My favorite lie that humanity still believes?
Yeah.
I think my favorite?
Like, what do they mean by that?
I guess maybe when you say it out loud, it's, I don't know if you should have a favorite lie.
But like, what lies do you think are, what do you think is the most precious lie that humanity still believes?
Shall I go, Sagary?
Yeah.
I've wanted to mind.
Yeah.
Go for it.
It's the Protestant work ethic and whatever form it is taken now.
It's that life here should be grueling hard work and that is it.
And that is how you should live.
It should just be continuous, brutal work.
And that is a great virtue.
And that has just taken such a monstrous form.
And with capitalism, it becomes like, or you become a slave that exploits itself that doesn't need a master at all.
You just have the slave master up in here.
So that's a very funny clip of Alex Formosi, like a business coach, guru.
And he's like slaves worked all hours of the day.
They worked from the time they woke up until the time they fell asleep.
In America and Egypt, all through history.
And if they did it, so can I.
Yeah, I mean, Buckminster Bulley said we must do away with the absolutely specious notion that we must earn our right to live.
That we extend to nature as well that if nature is not working and producing, and if we are not productive, then we don't deserve food, shelter, water, the things that we need to exist.
We don't deserve life if we're not being productive in a sort of suicidal paradox that we don't.
we need to produce and that we need to produce more and that we're in scarcity. I mean,
that's the ultimate lie. That's the biggest one. That's the big duh, is that we are in scarcity
and that we don't have enough and we have to compete to survive. And that's the foundation of the
whole market. That there's not enough to go around and we have to compete over it and we have to go
to war. There has to be a winner and a loser rather than this idea that we actually have enough
for everybody. We have way more than enough. We have not infinite, but resplendent, bountiful abundance
if we allocate it and utilize it properly and we don't overstrip it. I think that's the big lie.
The big lie is that we have to compete. And we internalize that into our daily lives. We are
exploiting ourselves. We are hustling. We are trying to compete in the market rather than cooperate
towards something better.
And there is a
motivational pathway
into this
out of the existing
burning building
that brings us
back into the truth.
You know?
Although, you know, the lie,
the favorite lie, I guess,
is Pablo Picasso said art is the lie
that tells the truth.
I think that there is some element
of like lying
that is essential to human beings
that we lie about the world because we're seeing something better,
that we have a delusion,
that things could be what they aren't right now.
And that is always what drives the wheel of history forward meaningfully
is those people who can see, oh, yeah, you know,
late stage capitalist abomination, you know, man-made horrors beyond comprehension
on a daily basis brought to me, you know, 24-7 in a,
casino style endless scroll cool um you know again ocean currents collapsing biodiversity dying off
uh fascist tin pot dictators taking over i mean you can look around and see okay things suck
things are terrible things are bad or you can be one of those people who's insulated by their
money and say everything's great what are you talking about stock market's doing great these are all lies
I don't know. I was a pathological liar as a kid for a face. I like threw ninja stars all in the wall and I just denied it flat out, you know.
And I think that there's something powerful in that. I think that that there is in that impulse of desire to break down the world and bring it back up in something other in a different shape, in a different form to let the waves crash over the sandcastle and build it back up anew.
And it is it does require a sort of insane delusion to think that you can change a world like this that's so intractable and so structured and so systematized and so totalitarian and so totalizing and it's apparent victory.
And yet we must dream.
We must see beyond that.
We have to lie to ourselves or we have to dispel the lie with with new stories, with new fictions that become real because everything that we're dealing with is a fiction.
everything we're dealing with is a lie you know most of our culture and most of the memes
that are raising us are not truthful they're not rooted in reality they're not ritualized you know
mythic stories connecting us to the water system and to the the generative capacities of our
environment to produce for us they are self-perpetuating illusions uh automatically and exponentially
regenerated by essential falsets and stories and myths and traumas that are still
puppeting the entire human race or not the entire human race because most of us are the most
of the billions of people in this world actually don't live by these lies they just live in them
where they tolerate them or they grunge through them or they honk their horn at them in their
car and they know that it's bullshit most people do know that they know that it sucks but it's it's
we have to muscle through the discomfort to acknowledge that we've been duped
and that things could be better
that it requires an admission that things are not great
and that we're in a subpar subhuman situation
for us to be able to say okay so things can be better
that's a big that's a big block that's a big hurdle that people have
and and then one more
I love that this is a lie because it's dispellable
lies are powerful because truth can dispel them right
and anything that any anything that can be destroyed by the truth should be
and can be and it's that we are not powerful enough
to make the change and that's a lie
and that's scary for people because they have to step into
actual responsibility and authorship
I have to be again
what the fuck did I drink this morning
man it's almost like the ending of a poem
to say I have to
again. It's like a Roger, it's like a Kipling if. It blows my mind to think about where we are. But, you know, from where I sit as someone who's 50, I have this rare vantage point where I can see what it is that was built before. And yet I can talk to some young men and women that are creating these new ideas. And not only that they're, maybe they're not really creating them as much as they are embodying them. And it's such an interesting perspective.
You know, when you look at this way and you go, oh, I see what it was.
But then you can look at this and be like, oh, I see what it's becoming.
I think that that is maybe the role of people like Gen Xers or something like that is.
Like you got to see both worlds.
You got to see this one dying.
You get to see this one emerging, you know?
And so you become sort of this sort of mediator or this someone who's translating.
Like, wait, some of these old people, some of these ideas are not so bad.
You got to tell the older generation, like, do these kids have way?
more awareness than you've ever had like you have no idea what they're coming up and you
don't understand what it's like so it's an interesting generational perspective what are
your thoughts on the generational aspect of it simon it's nice you paint a interesting image there
it's like this bridging bridging function yeah the old and new yeah um so i'm i'm
36 and sometimes it's difficult not to be a little. I also do let's say I also facilitate
workshops with the work of Joanna Macy, the work that reconnects and also for different audiences.
And I've interacted also with lovely people in general, but also in more let's say public
like short workshops kind of things and then interacting with elderly people
There's often a, how do I say this without, it's generalizing.
But there can be this sense of entitlement and this sense of, well, I'm old, so I know that
there's this sense of entitlement to wisdom, so that they attribute them wisdom to themselves,
where I feel like, look, I've talked to 20-year-olds who have way more wisdom than the way
you are describing or feeling or thinking about things.
and that can be frustrating and then i can have this image of like okay with the old literally
old world dying and old ideas getting sent to past here where i think it's that's also good
that's it's part of the cycle um you have this uh what is this book about um
hospice in modern now hospiceing modernity with uh like the composting of the old and then you can midwife
and that that yeah that that the work to 80 generation secretary was talking about how he's mentoring
someone from since they were 15 it's super important work most of the work that i've done with young people
people that i help or well that i support in that process either with group work or individually
one of the main things that happens there is is that they get taken seriously
their concerns and that you give them space to unpack the thoughts that they have about the world and the feelings that they have about the world and that they're not told to be that they're snowflakes or that they're overreacting or that it's always been like this but it will be fine or blah blah blah all these stories and that kind of opens up this ability to well start sensing through like what situation are we in and i'm i'm seeing and
Maybe this is generalizing, maybe the experience is different where you guys are at.
I'm seeing the younger generations do this way more than the older generations.
And that probably also has something to do with, or a lot to do with different sort of biological factors,
but also just material, material factors.
If you have a pension and if you have a mortgage or if you have your savings and everything's put down into the system and into the system,
surviving of course you're what is the saying it's it's very it's very difficult to get a minute
to believe something if his paycheck depends on him not understanding it yes yes yes that that kind of
thing so I think the generational it's not absolute but I do see that there is a there's a
there's a difference exactly what do you think about the generational divide like we were I was
saying I'm coming up on 50 so
So I have this sort of interesting seat where I can look at this last generation and see
the things that they've done there.
And then I can see this new generation coming up and creating new things that are happening
there.
And I feel like I'm a translator sometimes.
Like I'm talking to this group of people and I'm like, you have no idea what these kids are
coming up.
They have this whole new sense of awareness.
And then I got to tell some of the young guys, wait, some of these people built some
pretty incredible shit.
Like some of their values were pretty on point.
But when you look at the generational divide, how does that play into your matrix?
well I've always
connected a lot more
with older people that I have people my age
because
I don't know
I was successfully disassociated
from my
culture through
what you could call mental
illness I don't know ADHD
adaptation to distract myself and disassociate
for everything around me which is a precursor
to the psychedelic experience
which you know insane people can
indogynously produce so I'm in that club lucky me um yeah I always connected with
teachers and with older people and my parents friends and now I I spend my time a lot of the
people I'm working with not just teenagers I've just got up a call with Steve Keene who I'm helping
to mentor or guide through this navigate navigating this landscape of new media
you know, community building and and it's interesting to be engaged with those people
with that perspective because I really respect them. I respect their insight and their experience.
While at the same time, things are changing so rapidly and radically, I think we really need
the wisdom of elders and we need the novelty of youth. And it's the sort of perpetual duty of
youth to destroy everything that was created before.
I think there's some anarchist that was saying, like, I will be, if we succeed,
I will be called conservative and hung for the society that I create.
Dr. Fresco said, the cities that I design will be straight jackets to the children of the future.
And so, yeah, it's like there's a rebellion embedded in the regenerative reproductive capacities
of life and death.
Like, death is necessary, like, to innovate and,
involve and move things forward generationally.
And so, yeah, I just think we need a, we need a clear reconnection.
I think materially, the older generations have accumulated a vast amount of wealth
that is going to blow up their ass, I guess, or go to the grave with them if they don't
transfer that.
And, yeah, like the boomer generation has an enormous amount of wealth.
And the biggest wealth transfer in human history is incoming as they croak.
And I'd like to help with that silver tsunami.
I'd like it to be a wave that is positive and a wave that we can surf and a wave that brings prosperity to the new generation where we can have a handing off of the reins.
I mean, like a lot of our politicians are geriatric.
Literally.
They're in their 70s and 80s.
and they are not functioning properly.
And so we have a gerontocracy where the rich, well, the rich old rule,
but the old rule, that's a gerontocracy.
And that's not a just structure.
It's a structure that is strangling the youth and that is killing the future generations.
that it really should be the responsibility of the older generations to guide and to aid
and to make it so that the youth have a better life than they do.
And there's a very serious disorder in our culture where they're trying to hold on to what they have
and they don't necessarily want the next generation to have a better life.
They think they need to struggle more.
They think they need a war.
You know, these are very popular ideas among that generation.
even though to fire some shots the boomer generation had it way easier in a material sense um even as they had it
way harder in a spiritual sense because they had such strong infrastructure to be born into and such
steady tracks to just move through just go to college and they get a job and and that McDonald's job
can support a fucking two-car garage and a home home and you know you just got to show up you know and you
have there plenty of jobs and plenty of opportunity and we don't have that today.
Thankfully, thankfully, we don't have that.
Thankfully, our generation has to redefine wealth because transferring that wealth
doesn't just mean giving money to a new generation and giving them the reins to a broken
system.
It means us redefining what that wealth means and basically regaining our true inheritance,
which should be the earth.
I love it. I love it. Gentlemen, this conversation, like I should have scheduled more time, man.
I feel like we're just kind of starting to get into, first off, all the conferences have been brilliant,
but I really like where we're at right now. But I got a, my daughter's got guitar lessons coming up here.
And I've got to go play some Led Zeppelin, I guess, is what we're working on today.
So here I am, throwing back to the oldies, but it's still rebellious a little bit, you know.
But let me throw it back to each one of you to give you just a moment to wrap up and let people know where they can find you what you're working on.
Let me start with you, Simon.
Yeah, so thank you both.
Again, George, for hosting this and always being so gracious with your time,
but also just the questions and the fun introductions.
So happy to be here, happy to meet you, Zachary.
It's been nice.
I had a feeling that you probably will get along.
That's good.
Yeah, it's been interesting talking in this conversation, seeing where this goes
and the kind of stuff that we're getting into.
More and more and maybe that's also the Pufo talking,
but more and more I'm sort of letting the reins go a little bit on my theorizing
about where things are going.
And I'm trying to make more sense of where we are at,
while having a, let's say, inner orientation towards a more life-affirming future.
And that one always includes more connection in a heart-fellation.
way but for me it's very much through the more than human or more than human also
then included a non-human and seeing if those can enter the picture more and that
we can communicate more in a sense where it's less the human constantly soloing
over the whole orchestra and that's a little segue as well like so people can find me on
LinkedIn I often post a little things there my sub stack is like a little
meager but every now and then I'll write something down if I want to be more
esoteric than my LinkedIn sort of allows and yeah I'm hosting sort of group
ceremonial events where we do shape-shifting and that has been something that's
been bringing me a lot of joy and I got a lot of sort of very positive
feedback just in general in how our experience life
but also from the people participating and I'm slowly but surely figuring out ways of expanding
that how we can get the dialogue going with interesting fields we've with whether
we've gotten to be earth into the bedrock we've talked with whales become forest
and just figuring out like how do I get people who are interested in this get them into
these states of being and get them talking
get them talking to the subject that they are interested in.
I have scientists friends with whom I'm aching to start shapeshifting into microbes and viruses
and all these kinds of things to gain more insight instead of trying to appear from the
objective reductionist framework from the outside inwards.
I want to get people in and experience.
So that's one of the main things I'm super enthusiastic about.
very nice very nice thank you always a pleasure Zach we work and people find you what
are you got coming up man what's on what's on the radar for you I have a little low energy
today I haven't had breakfast yet but I have a storytelling federation called another
world as possible and we're crafting the meta-miff as a storytelling system to guide
conscious transformation and re-authorship with reality we are changing the world one
story at a time and working to guide people and organizations into their purpose and to
regaining control of the story of their life which is a holistic reorganizational process
to reposition yourself cosmically to stop competing in the marketplace and start standing
ahead as a leader waving your banner holding up your shield and sword cutting through the
bullshit striking to the heart of what really matters.
And yeah, we're just plowing ahead, helping people as much as we can, young and old,
to really get out of the internalization of all these problems,
which is like just going inward, going inward, going inward.
And the sort of bent that we only have the realm of language and philosophy
to navigate these issues, which I reject.
because i've spent too much time navel gazing i love a good naval gaze but um yeah i mean
our quest is to leave the imprisonment of the individual body and the the sort of narrow
kind of success that is one life or one company or one family and to expand that into a
truly planetary ambition that uh we can externalize as
a journey as a beacon to attract people into the story with us so that we can actually change
the situation that we're in and create sustainable regenerative livelihoods you know positive growth
the spread of good ideas you know the increase of the the body politic um neurochemicals of
followers and engagements and you know sales and all these other things as well
because that's the world we live in.
Yeah, I'm kind of struggling to really bring this full circle
in terms of the mythic diatribe we've had today.
It's felt a bit sporadic and random for me.
I mean, I'm just coming in, diving in here,
making a little meaning on a Saturday afternoon,
making a little sense.
And ultimately, I think if there's one thing I could come back to,
it's this idea of the super meme or super memetics of what we're doing,
that stories drive everything around us in the world.
They are not physical.
They are metaphysical.
They are manifestational.
They are spiritual.
They are hallucinogenic.
They are lies.
And yet lies or lies that tell truth are extremely powerful.
And we have lost them.
We have lost our connection to them.
We have allowed ourselves to be characters in somebody else's story.
And we have forgotten that we are the authors of the story.
So if any of you are on a journey and you want to communicate that better or you want to expand it,
you want to raise the roof of what you're doing, you want to take it to the next level,
you want to evolve, or if you're not in that phase and you want to and you're a little bit scared,
but you wonder what could be on the other side.
Reach out and I will help you through that narrow passage.
Because what's on the other side is truly amazing.
and we can make this world what we wanted to.
We are the ones we've been waiting for.
And to add a little scarcity and urgency to the offer,
the clock is ticking.
There is a very narrow window.
The Indiana Jones-style door is closing on us.
And we're in a civilization scale narrative reset.
And if we don't author it,
the story that has been destroying everything in the world autonomously
without even really any individual controller,
any person making it,
that's going to be the story that takes over.
And it's going to be a total victory of that story,
triumphing over the real world as we trawl the oceans
and devastate our landscapes and black the sun out with coal,
you know, for a lack of imagination and insight and connection
and just a better story.
Last word is that when logic fails, people reach for their stories.
And logic is failing the world.
The stories that we've been born into and the structures around us
don't make sense to most people.
And so we have an obligation and a beautiful opportunity to present people with a way forward and to step into being leaders, to going from being the freaks and the misfits and the losers or the dreamers or the idealists or the people who are just getting by who are maybe doing really well in that existing system.
But you're still not authors.
We're not waving the flag saying over here, over here.
We have to be those people.
All of us have to step into that role.
And what a journey it is to get there if you can get through the discomfort and the psychedelics help.
So I go to George for that.
I love it, man.
I love it.
Yeah.
You know, I had a conversation with a gentleman not too long ago and he said, George, listen, if you want something from the world, stand on top of a trash can and yell for it.
Tell them you need it.
Get out there and do it.
And so with that, I say, if you're listening and you enjoyed this conversation, go to the show notes and click on the support true life.
podcast because I need some help to bring these awesome conversations to all of you guys.
I'm grateful for both of you and to all the listening audience that participated today.
Thank you so much. Please support the show.
That's all we got for today, ladies and gentlemen.
Hang on briefly afterwards, gentlemen, and everyone else, have a beautiful day.
Aloha.
Did I give you those marching orders about the trash?
