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Old man Ridley lived in a White House down the street from where I grew up. My mother sent me over with things, and we developed a friendship. I spent many summers on his porch swing. He shared stories of his time in the Navy and the loss of his wife and child. One day, I asked how he stayed sane despite his grief. He replied that he would see his wife and son again soon. Later that night, I reflected on those lost summers and felt a mix of emotions. If anyone deserves peace in the afterlife, it’s that kind old man.

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I was so effective with my team that I was invited to a child sacrifice, which I couldn't handle. I didn't go, and my career fell apart. This invitation was my breaking point, because I care deeply about children and our inner child. I've been in trauma therapy for years because I enjoyed destroying humans and all life on Earth. My turning point was that invitation, which led to my body breaking down, a heart attack, and an out-of-body experience. I hid for years under fake identities, fearing for my family's safety. After reuniting with my son, I studied theology and found love from the creator, which saved me. To achieve liberation, we must change from within, unite, and say no more to the current system. The tools for transformation are available; we just need to connect and create a safe world for damaged children.

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Dannion Brinkley shares his near-death experiences, emphasizing that no one truly dies. He describes the process of transitioning from the physical body to a spiritual realm, where a life review occurs. Brinkley's psychic abilities emerged after his brush with death, during which he received visions of future events. Despite initial confusion, he now embraces his psychic gifts. His message revolves around the importance of understanding the reasons behind our actions and maintaining dignity, direction, and purpose in life. Ultimately, he believes in the eternal nature of the human spirit.

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I've been struggling with an incurable illness and have a do not resuscitate order. I received a handwritten letter from you, calling me the bravest woman. The love and support that came from that letter provided my son with a full ride to college when he graduates high school. I've been writing letters to him for when I'm in heaven, telling him what you've done for him. Now he has a responsibility to pay it forward, just as you have done for us.

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I was raised by my great grandmother, a Holocaust survivor who lost her entire extended family. She never supported the State of Israel because she believed it was wrong to inflict on others what was done to the Jewish people. She saw the state and the Zionists as becoming what they had once fought against. As a woman raised Jewish, it's unpopular for me to say this, but I no longer believe in the faith. However, the Jewish people are still my family.

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I wrote a poem called "Suicide Note" apologizing to my family for being a transgender woman. I struggled with my identity, hiding it for years. Coming out at 43 was terrifying, but surprisingly, my family was accepting. As a transgender chaplain, I aim to support others in the 2SLGBTQI+ community. I hope to promote understanding and acceptance within the Royal Canadian Chaplain Service. Translation: I wrote a poem titled "Suicide Note" apologizing to my family for being a transgender woman. I struggled with my identity, hiding it for years. Coming out at 43 was terrifying, but surprisingly, my family was accepting. As a transgender chaplain, I aim to support others in the 2SLGBTQI+ community. I hope to promote understanding and acceptance within the Royal Canadian Chaplain Service.

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The craziest thing happened when I was a kid. My mom was bathing my brothers and me, and I just froze up. My dad called my name, but I started acting slow, and he got mad, telling me to stop playing around. Immediately after that, we were speeding to the hospital, running red lights. Doctors said they needed to operate on my brain that night. Since then, I've had 13 brain surgeries, and my personality has changed each time. You don't often hear that from someone terminally ill with only five months to live. I'm going to keep going until I run out of gas, whenever God calls me home. I wouldn't be here if it wasn't for my dad, who I know is proud of me, and I'm proud of him. I also want to thank President Trump because I wouldn't be here today without him.

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I recently became a father to Wyatt Cooper, named after my late father and my mom's family name. He was born healthy, weighing £7.2. As a gay man, I never thought I could have a child, but I'm grateful for the surrogate who made it possible. I wish my late family could meet Wyatt, but I believe they're watching over us. Their love lives on in us, bringing new life and love to our family.

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I grew up in a rural town in Southern Alabama. When I needed my birth certificate, I discovered that my mother was only 12 years old when she gave birth to me. Despite the difficult circumstances, my mother supported me and helped me through it. I believe in the value of life and that every child deserves a chance, regardless of how they were conceived. My life has turned out well, with a loving family and a purpose. Aborting me wouldn't have eased my mother's trauma or allowed me to care for her now. Regardless of my challenging start, I feel blessed.

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I found out I was adopted at 5. A brother contacted me recently. I went to boarding school for trying to buy alcohol. My parents loved me. I feel guilty for not doing them justice. It took me 5 days to tell my mom my dad died. She looked out the window for 2 years and never spoke. She died 2 years later.

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We exist within systems designed to assimilate us, a legacy of settler colonialism where formal education aimed to erase indigeneity. This reality persists today. It's time to reject the "white gaze," that internal voice pushing us to conform. This isn't about individual white people, but about dismantling the settler colonial structure and patriarchy that dictates our behavior. Once we remove that gaze, who fills the void? For me, it's my ancestors who take precedence, guiding my actions and perspectives.

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I remember one time when I was younger, my mom was bathing me and my brothers when I suddenly froze up. My dad called my name, but I started going slow, acting like something was wrong. We rushed to the hospital, running lights, and the doctors said they needed to operate on my brain that night. Since then, I've had 13 brain surgeries, and my personality has changed each time. I'm terminally ill and only have five months to live, but I'm going to keep going until I can't anymore; whenever God calls me home. I wouldn't be here if it wasn't for my dad. I know he's proud of me, and I'm proud of him too. I also want to thank President Trump because I wouldn't be here today if it wasn't for him.

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Speaker 0: That's one thing I want to share with you. The other thing is this. I've had a lot of questions over the years about this, but I had a couple more just in the last two weeks regarding the question, what happens when you die? I have emails to get to you with folks who have been really busy just trying to hold things together myself. Okay? But I’ll get to your emails here in the next week. When you die, you have choices. You don’t know this, but you have choices. When you leave your physical body, it is very typical for you to see yourself standing next to your body with either your loved ones or EMTs or whatever the circumstances are. And you see yourself, and then you’ll hear a voice. You’ll see the tunnel of light, and a voice will be calling you, or you will hear the voice telepathically telling you to come on. Come. You know? Now as you stand there and you’re looking at the tunnel of light, you have a choice. You can go up to this tunnel of light where you’ll be with other loved ones that have crossed over usually. Alright? And you’ll be put into a system where you are essentially caught in a reincarnational cycle, a loop. Or you can turn around, put the tunnel of light behind you, and what you will see is the entire universe. If you choose to go to the universe instead of the tunnel of light, whatever dimension you came from when you came down here to Earth, k, we’ll keep it all present present time and place. Earth, whether it was sixth, seventh, eighth, ninth density, whatever it was, if you choose the universe and you say to yourself, I wish to go home, you will return to that dimension from which you came. So if it’s five, six, seven, or eight, you will leave here and you will go back to that dimension where I am told you’ll be reunited with your soul group because we’re multidimensional. We’re in many places at once. I’ve never shared this information before. Speaker 1: I heard that when we die, we should not go to the light as it is a trick to recapture our soul to rebirth on earth. Is that true? Speaker 0: That’s what I was told. Vesias was very specific. He said, you of course can choose to do whatever you want but none of you ever turn around and look what’s behind you. And when I asked, well, what is behind me? He said, freedom. Freedom of Earth. Freedom of the reincarnational cycle.

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I looked into the eyes of a godson and told him that I tried my best. Our day will come, but we must keep going.

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Speaker 0 contemplates death and how one should be remembered, asking, "Like, die? If everything completely goes away, how do you wanna be remembered? What do mean if I die? Everything just goes away. How would you if you could be associated with one thing, how would you wanna be remembered?" The remarks center on legacy and the importance of faith and resilience. The speaker specifies the core desire: "I wanna be I wanna be remembered for for courage, for my faith. That that would be the most important thing. Most important thing is my faith and my life." In the face of death, these priorities define memory.

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I remember being young and locking up suddenly while my mom was bathing my brothers and me. My dad thought I was just playing around, but when he realized I wasn't, we rushed to the hospital, speeding and running lights. Doctors said they needed to operate on my brain that night. Since then, I've had 13 brain surgeries, and each one has changed my personality. I'm terminally ill and only have five months to live, but I'm not giving up. I'll keep going until I can't anymore. You never know when God will call you home. I'm grateful to my dad; I wouldn't be here without him. I'm also thankful for President Trump; without him, I wouldn't be here today.

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I was born among the sand hills in my country. There were no white people. No white people. We slept without blankets. We wore no clothes, completely naked. We used to travel around and go hunting on foot. We'd catch large iguanas, bandicoots, blue tongue lizards, and possums. We'd eat every bit of these animals, even crush the bones. The first time I saw an airplane down near the stock route. We thought the white people might kill us. We hid in a wattle tree, stayed there overnight. My uncle was a stockman; he guided us to Balgo Mission. The priest gave us lollies. No. No flour. Later on, we traded bush tucker for flour. The Catholics were good and generous. They taught us little by little until we gradually learned English and understood it. We were baptized with holy water. No more sin.

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I did a special about my fear of death, which I know you share. My faith is shaky, but it reminds me that we’re all flawed, like a chunk of coal destined to become a diamond. I fear not existing, but Nabokov once saw a picture of his family before he was born and felt no terror in that absence. It’s the knowledge of not knowing that drives my fear. If we were animals, we wouldn’t worry about it. Martin Short pointed out that when you sleep, you could be dead, and if you don’t wake up, you wouldn’t know. Nowadays, doctors can put you to sleep for a while, and you wouldn’t feel pain, just a peaceful end.

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My faith is in God, not myself. I've worked for others, not me. No regrets, as this is God's fight. There's a war on humanity in Canada with euthanasia laws killing 60,000 elderly and disabled. 100,000 babies are aborted yearly. The pandemic added a new layer to this war, with the medical profession tragically involved in harming rather than healing.

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I was questioned about my memory in the report, even about when my son died. I wear his rosary every day since his passing, and we honor him every Memorial Day. I don't need reminders of his death. I sat through a 5-hour interview discussing events from the past 40 years.

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When you die, you have choices. After leaving your physical body, you may see yourself next to it with loved ones or EMTs. A voice will call you towards a tunnel of light, giving you the option to go towards it or turn around. If you choose the tunnel, you'll be with other loved ones in a reincarnational cycle. However, if you choose to go to the universe, you can return to the dimension you came from and be reunited with your small group. This information has never been shared before.

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Speaker 0: I would never take my own life. I would never take my own life. Okay? You hear that Israel? I would never take my own life. I'm grateful to God for His grace in my life. I love my siblings. I have so many friends and people that love me and people that I want to see their children grow up. I'm hopeful that I get to have a wife and my own children one day. Like there's a ton of things in my life that keep me alive and hopeful, right? I want to be able to have an impact in the world. Those are just a few of them probably, you know, I mean, so many just moments we've shared on this show that I'm like, oh, I live for those things.

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In 8th grade, I talked to the principal about my daughter's depression and took her to the hospital after she overdosed on pills. Child Protective Services (CPS) got involved and my daughter was sent to an LGBTQ group without my knowledge. She started feeling like she was in the wrong body and her depression worsened. She went through medication, therapy, and surgeries, but it didn't help. She attempted suicide twice and eventually died by kneeling in front of a train. I asked to see something from her body, but there was nothing left. I believe she can see how hard I fought for her from heaven.

The Diary of a CEO

Neil deGrasse Tyson: The Brutal Truth About Astrology! Our Breath Contains Molecules Jesus Inhaled!
Guests: Neil deGrasse Tyson
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From the first breath to the last speck of stardust within us, the episode threads a bold claim: we are not separate from the universe; we are its material. Gen Z, Tyson notes, believes in astrology at high rates, but the cosmic perspective reframes identity. We are literally composed of stardust, with DNA shared with every Earth life and even a banana. Molecules we exhale swirl around the globe, linking us to others who breathe the same air. In this light, true unity replaces random divides. The fragmenting daily noise of politics and identity fades when seen against the cosmic scale. Conversations quickly tilt to belief, mortality, and meaning. Tyson describes evolving from a Catholic upbringing to a stance that seeks dialogue rather than attack, gathering religious texts to better understand faith communities. He argues that science offers a global oneness—on the level of atoms and ancestry—yet acknowledges the emotional pull of spirituality for many. Death, he says, sharpens purpose: knowing life is finite can channel energy toward helping others and shaping a legacy. He cites a Horatian tombstone ideal: Be ashamed to die until you have won some victory for humanity. Beyond Earth, the dialogue pivots to life beyond us, the possibility of aliens, and even the simulation hypothesis. Tyson argues that life is likely elsewhere, calculates a rough probability of civilizations in the galaxy, but insists on evidence, not wishful thinking. He riffs on the 'God of the gaps' idea, noting that if God remains where science has yet to tread, the belief recedes as knowledge grows. The conversation also weighs the motives for space travel: Mars remains expensive with unclear business case, while Artemis plays into geopolitical rivalries rather than sheer curiosity. Interwoven through the talk are reflections on technology, inquiry, and the art of asking questions. Tyson embraces AI as a tool that accelerates discovery but warns that true creativity requires leaps beyond imitation. He champions scientific literacy and curiosity as the antidote to stagnation, arguing that the surest path to wisdom is learning from errors and asking better questions. He also stresses the social value of community and education—church, family, and classroom—as anchors in an era of digital transformation. His closing guidance to the younger guest: cultivate humility, and love the questions themselves.

The Dr. Jordan B. Peterson Podcast

Cruelty | Charles Joseph | EP 223
Guests: Charles Joseph
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Jordan Peterson speaks with Charles Joseph, a member of the Kwakwa people and an accomplished cedar carver. They discuss Charles's background, including his experiences in a residential school, where he faced significant trauma and abuse. Charles shares that he was taken from his great-grandparents at a young age and placed in a residential school, where he suffered neglect, hunger, and physical abuse. He recounts the pain of separation from his family and the harsh realities of life in the school, including foraging for food and enduring punishment. Despite these hardships, Charles found solace in his cultural heritage and the teachings of his great-grandparents. He describes how reconnecting with his roots and engaging in traditional practices helped him heal. His art, particularly carving, became a means of expression and a way to honor his ancestors. He emphasizes the spiritual connection he feels while carving, often receiving inspiration from dreams involving his family and cultural symbols. The conversation also touches on the broader context of reconciliation in Canada, with Charles expressing skepticism about the effectiveness of current efforts. He believes true reconciliation requires acknowledgment of the past wrongs committed against Indigenous peoples. The discussion culminates in reflections on their friendship and the significance of cultural exchange, highlighting the importance of understanding and healing across different backgrounds. Charles's journey illustrates resilience and the power of art and culture in overcoming trauma.
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