1 00:00:00,200 --> 00:00:02,480 Speaker 1: Do you have opinions that you feel you can express. 2 00:00:02,680 --> 00:00:04,520 Speaker 1: I think we all do. Are you looking for a 3 00:00:04,519 --> 00:00:07,400 Speaker 1: place to stir up conversation and let your opinions be heard? 4 00:00:07,640 --> 00:00:10,160 Speaker 1: I want to introduce you to a new alternative social 5 00:00:10,200 --> 00:00:14,120 Speaker 1: media site, snippy dot com. Snippy is an unbiased social 6 00:00:14,160 --> 00:00:17,759 Speaker 1: media platform that's all about conversation and community. 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No shadow banning, no character limit, 16 00:00:49,560 --> 00:00:52,600 Speaker 1: and no suppression of conservative thought ever. Check out the 17 00:00:52,600 --> 00:00:56,280 Speaker 1: website at snippy dot com or download the app, No censorship, 18 00:00:56,480 --> 00:00:59,320 Speaker 1: no agenda. Join us at snippy to get the discussion 19 00:00:59,400 --> 00:01:03,040 Speaker 1: rolling now. Here's a highlight from Coast to coast am 20 00:01:03,320 --> 00:01:06,160 Speaker 1: on I Heart Radio and welcome back to Coast to 21 00:01:06,200 --> 00:01:09,000 Speaker 1: Coast our final hour here with Lynda Taggert. As we 22 00:01:09,080 --> 00:01:12,120 Speaker 1: talked about to work, the power of eight is the 23 00:01:12,200 --> 00:01:17,760 Speaker 1: one just as powerful as the eight, Lenn No, I think. 24 00:01:18,040 --> 00:01:21,039 Speaker 1: I think you can intend for yourself, no question, and 25 00:01:21,080 --> 00:01:26,160 Speaker 1: you can have you know, you can manifest things definitely. Um. 26 00:01:26,319 --> 00:01:29,199 Speaker 1: I've certainly seen that in my own life and seen 27 00:01:29,319 --> 00:01:33,560 Speaker 1: it in in many many instances. But there seems to 28 00:01:33,560 --> 00:01:36,399 Speaker 1: be some sort of scaling up in a group. You know, 29 00:01:37,520 --> 00:01:39,520 Speaker 1: I wrote about this in my last book, The Bond, 30 00:01:39,920 --> 00:01:42,840 Speaker 1: about how we are really need to be part of 31 00:01:42,840 --> 00:01:46,920 Speaker 1: a community, George, and you know that is our our 32 00:01:47,000 --> 00:01:51,240 Speaker 1: kind of birthright. It's also our feeling of of coming 33 00:01:51,280 --> 00:01:53,720 Speaker 1: home in a way. You know, we were always meant 34 00:01:53,760 --> 00:01:56,120 Speaker 1: to be in groups. We were never and we were 35 00:01:56,120 --> 00:01:58,920 Speaker 1: always part supposed to be part of a greater whole. 36 00:01:59,080 --> 00:02:02,440 Speaker 1: We were never supposed to be alone. And I think 37 00:02:02,480 --> 00:02:07,880 Speaker 1: there's something about that group support, that group feeling that 38 00:02:08,120 --> 00:02:10,040 Speaker 1: you know, you've got a load of people who are 39 00:02:10,160 --> 00:02:14,040 Speaker 1: just wishing you well there, you know, intending for you 40 00:02:14,160 --> 00:02:18,960 Speaker 1: for your health or your happiness or something that's really powerful. 41 00:02:19,680 --> 00:02:24,320 Speaker 1: And you know, in many cases with my masterclasses. For instance, 42 00:02:24,400 --> 00:02:27,560 Speaker 1: when I put people in groups, they're total strangers and 43 00:02:27,639 --> 00:02:31,280 Speaker 1: they don't meet in person. They're meeting virtually, you know, 44 00:02:31,320 --> 00:02:35,400 Speaker 1: they're meeting on Skype or zoom or conference call or 45 00:02:35,480 --> 00:02:39,520 Speaker 1: something like that. Many of them end up feeling like, 46 00:02:39,639 --> 00:02:42,520 Speaker 1: this is a batch of people who are closer to 47 00:02:42,600 --> 00:02:46,320 Speaker 1: me than my own family. Never they nevertheless, they've never 48 00:02:46,400 --> 00:02:50,240 Speaker 1: actually met them in person. And that's the incredible thing 49 00:02:50,280 --> 00:02:53,880 Speaker 1: about it. But it's that idea of a group of strangers, 50 00:02:54,280 --> 00:02:58,640 Speaker 1: you know, praying for you. Basically, that's very very powerful. 51 00:02:59,320 --> 00:03:04,520 Speaker 1: Have you find lend in your studies that these abilities 52 00:03:05,480 --> 00:03:10,840 Speaker 1: will work for people of certain age brackets, of certain 53 00:03:11,000 --> 00:03:16,080 Speaker 1: sexes or does exkew anything? No? I mean, you can 54 00:03:16,120 --> 00:03:20,840 Speaker 1: be young, you can be older, you know. I think that, Um, 55 00:03:20,880 --> 00:03:24,160 Speaker 1: the people who tend to do this stuff are people 56 00:03:24,200 --> 00:03:28,959 Speaker 1: who are you know, anywhere from their thirties to their seventies. Um. 57 00:03:29,000 --> 00:03:31,480 Speaker 1: It really depends on what they want in their life. 58 00:03:31,520 --> 00:03:34,600 Speaker 1: They I've had young people, I've had older people, and 59 00:03:34,680 --> 00:03:39,200 Speaker 1: it works for them. I think it's all about using 60 00:03:39,240 --> 00:03:42,880 Speaker 1: the techniques that I teach, you know, and becoming a 61 00:03:42,920 --> 00:03:47,119 Speaker 1: master in tender essentially knowing how to really focus your 62 00:03:47,160 --> 00:03:51,320 Speaker 1: mind knowing how to what kinds of things to intend 63 00:03:51,360 --> 00:03:54,400 Speaker 1: for and how to do it, but also being part 64 00:03:54,400 --> 00:03:58,040 Speaker 1: of that group and just meeting regularly. And I think 65 00:03:58,080 --> 00:04:02,600 Speaker 1: it's that meeting regularly that does the trick. I mean, 66 00:04:02,640 --> 00:04:06,440 Speaker 1: there's a guy called Mitchell Dean I write about my 67 00:04:06,520 --> 00:04:12,840 Speaker 1: book who is a clinical psychologist but suffered from depression 68 00:04:12,920 --> 00:04:16,920 Speaker 1: which such so bad that it was often suicidal. That's 69 00:04:17,000 --> 00:04:20,960 Speaker 1: not a good calling card for a psychologist. So he 70 00:04:21,080 --> 00:04:24,640 Speaker 1: had tried everything conventional and alternative to try to get 71 00:04:24,680 --> 00:04:28,400 Speaker 1: over this depression and he couldn't. And so being part 72 00:04:28,400 --> 00:04:31,640 Speaker 1: of the group, they intended for that, and what they 73 00:04:31,680 --> 00:04:34,840 Speaker 1: intended for was that he would find the source of 74 00:04:34,880 --> 00:04:39,440 Speaker 1: his of his depression. And soon after that he got 75 00:04:39,480 --> 00:04:43,960 Speaker 1: a brain wave to go to a Chinese herbalist who 76 00:04:44,000 --> 00:04:48,440 Speaker 1: worked out that one of his liver filtration systems wasn't working, 77 00:04:48,960 --> 00:04:51,440 Speaker 1: and he went and got tests and it confirmed that 78 00:04:51,640 --> 00:04:54,599 Speaker 1: he that he was right, And as soon as that 79 00:04:54,800 --> 00:04:59,960 Speaker 1: was treated, his depression completely lifted. But the really interest 80 00:05:00,240 --> 00:05:04,119 Speaker 1: part of Mitchell's story is what happened over the year. 81 00:05:04,760 --> 00:05:07,960 Speaker 1: Not only did that happen, but he ended up going 82 00:05:08,000 --> 00:05:10,480 Speaker 1: back to his fighting weight. He lost weight and he 83 00:05:10,880 --> 00:05:13,960 Speaker 1: got back to his you know, his his weight that 84 00:05:14,000 --> 00:05:17,800 Speaker 1: he was as a young man. He um his chee 85 00:05:17,800 --> 00:05:21,359 Speaker 1: gong practice. He was practicing cheegung that got better. He 86 00:05:21,520 --> 00:05:24,800 Speaker 1: got of a writer's block and was able to start 87 00:05:24,880 --> 00:05:29,640 Speaker 1: writing again. UM. He also developed something to help other 88 00:05:29,720 --> 00:05:33,960 Speaker 1: people with. I think it's with depression of special um, 89 00:05:34,000 --> 00:05:38,520 Speaker 1: a special kind of technique. And everything in his life 90 00:05:38,880 --> 00:05:42,200 Speaker 1: was getting better, and even his training, you know, his 91 00:05:42,200 --> 00:05:46,240 Speaker 1: his um. His his trainer at the gym said him, 92 00:05:46,400 --> 00:05:49,360 Speaker 1: what are you doing, man, You're exercising less and you're 93 00:05:49,400 --> 00:05:51,800 Speaker 1: more fit. What's going on with you? And it was 94 00:05:51,880 --> 00:05:55,000 Speaker 1: like everything in his life was starting to improve. But 95 00:05:55,440 --> 00:05:58,880 Speaker 1: he was one of the people who met religiously, and 96 00:05:58,960 --> 00:06:01,960 Speaker 1: in fact, one of the guys in his group, Robert 97 00:06:02,040 --> 00:06:05,080 Speaker 1: became a really really close with him, even though they've 98 00:06:05,120 --> 00:06:09,279 Speaker 1: never actually physically met. And there were times when Mitchell 99 00:06:09,320 --> 00:06:12,720 Speaker 1: would say, you know, I had insomnia last night and 100 00:06:12,920 --> 00:06:15,159 Speaker 1: I couldn't sleep, and Robert would say, don't worry, man, 101 00:06:15,320 --> 00:06:17,960 Speaker 1: I had you covered, and he was intending for him 102 00:06:18,160 --> 00:06:21,560 Speaker 1: to have a you know, to to sleep better. And 103 00:06:21,800 --> 00:06:26,520 Speaker 1: so knowing you've got that constant support is really strengthening 104 00:06:26,520 --> 00:06:30,680 Speaker 1: in every way over the year. When when you do 105 00:06:30,760 --> 00:06:35,240 Speaker 1: these intentions, not experiments. But when you do these intentions 106 00:06:35,440 --> 00:06:39,000 Speaker 1: to do something, what do they do? Actually? I mean 107 00:06:39,080 --> 00:06:41,600 Speaker 1: you sit there and think, I mean, what what do 108 00:06:41,680 --> 00:06:45,720 Speaker 1: they do? Okay, well, there's a lot of little techniques 109 00:06:45,720 --> 00:06:47,640 Speaker 1: that make you a good intender. I mean, you know, 110 00:06:47,720 --> 00:06:50,599 Speaker 1: the popular view is that you just have to think 111 00:06:50,600 --> 00:06:53,800 Speaker 1: about it and believe it, close your eyes or whatever 112 00:06:53,839 --> 00:06:57,400 Speaker 1: you do. Yeah, but it's you know, one thing to 113 00:06:57,480 --> 00:07:00,680 Speaker 1: really keep in mind, George, is that we're intending all 114 00:07:00,800 --> 00:07:04,240 Speaker 1: the time, you know, and we sabotage most of our intentions. 115 00:07:04,640 --> 00:07:07,720 Speaker 1: We we think that we're just having you know, we 116 00:07:07,720 --> 00:07:09,840 Speaker 1: we have our meditation in the morning, we do a 117 00:07:09,840 --> 00:07:13,280 Speaker 1: little power thought, and that the power thought is the 118 00:07:13,280 --> 00:07:15,320 Speaker 1: thing that's our intention, and that's the only thing the 119 00:07:15,400 --> 00:07:19,200 Speaker 1: universe is going to hear. But um, as I wrote 120 00:07:19,240 --> 00:07:22,320 Speaker 1: about in my book The Field, you know, we are 121 00:07:22,360 --> 00:07:25,520 Speaker 1: emitting energy all the time. We're emitting a tiny current 122 00:07:25,600 --> 00:07:29,240 Speaker 1: of light all the time, and our thoughts are another 123 00:07:29,320 --> 00:07:32,440 Speaker 1: part of that kind of emission. And we're kind of 124 00:07:32,560 --> 00:07:37,720 Speaker 1: leaky buckets were we're you know, broadcasting seven and so 125 00:07:37,880 --> 00:07:40,400 Speaker 1: if we have this one little power thought saying I'd 126 00:07:40,480 --> 00:07:43,080 Speaker 1: like to have this um but the rest of the time, 127 00:07:43,120 --> 00:07:46,480 Speaker 1: we're thinking no, it can't possibly come to pass, or 128 00:07:46,520 --> 00:07:49,240 Speaker 1: I'm such a loser, or I don't like my hair 129 00:07:49,440 --> 00:07:53,920 Speaker 1: or whatever. You know, we're sabotaging it. And so one 130 00:07:53,920 --> 00:07:55,600 Speaker 1: of the things you have to do is get used 131 00:07:55,640 --> 00:07:59,320 Speaker 1: to really having a focused mind, a sense of positivity. 132 00:08:00,040 --> 00:08:03,560 Speaker 1: But probably the most important thing of all that no 133 00:08:03,600 --> 00:08:08,280 Speaker 1: one ever thinks about is being specific. Um. You really 134 00:08:08,320 --> 00:08:12,280 Speaker 1: have to direct yourself to a target, don't you. Yeah. 135 00:08:12,320 --> 00:08:15,800 Speaker 1: I mean most people think about you know, well, I'll 136 00:08:15,840 --> 00:08:18,920 Speaker 1: do something general in the universe will still in the gaps, 137 00:08:19,800 --> 00:08:23,960 Speaker 1: And that's a big mistake, because the universe can oftentimes 138 00:08:24,000 --> 00:08:27,600 Speaker 1: fill in the gap in a really negative way, you know. 139 00:08:27,800 --> 00:08:32,560 Speaker 1: I think of the case of Heather Mills McCartney, who 140 00:08:32,679 --> 00:08:37,960 Speaker 1: was uh Paul McCartney's uh second wife. Um. She was 141 00:08:38,240 --> 00:08:41,320 Speaker 1: he had lost his love of his life, Linda, his 142 00:08:41,400 --> 00:08:45,000 Speaker 1: first wife, and he was mourning her and he met Heather, 143 00:08:45,480 --> 00:08:49,560 Speaker 1: who had been a She was a northern girl from 144 00:08:49,679 --> 00:08:52,280 Speaker 1: the north of England who came from a pretty rough 145 00:08:52,320 --> 00:08:55,400 Speaker 1: family and she wanted to better herself, so she came 146 00:08:55,440 --> 00:08:58,360 Speaker 1: down to London and she was a model, and she 147 00:08:58,440 --> 00:09:01,760 Speaker 1: was a glamour model and she got hit by a 148 00:09:01,800 --> 00:09:05,920 Speaker 1: motorcycle one day and she lost her leg below the knee, 149 00:09:06,000 --> 00:09:08,920 Speaker 1: one of her legs. But she was very plucky and she, 150 00:09:09,559 --> 00:09:12,440 Speaker 1: you know, she continued to model and stood up for 151 00:09:12,520 --> 00:09:15,520 Speaker 1: the rights of people who had lost limbs. And that's 152 00:09:15,520 --> 00:09:19,439 Speaker 1: when Paul McCartney met her. Now, Heather Mills really wanted 153 00:09:19,480 --> 00:09:22,440 Speaker 1: to be famous. That was something really important to her. 154 00:09:22,480 --> 00:09:25,920 Speaker 1: And suddenly, after Paul married her and fell in love 155 00:09:26,000 --> 00:09:29,280 Speaker 1: and married her, you know, she became really famous, you know, 156 00:09:29,440 --> 00:09:33,240 Speaker 1: super famous. She married a former Beatle. But I think 157 00:09:33,600 --> 00:09:37,360 Speaker 1: you know what ended up happening is as the marriage 158 00:09:37,400 --> 00:09:43,120 Speaker 1: got sour um she they the British press started digging 159 00:09:43,160 --> 00:09:45,880 Speaker 1: up all this stuff about her, about how she had 160 00:09:45,960 --> 00:09:49,920 Speaker 1: featured in porn um photos and things like this, and say, 161 00:09:50,040 --> 00:09:54,640 Speaker 1: suddenly Heather, from being very famous and kind of revered, 162 00:09:54,800 --> 00:09:57,679 Speaker 1: was infamous. And so I look at that case and 163 00:09:57,720 --> 00:10:00,800 Speaker 1: I think her big problem was she wanted to be famous, 164 00:10:01,000 --> 00:10:04,800 Speaker 1: but she just didn't specify how, and so suddenly and 165 00:10:04,840 --> 00:10:10,559 Speaker 1: it had consequences that they have consequences, right, absolutely, absolutely, 166 00:10:10,679 --> 00:10:14,440 Speaker 1: So it's about really telling the universe what you want. 167 00:10:14,840 --> 00:10:18,640 Speaker 1: I mean, I know that you're a journalist too, and 168 00:10:18,720 --> 00:10:22,640 Speaker 1: so you'll recognize the five w's in age. I usually 169 00:10:22,640 --> 00:10:25,880 Speaker 1: tell people, you know, what reporters have to learn is 170 00:10:25,920 --> 00:10:28,200 Speaker 1: when they write a lead of a story, they write 171 00:10:28,200 --> 00:10:31,600 Speaker 1: in an intro they have to do who, what, when, where, 172 00:10:31,720 --> 00:10:34,960 Speaker 1: why and how? And that's not a bad thing to 173 00:10:35,040 --> 00:10:38,360 Speaker 1: do when you're formulating an intention. If a story includes 174 00:10:38,400 --> 00:10:41,880 Speaker 1: all those ingredients, you've got a pretty good story, exactly. 175 00:10:41,960 --> 00:10:44,360 Speaker 1: And for an intention, it's the same thing. You've got 176 00:10:44,360 --> 00:10:47,360 Speaker 1: to say, what do you want? You know, the number 177 00:10:47,360 --> 00:10:50,400 Speaker 1: of people on my master class who will do things 178 00:10:50,480 --> 00:10:54,280 Speaker 1: like I want to be rich, and you know, they 179 00:10:54,320 --> 00:10:57,880 Speaker 1: don't really want to be rich. What they want is 180 00:10:58,120 --> 00:11:00,840 Speaker 1: usually you know, in the sense of having loads and 181 00:11:00,880 --> 00:11:03,600 Speaker 1: loads of money and more stuff. What they want is 182 00:11:04,000 --> 00:11:06,679 Speaker 1: they don't want the job they're in. What they want 183 00:11:06,800 --> 00:11:09,200 Speaker 1: is not to worry so much anymore. They need a 184 00:11:09,240 --> 00:11:12,040 Speaker 1: certain amount of money, they may not necessarily need to 185 00:11:12,080 --> 00:11:15,640 Speaker 1: be rich. Um. What they want is more time to 186 00:11:15,679 --> 00:11:19,600 Speaker 1: spend with their children or grandchildren. And so what you 187 00:11:19,640 --> 00:11:21,880 Speaker 1: have to do is try to figure out first what 188 00:11:22,000 --> 00:11:24,760 Speaker 1: you want, what is it you really want, and then 189 00:11:24,880 --> 00:11:29,439 Speaker 1: tell the universe exactly what you want. And the other 190 00:11:29,600 --> 00:11:34,320 Speaker 1: thing I noticed, George is oftentimes the universe gives us 191 00:11:34,320 --> 00:11:37,880 Speaker 1: what we need not necessarily what we're trying to say 192 00:11:37,920 --> 00:11:43,199 Speaker 1: we need, like, um, I have one group one master class, 193 00:11:43,400 --> 00:11:46,560 Speaker 1: uh intention group of eight and they said, well, we're 194 00:11:46,559 --> 00:11:49,280 Speaker 1: intending for all of us to win the lottery. And 195 00:11:49,400 --> 00:11:52,719 Speaker 1: I said to them, why what do you need? And 196 00:11:52,760 --> 00:11:57,840 Speaker 1: they said, well, Gene needs twelve thousand dollars UM for 197 00:11:57,920 --> 00:12:02,400 Speaker 1: her child, and Joe aids another fifteen thousand dollars to 198 00:12:02,400 --> 00:12:05,040 Speaker 1: get a car, and so and so needs this and that. 199 00:12:05,160 --> 00:12:06,679 Speaker 1: And I said, well, why don't you intend for the 200 00:12:06,760 --> 00:12:10,480 Speaker 1: met individually and ask for what exactly they need, because 201 00:12:10,520 --> 00:12:13,199 Speaker 1: that's probably what the universe is going to give you, 202 00:12:13,200 --> 00:12:17,760 Speaker 1: you know. So it's it's really about first of all, 203 00:12:17,840 --> 00:12:21,640 Speaker 1: figuring out what you want exactly and then telling me 204 00:12:22,040 --> 00:12:25,760 Speaker 1: focusing right on it. Yeah, exactly. Listen to more Coast 205 00:12:25,800 --> 00:12:29,040 Speaker 1: to Coast AM every weeknight at one a m. Eastern 206 00:12:29,320 --> 00:12:31,720 Speaker 1: and go to Coast to Coast am dot com for 207 00:12:31,840 --> 00:12:32,040 Speaker 1: more