1 00:00:05,320 --> 00:00:08,360 Speaker 1: Welcome to the iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast AM Paranormal 2 00:00:08,400 --> 00:00:11,480 Speaker 1: podcast network. This is the place to be if you're 3 00:00:11,520 --> 00:00:15,440 Speaker 1: ready for the best podcasts of the paranormal, curious, and 4 00:00:15,520 --> 00:00:18,240 Speaker 1: sometimes unexplained. Now listen to this. 5 00:00:25,760 --> 00:00:29,040 Speaker 2: Welcome to our podcast. Please be aware the thoughts and 6 00:00:29,120 --> 00:00:33,080 Speaker 2: opinions expressed by the host are their thoughts and opinions 7 00:00:33,120 --> 00:00:38,320 Speaker 2: only and do not reflect those of iHeartMedia, iHeartRadio, Coast 8 00:00:38,320 --> 00:00:42,760 Speaker 2: to Coast AM, employees of Premiere Networks, or their sponsors 9 00:00:42,800 --> 00:00:46,000 Speaker 2: and associates. We would like to encourage you to do 10 00:00:46,040 --> 00:00:49,599 Speaker 2: your own research and discover the subject matter for yourself. 11 00:01:11,120 --> 00:01:15,839 Speaker 3: Ready to be amazed by the Wizard of Weird Strange 12 00:01:15,959 --> 00:01:18,319 Speaker 3: Things with Joshua Warren. 13 00:01:25,319 --> 00:01:28,320 Speaker 1: I am Joshua B. Warren, and each week on this show, 14 00:01:28,640 --> 00:01:32,840 Speaker 1: I'll be bringing you brand new mind blowing content, news, exercises, 15 00:01:32,920 --> 00:01:36,720 Speaker 1: and weird experiments you can do at home, and a 16 00:01:36,840 --> 00:01:42,360 Speaker 1: lot more on this edition of the show, The Dark 17 00:01:42,920 --> 00:01:51,640 Speaker 1: Forest Hypothesis plus three things you can do to easily 18 00:01:51,720 --> 00:01:56,000 Speaker 1: turn your bad luck into good luck. Yes, we're gonna 19 00:01:56,040 --> 00:02:00,440 Speaker 1: get into that later. Everybody needs some new tips time 20 00:02:00,480 --> 00:02:03,919 Speaker 1: to time, and h well, these are some good ones. 21 00:02:04,680 --> 00:02:10,640 Speaker 1: But first the dark Forest hypothesis sound spooky. Some of 22 00:02:10,680 --> 00:02:13,840 Speaker 1: you probably know what this is. I bet many of. 23 00:02:13,800 --> 00:02:14,280 Speaker 3: You do not. 24 00:02:15,760 --> 00:02:18,680 Speaker 1: I did one of these shows. Let's see, it was 25 00:02:18,720 --> 00:02:22,760 Speaker 1: episode one thirty three of this podcast called Strange Things, 26 00:02:23,480 --> 00:02:28,600 Speaker 1: that was called where Are the Aliens? I also, by 27 00:02:28,639 --> 00:02:32,000 Speaker 1: the way, UH introduced my Aztec death whistle on that 28 00:02:32,160 --> 00:02:36,640 Speaker 1: episode one thirty three. But the big topic where are 29 00:02:36,760 --> 00:02:42,480 Speaker 1: the Aliens? And I kind of dug into how to 30 00:02:42,680 --> 00:02:47,960 Speaker 1: reconcile something like the Drake equation with the Fermi paradox. 31 00:02:47,960 --> 00:02:49,600 Speaker 1: I'm not going to get all into that again. You 32 00:02:49,639 --> 00:02:53,160 Speaker 1: can go back and listen, but basically, just to recap 33 00:02:53,960 --> 00:03:01,960 Speaker 1: the Drake equation, is this this very precise respected equation 34 00:03:02,240 --> 00:03:10,079 Speaker 1: formulated in nineteen sixty one by this astrophysicist named Frank Drake, 35 00:03:10,840 --> 00:03:13,640 Speaker 1: And he was calculating all the information that we have 36 00:03:13,840 --> 00:03:16,919 Speaker 1: about all the things that exist out there in the universe, 37 00:03:17,800 --> 00:03:23,280 Speaker 1: and what the likelihood of well, an alien civilization, an 38 00:03:23,320 --> 00:03:29,200 Speaker 1: intelligent alien civilization, being out there, what that likelihood was. 39 00:03:30,040 --> 00:03:33,240 Speaker 1: And basically, you know, without getting into the math, and 40 00:03:33,440 --> 00:03:37,160 Speaker 1: I don't think the average person can understand it by 41 00:03:37,480 --> 00:03:40,480 Speaker 1: crunching all the number is about you know, the Goldilock 42 00:03:40,640 --> 00:03:45,480 Speaker 1: zones and just all these variables. Basically, he came up 43 00:03:45,520 --> 00:03:51,120 Speaker 1: with this result that it appears there should be thousands 44 00:03:51,600 --> 00:03:58,520 Speaker 1: of intelligent alien civilizations which may currently exist. And of course, 45 00:03:59,040 --> 00:04:01,960 Speaker 1: even though that makes sense it's on paper, it takes 46 00:04:02,000 --> 00:04:04,360 Speaker 1: us to what so many people refer to as the 47 00:04:04,360 --> 00:04:11,320 Speaker 1: Fermi paradox. And the Fermi paradox is this discrepancy between 48 00:04:12,440 --> 00:04:19,000 Speaker 1: the lack of conclusive evidence of advanced extraterrestrial life and 49 00:04:19,480 --> 00:04:26,000 Speaker 1: the apparently high likelihood of its existence. And apparently this 50 00:04:26,080 --> 00:04:31,280 Speaker 1: goes back to a meeting that Fermi was having sort 51 00:04:31,320 --> 00:04:34,120 Speaker 1: of a casual conversation in the summer of nineteen fifty 52 00:04:34,160 --> 00:04:37,520 Speaker 1: with some other physicists, and while walking to lunch, the 53 00:04:37,600 --> 00:04:42,400 Speaker 1: men discussed recent UFO reports and the possibility of faster 54 00:04:42,480 --> 00:04:47,920 Speaker 1: than light travel, and apparently the guys were kind of 55 00:04:47,960 --> 00:04:51,400 Speaker 1: open minded to the fact that this statistically should be 56 00:04:51,400 --> 00:04:53,800 Speaker 1: the case because the universe is so big that it's possible. 57 00:04:54,000 --> 00:04:56,799 Speaker 1: But then at one point Farmi blurted out, but where 58 00:04:56,880 --> 00:05:03,920 Speaker 1: is everybody? And that question, that one sentence, coming from 59 00:05:04,279 --> 00:05:09,000 Speaker 1: a physicist of that stature went down in history as 60 00:05:09,040 --> 00:05:14,320 Speaker 1: a paradox. Books have been written about it. Where is everybody, 61 00:05:15,640 --> 00:05:18,320 Speaker 1: and I won't get into again all the reasons. I 62 00:05:18,360 --> 00:05:22,200 Speaker 1: went deeper into this in episode one thirty three, But 63 00:05:23,400 --> 00:05:28,400 Speaker 1: you know, obviously, one of the most likely explanations is 64 00:05:28,440 --> 00:05:32,320 Speaker 1: that the universe is just so huge, everything's just spread 65 00:05:32,360 --> 00:05:35,760 Speaker 1: too far apart. I mean, you can't imagine how huge 66 00:05:35,800 --> 00:05:39,760 Speaker 1: the universe versus and we just can't find each other 67 00:05:40,560 --> 00:05:42,520 Speaker 1: or we don't have the technology to reach each other. 68 00:05:42,560 --> 00:05:45,120 Speaker 1: That's probably the simplest one. But then there are some 69 00:05:45,240 --> 00:05:49,599 Speaker 1: other really interesting ones that I think are especially thought provoking, 70 00:05:50,040 --> 00:05:52,320 Speaker 1: such as the fact that you know, you and I 71 00:05:52,400 --> 00:05:56,360 Speaker 1: we measure life pretty much in terms of a human lifetime. 72 00:05:56,480 --> 00:05:59,160 Speaker 1: So you might say, okay, human life is in the 73 00:05:59,160 --> 00:06:03,960 Speaker 1: neighborhood of one hundred years right now, and so we 74 00:06:04,360 --> 00:06:08,480 Speaker 1: have a tendency to break our lives up into days 75 00:06:08,520 --> 00:06:10,680 Speaker 1: and weeks and months leading up leading up to this, 76 00:06:11,160 --> 00:06:13,799 Speaker 1: you know, the span of years that we consider a life. 77 00:06:13,800 --> 00:06:17,240 Speaker 1: But that is irrelevant when it comes to time and 78 00:06:17,279 --> 00:06:20,640 Speaker 1: the cosmos, and so it may just be that it's 79 00:06:20,839 --> 00:06:28,039 Speaker 1: very unlikely for two civilizations to have matured at the 80 00:06:28,120 --> 00:06:31,200 Speaker 1: same time so that they can communicate with each other. 81 00:06:31,839 --> 00:06:36,840 Speaker 1: You know, you're talking about some incredible synchronicity that these 82 00:06:36,839 --> 00:06:41,640 Speaker 1: civilizations they thrive, but they are billions of years apart 83 00:06:41,640 --> 00:06:43,960 Speaker 1: when they rise and fall, and it just doesn't match up. 84 00:06:44,560 --> 00:06:44,760 Speaker 4: You know. 85 00:06:44,960 --> 00:06:48,880 Speaker 1: This is seriously something that many books have been written about. 86 00:06:48,880 --> 00:06:50,360 Speaker 1: So I'm not going to try to dig into all 87 00:06:50,400 --> 00:06:53,680 Speaker 1: the options here in this podcast, but this is from 88 00:06:53,720 --> 00:06:56,640 Speaker 1: a scientific point of view. This is the question, and 89 00:06:56,839 --> 00:07:01,320 Speaker 1: in my podcast called where are the Aliens, the point 90 00:07:01,440 --> 00:07:06,400 Speaker 1: of that one was the evidence that I have found 91 00:07:06,680 --> 00:07:12,520 Speaker 1: to suggest that many of these UFOs UAP, these types 92 00:07:12,560 --> 00:07:18,320 Speaker 1: of beings, they tend to be seen around the water, 93 00:07:19,080 --> 00:07:23,400 Speaker 1: around shorelines and including going in and out of the water. 94 00:07:23,520 --> 00:07:27,680 Speaker 1: This happens all the time, and so I would say 95 00:07:27,720 --> 00:07:31,000 Speaker 1: there's a higher likelihood than whatever these things are, and 96 00:07:31,040 --> 00:07:34,920 Speaker 1: whoever these beings are, there's a higher likelihood that they 97 00:07:34,960 --> 00:07:38,400 Speaker 1: are spending more time in the oceans of the world 98 00:07:39,240 --> 00:07:42,520 Speaker 1: than they are flying around in outer space up above us. 99 00:07:43,880 --> 00:07:47,480 Speaker 1: I mean, space from what we can tell, seems to 100 00:07:47,520 --> 00:07:53,120 Speaker 1: be a pretty dead zone compared to the oceans, which 101 00:07:53,120 --> 00:08:00,240 Speaker 1: are absolutely overwhelmingly full of and teeming with life, and 102 00:08:00,280 --> 00:08:02,880 Speaker 1: not only life, but some of the most bizarre forms 103 00:08:02,880 --> 00:08:05,840 Speaker 1: of life that you can imagine. So it would make 104 00:08:05,920 --> 00:08:09,520 Speaker 1: sense that, you know, it's an easier stretch logically to 105 00:08:09,600 --> 00:08:14,120 Speaker 1: say that these beings are living in that environment, in 106 00:08:14,160 --> 00:08:18,320 Speaker 1: the aquatic environment, and that that does not mean they 107 00:08:18,320 --> 00:08:20,600 Speaker 1: cannot fly up into the sky and travel in that 108 00:08:20,640 --> 00:08:24,360 Speaker 1: realm occasionally as well. But maybe that's where they are 109 00:08:24,920 --> 00:08:28,000 Speaker 1: more often than not. And it's kind of interesting because 110 00:08:28,000 --> 00:08:31,400 Speaker 1: as I was doing prep for this show, this article 111 00:08:31,480 --> 00:08:35,400 Speaker 1: popped up here at Fox News and the headline is 112 00:08:36,000 --> 00:08:39,319 Speaker 1: only one type of alien life form could make it 113 00:08:39,400 --> 00:08:45,600 Speaker 1: to Earth's doorstep. This is from a Harvard expert. It 114 00:08:45,640 --> 00:08:50,240 Speaker 1: says biological creatures would unlikely survive journey to Earth, says 115 00:08:50,360 --> 00:08:55,640 Speaker 1: astrophysicist a vi Lobe. And I'll just read the beginning here. 116 00:08:55,679 --> 00:08:59,960 Speaker 1: It says a renowned astrophysicist is calling foul on report 117 00:09:00,120 --> 00:09:04,880 Speaker 1: of alien sightings and Earth's atmosphere, arguing that biological creatures 118 00:09:04,920 --> 00:09:07,559 Speaker 1: would be unable to survive a journey to our planet. 119 00:09:08,160 --> 00:09:10,480 Speaker 1: Quote it would take about a billion years to cross 120 00:09:10,480 --> 00:09:12,720 Speaker 1: from one side of the Milky Way galaxy to the other, 121 00:09:13,280 --> 00:09:17,680 Speaker 1: a Velobe, a Harvard astrophysicist, said during an appearance on 122 00:09:17,880 --> 00:09:21,120 Speaker 1: gb News this week. Quote. Given that I don't think 123 00:09:21,160 --> 00:09:23,920 Speaker 1: any spacecraft that would arrive to us from another star 124 00:09:24,040 --> 00:09:30,840 Speaker 1: would carry biological creatures. And so I think that basically, 125 00:09:30,880 --> 00:09:35,360 Speaker 1: what if I gather the if I get the point 126 00:09:35,400 --> 00:09:39,800 Speaker 1: here he's saying that, like, it's more likely if they 127 00:09:39,840 --> 00:09:44,440 Speaker 1: are autonomous, they have an artificial brain, artificial intelligence. We 128 00:09:44,480 --> 00:09:46,800 Speaker 1: have already developed that on Earth. We haven't launched it 129 00:09:46,840 --> 00:09:49,360 Speaker 1: to space, but that would be the next step. End quote. 130 00:09:49,720 --> 00:09:52,080 Speaker 1: You know what, I have to agree, there's something to that. 131 00:09:52,640 --> 00:09:54,560 Speaker 1: You know, I have talked about these things I called 132 00:09:54,600 --> 00:10:01,440 Speaker 1: o UFO's and but that stands for organic UFO. But 133 00:10:01,520 --> 00:10:03,920 Speaker 1: really what I'm talking about is some of these things 134 00:10:03,920 --> 00:10:08,840 Speaker 1: that may be like artificial intelligence, that do have an 135 00:10:09,000 --> 00:10:13,000 Speaker 1: organic body and a shape shifting ability. That these these 136 00:10:13,000 --> 00:10:16,520 Speaker 1: things flying around us are not always just so you know, 137 00:10:16,600 --> 00:10:20,120 Speaker 1: black and white as being animate or inanimate or organic 138 00:10:20,640 --> 00:10:26,520 Speaker 1: or inorganic. And so I tend to think that, you know, 139 00:10:26,600 --> 00:10:31,920 Speaker 1: there is a sound logic there. And so when we 140 00:10:32,040 --> 00:10:37,760 Speaker 1: start thinking about this, however, and we start looking into reconciling, well, 141 00:10:38,120 --> 00:10:43,000 Speaker 1: all these beings are sub statistically supposedly possibly around us, 142 00:10:43,720 --> 00:10:49,200 Speaker 1: where are they? When I talked about that in episode 143 00:10:49,240 --> 00:10:51,800 Speaker 1: one point thirty three, I started getting some messages from 144 00:10:51,840 --> 00:10:54,880 Speaker 1: people saying, well, what do you think about the dark 145 00:10:55,040 --> 00:11:01,280 Speaker 1: Forest hypothesis, and I I was aware of it, but 146 00:11:01,320 --> 00:11:03,360 Speaker 1: I never I don't think I've ever really sat down 147 00:11:03,440 --> 00:11:08,320 Speaker 1: and talked about it in particular on this podcast. So 148 00:11:08,440 --> 00:11:11,320 Speaker 1: let me explain to you what the dark Forest hypothesis is. 149 00:11:11,559 --> 00:11:14,200 Speaker 1: As a matter of fact, let's take our break first, 150 00:11:15,000 --> 00:11:20,040 Speaker 1: because I want to dig into this and it is spooky, 151 00:11:20,280 --> 00:11:23,600 Speaker 1: it is eerie, it is unsettling if you really think 152 00:11:23,640 --> 00:11:29,080 Speaker 1: about the implications of this thing called the dark Forest hypothesis, 153 00:11:29,120 --> 00:11:33,120 Speaker 1: because it applies not only to the concept of quote unquote, 154 00:11:33,120 --> 00:11:36,760 Speaker 1: you know, aliens flying around out there, but maybe other 155 00:11:37,760 --> 00:11:45,920 Speaker 1: phenomena that we often consider supernatural, paranormal, maybe interdimensional, all 156 00:11:45,920 --> 00:11:51,120 Speaker 1: that kind of stuff. Some good news as I record 157 00:11:51,280 --> 00:11:57,360 Speaker 1: this particular podcast, we are currently accepting requests for customized 158 00:11:58,160 --> 00:12:02,320 Speaker 1: personalized sigils. We go through phases. We'll accept requests for 159 00:12:02,360 --> 00:12:04,280 Speaker 1: a while and then we'll have to shut them off. 160 00:12:04,280 --> 00:12:06,800 Speaker 1: But we are available right now to make you a 161 00:12:06,920 --> 00:12:12,000 Speaker 1: personalized customized sigil if you go right now to thesigital 162 00:12:12,200 --> 00:12:15,360 Speaker 1: lab dot com. Sigil is spelled s I g I 163 00:12:15,559 --> 00:12:20,320 Speaker 1: l vsigital lab dot com and you'll see the information there. 164 00:12:20,360 --> 00:12:23,920 Speaker 1: We're not doing business sigitals for now. Of course, the 165 00:12:24,000 --> 00:12:26,360 Speaker 1: website needs to be updated because it still says something 166 00:12:26,400 --> 00:12:29,400 Speaker 1: about holiday sigls, but those are those are sold out 167 00:12:29,440 --> 00:12:32,920 Speaker 1: long ago, of course. But you can get a personalized 168 00:12:32,960 --> 00:12:37,000 Speaker 1: sigl also if you listen to this show, do yourself 169 00:12:37,000 --> 00:12:41,000 Speaker 1: a favor. Okay, go to my personal website Joshua pee 170 00:12:41,120 --> 00:12:44,520 Speaker 1: Warren dot com. Sign up for the free e newsletter 171 00:12:44,640 --> 00:12:49,040 Speaker 1: right there on the homepage and it'll take you two seconds. 172 00:12:49,080 --> 00:12:53,480 Speaker 1: When you do that, then you will instantly receive an 173 00:12:53,520 --> 00:12:57,400 Speaker 1: automated email from me with some links to free online goodies. 174 00:12:57,480 --> 00:13:01,960 Speaker 1: Joshua Pewarren dot com. That's me, Joshua p. Warren. And 175 00:13:02,000 --> 00:13:06,400 Speaker 1: you are listening to strange things on the iHeartRadio and 176 00:13:06,640 --> 00:13:10,400 Speaker 1: Coast to Coast AM Paranormal podcast Network, and I will 177 00:13:10,440 --> 00:13:19,959 Speaker 1: be here right back. Hang on, josh will be right back. 178 00:13:24,440 --> 00:13:27,280 Speaker 4: Hey, folks, we need your music. Hey, it's producer Tom 179 00:13:27,280 --> 00:13:29,599 Speaker 4: at Coast to Coast AM and every first Sunday of 180 00:13:29,640 --> 00:13:32,840 Speaker 4: the month we play music from emerging artists just like you. 181 00:13:33,000 --> 00:13:35,600 Speaker 4: If you're a musician or a singer and have recorded 182 00:13:35,679 --> 00:13:38,320 Speaker 4: music you'd like to submit, it's very easy. Just go 183 00:13:38,400 --> 00:13:41,720 Speaker 4: to Coast TOCOASTAM dot com. Click the Emerging Artist banner 184 00:13:41,760 --> 00:13:44,800 Speaker 4: in the carousel, follow the instructions, and we just might 185 00:13:44,840 --> 00:13:47,400 Speaker 4: play your music on the air. Go now to Coast 186 00:13:47,440 --> 00:13:50,640 Speaker 4: tocoastam dot com to send us your recording. That's Coast 187 00:13:50,640 --> 00:14:02,200 Speaker 4: to coastam dot com. 188 00:14:02,320 --> 00:14:03,840 Speaker 1: Hi, it's count your sky. 189 00:14:04,640 --> 00:14:08,000 Speaker 3: Keep it right here on the iHeart Radio and Coast 190 00:14:08,000 --> 00:14:36,560 Speaker 3: to Coast AM Ironormal Podcast Network. 191 00:14:39,600 --> 00:14:45,320 Speaker 1: Welcome back to Strange Things on the iHeartRadio and Coast 192 00:14:45,320 --> 00:14:49,280 Speaker 1: to Coast AM Paranormal Podcast Network. I am your host, 193 00:14:49,960 --> 00:14:53,880 Speaker 1: the Wizard of Weird, Joshua P. Warren, beaming into your 194 00:14:53,920 --> 00:14:58,840 Speaker 1: worm whole brain from my studio in Sin City, Las Vegas, Nevada, 195 00:14:59,080 --> 00:15:03,600 Speaker 1: where every day golden and every night is silver. Gia 196 00:15:03,760 --> 00:15:12,480 Speaker 1: tato zume. And last year, in twenty twenty three, I 197 00:15:12,600 --> 00:15:17,880 Speaker 1: made the electro Marine available as a special one time 198 00:15:18,000 --> 00:15:21,480 Speaker 1: batch made by the world's greatest artisan right here in 199 00:15:21,520 --> 00:15:26,600 Speaker 1: the United States of America. And I only you know 200 00:15:26,680 --> 00:15:29,960 Speaker 1: he was only able to make a limited amount. And 201 00:15:30,200 --> 00:15:33,800 Speaker 1: I cannot tell you how many emails I've gotten from 202 00:15:33,840 --> 00:15:36,720 Speaker 1: people since then. Oh my gosh, I can't believe that 203 00:15:36,840 --> 00:15:39,360 Speaker 1: I missed this. I didn't know about it. Please, please, 204 00:15:39,440 --> 00:15:42,000 Speaker 1: how do I get one a lot of other people 205 00:15:42,040 --> 00:15:44,200 Speaker 1: saying I bought one, now I want another one. I 206 00:15:44,240 --> 00:15:46,520 Speaker 1: want to give one to my wife, I want to 207 00:15:46,520 --> 00:15:49,960 Speaker 1: get one to my kid. I want So I am 208 00:15:50,080 --> 00:15:53,120 Speaker 1: talking right now with the artisan to see if he 209 00:15:53,160 --> 00:15:55,800 Speaker 1: will make one more batch. Because you have to understand, 210 00:15:55,920 --> 00:16:00,160 Speaker 1: this man actually smelts the metal. Okay, I mean he 211 00:16:00,160 --> 00:16:02,840 Speaker 1: he gets the stuff and melts it down, and like 212 00:16:02,880 --> 00:16:09,320 Speaker 1: these are hand hammered and a professional workshop. Everyone is unique. 213 00:16:09,360 --> 00:16:14,240 Speaker 1: It's custom made to your size. There are no two alike. 214 00:16:15,240 --> 00:16:18,880 Speaker 1: It's a real electrom ring. And so I think we're 215 00:16:18,880 --> 00:16:20,200 Speaker 1: going to be able to work this out to do 216 00:16:20,280 --> 00:16:22,360 Speaker 1: one more batch. But I'm just going to tell you 217 00:16:22,440 --> 00:16:25,760 Speaker 1: right now that the only way I will be announcing 218 00:16:25,800 --> 00:16:29,400 Speaker 1: it will be through my e newsletter. And that's because 219 00:16:29,440 --> 00:16:31,840 Speaker 1: that I mean, I might mention it on this podcast, 220 00:16:31,840 --> 00:16:34,520 Speaker 1: but it doesn't mean that it'll time out right because 221 00:16:35,360 --> 00:16:38,280 Speaker 1: we have these limited windows when he makes them, and 222 00:16:38,640 --> 00:16:40,720 Speaker 1: the podcast, you know, you never know exactly when it's 223 00:16:40,720 --> 00:16:44,480 Speaker 1: going to get posted. So basically, here's the bottom line. 224 00:16:44,480 --> 00:16:48,160 Speaker 1: If you want to get the DIBs, I'll make the 225 00:16:48,240 --> 00:16:50,640 Speaker 1: sales available if possible. For like, I'll say you got 226 00:16:50,640 --> 00:16:52,360 Speaker 1: two or three days if you want to get one 227 00:16:52,480 --> 00:16:56,080 Speaker 1: from this last batch, go to Joshua P. Warren dot 228 00:16:56,080 --> 00:16:58,560 Speaker 1: com sign up from my free E newsletter on the homepage. 229 00:16:58,560 --> 00:17:01,040 Speaker 1: There if you want to be notified immediately when the 230 00:17:01,200 --> 00:17:04,080 Speaker 1: electro MA ring is available again, I'm hoping it will 231 00:17:04,080 --> 00:17:09,640 Speaker 1: be sometime in February of twenty twenty four. Let's get 232 00:17:09,680 --> 00:17:13,600 Speaker 1: back to the dark Forest hypothesis. 233 00:17:15,480 --> 00:17:15,680 Speaker 3: Now. 234 00:17:15,720 --> 00:17:22,919 Speaker 1: Of course, I've been talking about this idea that well, 235 00:17:23,720 --> 00:17:28,480 Speaker 1: if science tells us statistically there ought to be the 236 00:17:28,560 --> 00:17:33,720 Speaker 1: possibility of intelligent life all over the place, well where 237 00:17:33,840 --> 00:17:38,439 Speaker 1: is everybody? You know? If we dig into that question, 238 00:17:38,520 --> 00:17:43,159 Speaker 1: that fermi paradox. Some folks bring up what is called 239 00:17:43,400 --> 00:17:48,920 Speaker 1: the dark Forest hypothesis, and first off, let me read 240 00:17:48,920 --> 00:17:53,719 Speaker 1: to you what it says here at Wikipedia. The dark 241 00:17:53,880 --> 00:18:00,720 Speaker 1: Forest hypothesis is the conjecture that many alien civilization exist 242 00:18:00,920 --> 00:18:07,679 Speaker 1: throughout the universe, but they are both silent and hostile, 243 00:18:08,840 --> 00:18:15,240 Speaker 1: maintaining their undetectability by humanity for fear of being destroyed 244 00:18:15,480 --> 00:18:21,760 Speaker 1: by another hostile and undetected civilization. In this framing, it 245 00:18:21,840 --> 00:18:26,520 Speaker 1: is presumed that any space fearing civilization would view any 246 00:18:26,600 --> 00:18:31,720 Speaker 1: other intelligent life as an inevitable threat and thus destroy 247 00:18:32,359 --> 00:18:37,480 Speaker 1: any nascent life that makes itself known. As a result, 248 00:18:37,960 --> 00:18:43,199 Speaker 1: the electromagnetic spectrum would be relatively quiet without evidence of 249 00:18:43,240 --> 00:18:48,880 Speaker 1: any intelligent alien life, as in a dark forest filled 250 00:18:48,920 --> 00:18:57,439 Speaker 1: with armed hunters stalking through the trees like ghosts. Okay, 251 00:18:57,520 --> 00:19:01,879 Speaker 1: for a bit more description. I found this article about 252 00:19:01,880 --> 00:19:08,560 Speaker 1: this topic at bigfink dot com, written by Scotti Hendrix, 253 00:19:11,240 --> 00:19:14,119 Speaker 1: and I'll just read a couple little passages. The Milky 254 00:19:14,160 --> 00:19:17,720 Speaker 1: Way galaxy has two hundred billion stars and perhaps one 255 00:19:17,800 --> 00:19:21,359 Speaker 1: hundred billion planets. If even a small fraction of those 256 00:19:21,359 --> 00:19:26,720 Speaker 1: planets harbored life, and even a pathetic scattering of those 257 00:19:26,760 --> 00:19:31,200 Speaker 1: planets had life forms which became intelligent, our galaxy would 258 00:19:31,200 --> 00:19:36,080 Speaker 1: be teeming with alien civilizations. Then, of course we reflect 259 00:19:36,119 --> 00:19:41,840 Speaker 1: back on the Drake equation and all that, And he 260 00:19:41,960 --> 00:19:45,240 Speaker 1: says here, many of the solutions aim at one of 261 00:19:45,240 --> 00:19:47,679 Speaker 1: the variables in the Drake equation and try to make 262 00:19:47,720 --> 00:19:52,359 Speaker 1: the supposed number of civilizations lower. Blah blah blah. But 263 00:19:52,680 --> 00:19:57,679 Speaker 1: this is the dark forest solution, which explains why we 264 00:19:57,800 --> 00:20:02,240 Speaker 1: have not heard from aliens, as they are purposefully keeping quiet. 265 00:20:04,080 --> 00:20:07,040 Speaker 1: The reasoning is laid out in the science fiction novel 266 00:20:07,119 --> 00:20:12,200 Speaker 1: The Dark Forests by Leu shiksen I guess that's it's 267 00:20:12,200 --> 00:20:16,840 Speaker 1: pronounced cixi n. The plot of the book, the second 268 00:20:16,880 --> 00:20:20,040 Speaker 1: and a series concerns questions of how to best interact 269 00:20:20,119 --> 00:20:23,160 Speaker 1: with potentially hostile alien life, so the argument's laid out. 270 00:20:23,200 --> 00:20:27,760 Speaker 1: Like all life desires to stay alive, there is no 271 00:20:27,920 --> 00:20:30,480 Speaker 1: way to know if other life forms can or will 272 00:20:30,480 --> 00:20:34,800 Speaker 1: destroy you if given a chance, and that lacking assurances, 273 00:20:34,920 --> 00:20:38,240 Speaker 1: the safest option for any species is to annihilate other 274 00:20:38,359 --> 00:20:40,840 Speaker 1: life forms before they have a chance to do the same. 275 00:20:43,080 --> 00:20:46,720 Speaker 1: So this all leads to this, you know, radio silence. 276 00:20:46,720 --> 00:20:51,520 Speaker 1: And in fact, here's a paragraph from the actual novel quote. 277 00:20:51,640 --> 00:20:56,800 Speaker 1: The universe is a dark forest. Every civilization is an 278 00:20:56,880 --> 00:21:00,840 Speaker 1: armed hunter, stalking through the trees like a ghost, gently 279 00:21:00,880 --> 00:21:04,520 Speaker 1: pushing aside branches that block the path and trying to 280 00:21:04,600 --> 00:21:09,320 Speaker 1: tread without sound. Even breathing is done with care. The 281 00:21:09,400 --> 00:21:12,760 Speaker 1: hunter has to be careful because everywhere in the forest 282 00:21:12,840 --> 00:21:17,000 Speaker 1: are stealthy hunters like him. If he finds another life 283 00:21:17,800 --> 00:21:22,960 Speaker 1: another hunter, an angel or a demon, a delicate infant, 284 00:21:23,000 --> 00:21:27,480 Speaker 1: to tottering old man, a fairy or demi god, there's 285 00:21:27,520 --> 00:21:35,560 Speaker 1: only one thing he can do, open fire and eliminate them. Okay, 286 00:21:35,760 --> 00:21:41,320 Speaker 1: So I think you get the idea. The hypothesis here 287 00:21:41,480 --> 00:21:49,000 Speaker 1: is that maybe these beings. We can just start with 288 00:21:49,040 --> 00:21:51,520 Speaker 1: the aliens, but you can expand this however you want. 289 00:21:52,400 --> 00:21:55,720 Speaker 1: There they might be all around you. They might be 290 00:21:55,760 --> 00:22:01,680 Speaker 1: in your bedroom, in your closet, in your backyard, at 291 00:22:01,680 --> 00:22:07,640 Speaker 1: your kids' school, they could be anywhere. But they are 292 00:22:07,800 --> 00:22:12,119 Speaker 1: hiding intentionally because they don't know what the consequences for 293 00:22:12,240 --> 00:22:17,240 Speaker 1: them and their civilization will be. If we know for 294 00:22:17,280 --> 00:22:21,359 Speaker 1: sure that they are there, Maybe they are being hostile 295 00:22:21,400 --> 00:22:23,639 Speaker 1: towards us and the people are being kept in the dark. 296 00:22:24,920 --> 00:22:29,359 Speaker 1: This also, well, okay, let me just mention this because 297 00:22:29,400 --> 00:22:31,520 Speaker 1: I have gotten emails about this. You know, a while back, 298 00:22:31,560 --> 00:22:34,720 Speaker 1: there was a news story saying that a bunch of 299 00:22:34,720 --> 00:22:36,880 Speaker 1: people claimed that they are these like ten foot tall 300 00:22:36,880 --> 00:22:41,040 Speaker 1: aliens running around some shopping mall in Florida, and all 301 00:22:41,119 --> 00:22:46,280 Speaker 1: these police showed up, and that whole story seems pretty 302 00:22:46,400 --> 00:22:49,119 Speaker 1: wishy washy to me. I mean, look, all I can 303 00:22:49,160 --> 00:22:51,359 Speaker 1: tell you is I have not I've looked at the 304 00:22:51,520 --> 00:22:53,359 Speaker 1: video footage and stuff that's come out, and I have 305 00:22:53,440 --> 00:22:57,920 Speaker 1: not seen anything that I believe is convincing evidence that 306 00:22:57,920 --> 00:23:01,639 Speaker 1: that story is true. Doesn't mean it it's not. I 307 00:23:01,720 --> 00:23:04,679 Speaker 1: just haven't seen any evidence of it. Maybe aliens are 308 00:23:04,720 --> 00:23:08,159 Speaker 1: all over the place, but here is I think the 309 00:23:08,359 --> 00:23:14,479 Speaker 1: even eerier part is that, well, maybe we're we're not 310 00:23:14,560 --> 00:23:18,200 Speaker 1: just talking about aliens visitors from beyond. Maybe we're talking 311 00:23:18,240 --> 00:23:23,359 Speaker 1: about literally this other realm of reality that overlays our realm. 312 00:23:24,160 --> 00:23:27,040 Speaker 1: That there are all of these interdimensional beings that are 313 00:23:27,040 --> 00:23:30,159 Speaker 1: all around us all the time, and they're very intentionally 314 00:23:30,240 --> 00:23:37,119 Speaker 1: keeping quiet. And it reminds one, does it not, of 315 00:23:37,160 --> 00:23:46,159 Speaker 1: the so called shadow person reports, Because people like my 316 00:23:46,240 --> 00:23:51,160 Speaker 1: friend Heidi Hollis, who have spent years studying the shadow 317 00:23:51,160 --> 00:23:56,600 Speaker 1: person phenomenon and similar things, they often find that when 318 00:23:57,160 --> 00:24:01,200 Speaker 1: somebody observes a shadow person, as soon as the shadow 319 00:24:01,240 --> 00:24:05,320 Speaker 1: person realizes that it is being observed, it darts away. 320 00:24:06,520 --> 00:24:08,920 Speaker 1: And if you are brand new to this topic, well, 321 00:24:08,920 --> 00:24:13,240 Speaker 1: a shadow person is just a shadowy silhouette. It's almost 322 00:24:13,280 --> 00:24:16,040 Speaker 1: like my mom saw a shadow person one time. This 323 00:24:16,080 --> 00:24:19,280 Speaker 1: is many years ago. She was in North Carolina and 324 00:24:19,320 --> 00:24:24,879 Speaker 1: she was at home, I think, by herself, and a 325 00:24:25,000 --> 00:24:29,040 Speaker 1: human silhouette across like over in the corner across the 326 00:24:29,080 --> 00:24:33,440 Speaker 1: living room caught her eye and she saw this shadowy 327 00:24:33,480 --> 00:24:37,200 Speaker 1: figure there just very quietly watching and kind of hovering. 328 00:24:37,320 --> 00:24:39,640 Speaker 1: At first, she thought it was me trying to play 329 00:24:39,640 --> 00:24:41,560 Speaker 1: a prank on her or something like that, because my 330 00:24:41,600 --> 00:24:44,439 Speaker 1: mom and I have been jokesters over the years and 331 00:24:44,480 --> 00:24:49,119 Speaker 1: we've occasionally pranked each other, excuse me, and so she, 332 00:24:51,040 --> 00:24:55,320 Speaker 1: my mom thought it was me, and she said, Josh, 333 00:24:55,400 --> 00:24:57,320 Speaker 1: what are you doing? You know, like your busted. I 334 00:24:57,359 --> 00:25:03,440 Speaker 1: caught you. And then this thing turns and very quickly vanishes. 335 00:25:05,160 --> 00:25:07,760 Speaker 1: I think it kind of darted down the hallway, and 336 00:25:08,040 --> 00:25:12,000 Speaker 1: that freaked my mom out because when she realized that 337 00:25:12,080 --> 00:25:16,560 Speaker 1: she was home alone, she knew that well, she had 338 00:25:16,600 --> 00:25:19,959 Speaker 1: seen something there that appeared to be a real silhouette 339 00:25:20,000 --> 00:25:25,679 Speaker 1: of a real person. And so the dark forest hypothesis 340 00:25:25,800 --> 00:25:31,560 Speaker 1: may explain why that some of these beings, whether they 341 00:25:31,600 --> 00:25:36,360 Speaker 1: are out there billions of light years away or they're 342 00:25:36,520 --> 00:25:41,840 Speaker 1: right here sitting next to you, why that they may 343 00:25:42,440 --> 00:25:47,679 Speaker 1: intentionally be keeping quiet and maybe even watching us like 344 00:25:47,720 --> 00:25:50,600 Speaker 1: we're in some kind of a zoom. Do you think 345 00:25:50,640 --> 00:25:55,800 Speaker 1: that that is a good possible explanation a solution to 346 00:25:55,960 --> 00:25:59,560 Speaker 1: the Fermi paradox. When we come back from this break, 347 00:26:00,440 --> 00:26:04,960 Speaker 1: I'm going to tell you something about the process that 348 00:26:05,040 --> 00:26:07,679 Speaker 1: some of these beings might use when they come here 349 00:26:07,720 --> 00:26:11,639 Speaker 1: to interact with us, and it leads interestingly enough into 350 00:26:11,680 --> 00:26:16,240 Speaker 1: this topic three things you can do to easily turn 351 00:26:16,720 --> 00:26:20,119 Speaker 1: your bad luck into good luck. I'm Joshua P. Warren 352 00:26:20,400 --> 00:26:23,960 Speaker 1: and you're listening to Strange Things on the iHeartRadio and 353 00:26:24,080 --> 00:26:28,000 Speaker 1: Coast to Coast AM Paranormal Podcast Network, and I will 354 00:26:28,000 --> 00:26:30,080 Speaker 1: be back after these important messages. 355 00:26:38,119 --> 00:26:40,879 Speaker 2: Hang in there. Josh is coming right back on the 356 00:26:40,920 --> 00:26:45,480 Speaker 2: iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast AM Paranormal Podcast Network. 357 00:26:52,119 --> 00:26:53,320 Speaker 1: Take us with you anywhere. 358 00:26:53,480 --> 00:26:56,320 Speaker 4: This is the iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast AM Paranormal 359 00:26:56,400 --> 00:26:57,480 Speaker 4: Podcast Network. 360 00:27:03,359 --> 00:27:03,520 Speaker 1: Hi. 361 00:27:03,880 --> 00:27:06,960 Speaker 2: I'm Sandra Champlain. Please make sure and check out my 362 00:27:07,119 --> 00:27:10,760 Speaker 2: show Shades of the Afterlife, heard right here on the 363 00:27:10,800 --> 00:27:15,280 Speaker 2: iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast AM Paranormal Podcast Network. 364 00:27:40,800 --> 00:27:46,400 Speaker 1: Welcome back to Strange Things on the iHeartRadio and Coast 365 00:27:46,480 --> 00:27:51,440 Speaker 1: to Coast AM Paranormal Podcast Network. I am your host, 366 00:27:51,560 --> 00:27:54,840 Speaker 1: JOSHUAPA Warren, and this is the show where the unusual 367 00:27:54,920 --> 00:28:00,960 Speaker 1: becomes usual. Here's something that's kind of interesting to think 368 00:28:01,000 --> 00:28:04,479 Speaker 1: about when you try to comprehend the relationship that we 369 00:28:04,520 --> 00:28:09,280 Speaker 1: may have to other intelligent life out there, whether it 370 00:28:09,400 --> 00:28:16,239 Speaker 1: be always on the physical plane, like other apes like 371 00:28:16,359 --> 00:28:19,439 Speaker 1: us out there flying around that originated from another planet, 372 00:28:19,520 --> 00:28:23,760 Speaker 1: or if we're talking about interdimensional creatures that morph in 373 00:28:23,800 --> 00:28:28,639 Speaker 1: and out of our world, whatever they are, we have 374 00:28:28,720 --> 00:28:32,440 Speaker 1: to think about the means that may they may have 375 00:28:32,640 --> 00:28:37,879 Speaker 1: in order to interact with us, to reach us both 376 00:28:37,920 --> 00:28:41,680 Speaker 1: physically and linearly. I mean, for example, are they just 377 00:28:42,400 --> 00:28:47,719 Speaker 1: traveling across vast distances or are they using wormholes in 378 00:28:47,840 --> 00:28:52,520 Speaker 1: order to overcome distances and immediately teleport back and forth? 379 00:28:52,520 --> 00:28:58,120 Speaker 1: I mean all that stuff. Right. There is a man 380 00:28:58,320 --> 00:29:02,360 Speaker 1: that you may have come across in your studies of 381 00:29:02,400 --> 00:29:06,400 Speaker 1: the metaphysical world. He's quite popular. Let's see, he's sixty 382 00:29:06,440 --> 00:29:10,440 Speaker 1: six years old. His name is sad Guru sad Guru 383 00:29:10,480 --> 00:29:14,080 Speaker 1: that's spelled s A d h g U r U, 384 00:29:14,600 --> 00:29:17,560 Speaker 1: and he is the founder and head of the Esha 385 00:29:17,640 --> 00:29:21,080 Speaker 1: Foundation based in India. I don't know if I'm pronouncing 386 00:29:21,120 --> 00:29:23,360 Speaker 1: that right Esha, but I think so. I says. It 387 00:29:23,400 --> 00:29:26,640 Speaker 1: was established in nineteen ninety two, operates an ashram and 388 00:29:26,720 --> 00:29:30,760 Speaker 1: yoga center that carries out educational and spiritual activities. He's 389 00:29:30,760 --> 00:29:33,960 Speaker 1: been teaching yoga since nineteen eighty two. He does a 390 00:29:34,000 --> 00:29:36,320 Speaker 1: lot of speaking engagements and hey, you know, he's one 391 00:29:36,320 --> 00:29:38,280 Speaker 1: of these guys. When you look at him, he's you know, 392 00:29:38,320 --> 00:29:40,880 Speaker 1: he's got like the robe and the white beard, and 393 00:29:40,920 --> 00:29:43,120 Speaker 1: he has the cloth wrapped around his head. And I mean, 394 00:29:43,160 --> 00:29:47,960 Speaker 1: he he looks like a guru, but he is extremely 395 00:29:48,080 --> 00:29:53,400 Speaker 1: articulate and he's I've I enjoy listening to his videos, 396 00:29:53,440 --> 00:29:55,400 Speaker 1: even though I really don't know much about the guy, 397 00:29:55,560 --> 00:29:58,000 Speaker 1: to be honest with you. Yeah, and I even bought 398 00:29:58,000 --> 00:30:01,280 Speaker 1: one of his books and h and he had he 399 00:30:01,320 --> 00:30:04,080 Speaker 1: made some pretty interesting points in that. But I bring 400 00:30:04,160 --> 00:30:08,640 Speaker 1: him up because the other day I saw he was 401 00:30:08,720 --> 00:30:14,760 Speaker 1: interviewed by Joe Rogan, and at one point in the interview, 402 00:30:15,680 --> 00:30:19,320 Speaker 1: saw Guru was talking about that what really makes humans 403 00:30:19,920 --> 00:30:28,680 Speaker 1: special compared to other other animals, other creatures that we're 404 00:30:28,720 --> 00:30:33,360 Speaker 1: aware of is our ability to use tools that you 405 00:30:33,400 --> 00:30:38,640 Speaker 1: cannot underestimate that one thing. And he said, you know, 406 00:30:38,720 --> 00:30:41,760 Speaker 1: to Joe Rogan, he goes, you're a strong man. He says, 407 00:30:42,880 --> 00:30:44,440 Speaker 1: what if I tell you to come over here and 408 00:30:44,600 --> 00:30:48,600 Speaker 1: take the screw out of this chair with your bare hands? 409 00:30:49,560 --> 00:30:51,560 Speaker 1: And Joe Rogan says, oh, I guess that'd be kind 410 00:30:51,560 --> 00:30:53,000 Speaker 1: of tough that he says, yeah, you know, he says, 411 00:30:53,360 --> 00:30:55,760 Speaker 1: you might be able to do it eventually. But you 412 00:30:55,840 --> 00:30:58,840 Speaker 1: might lose a fingernail, maybe you'd use your teeth, you 413 00:30:58,960 --> 00:31:02,080 Speaker 1: might lose a tooth, But I give you a screwdriver 414 00:31:02,120 --> 00:31:05,320 Speaker 1: and boon, that thing comes right out. So why wouldn't 415 00:31:05,320 --> 00:31:08,719 Speaker 1: you take advantage of this tool and make things easy 416 00:31:08,720 --> 00:31:14,200 Speaker 1: on yourself? And this extends throughout the entire story of 417 00:31:14,520 --> 00:31:17,680 Speaker 1: human development. It has taken us all the way to 418 00:31:17,960 --> 00:31:22,680 Speaker 1: the moon. The fact and beyond the fact that we 419 00:31:22,960 --> 00:31:27,080 Speaker 1: are master tool makers compared to every other thing out 420 00:31:27,080 --> 00:31:29,560 Speaker 1: there that we see. I mean, there are some creatures 421 00:31:30,040 --> 00:31:32,320 Speaker 1: that use tools to some extent, you know, using a 422 00:31:32,400 --> 00:31:37,080 Speaker 1: stick for this or that. But I mean it's if 423 00:31:37,120 --> 00:31:39,800 Speaker 1: there's any doubt that there's some kind of divine spark 424 00:31:39,880 --> 00:31:42,600 Speaker 1: within a human being. I mean, look at our ability 425 00:31:42,680 --> 00:31:47,680 Speaker 1: to create things by using tools, and so just because 426 00:31:48,040 --> 00:31:53,520 Speaker 1: there are other possible advanced life forms out there, it 427 00:31:53,560 --> 00:31:56,280 Speaker 1: doesn't mean that they are tool makers like we are. 428 00:31:57,000 --> 00:31:59,360 Speaker 1: I am I'm not certain that you could actually say 429 00:31:59,360 --> 00:32:03,400 Speaker 1: that a human more intelligent than any other creature, especially 430 00:32:03,440 --> 00:32:05,880 Speaker 1: when you start looking at dolphins and chimps and all that. 431 00:32:05,920 --> 00:32:07,760 Speaker 1: I mean, we just live in different worlds, We have 432 00:32:07,800 --> 00:32:10,480 Speaker 1: a different set of needs for the environment that we're in. 433 00:32:11,600 --> 00:32:13,680 Speaker 1: You know, you may say, well, I'm smarter than a shark, 434 00:32:13,760 --> 00:32:15,640 Speaker 1: so you know I'm better than a shark. But okay, 435 00:32:15,760 --> 00:32:18,440 Speaker 1: let's throw you in the ocean and see who who 436 00:32:18,480 --> 00:32:24,360 Speaker 1: comes out better in that situation. Well, I think it's 437 00:32:24,400 --> 00:32:29,040 Speaker 1: also important for us to realize that tools they can 438 00:32:29,120 --> 00:32:32,520 Speaker 1: help us achieve extraordinary things when we go out there 439 00:32:32,560 --> 00:32:36,440 Speaker 1: and we explore the world and we experience the universe. 440 00:32:36,560 --> 00:32:42,160 Speaker 1: But it also goes for mental tools, and this is 441 00:32:42,160 --> 00:32:46,760 Speaker 1: something that's overlooked way too much. We have a tendency 442 00:32:46,760 --> 00:32:49,360 Speaker 1: to only focus on things that are our physical and 443 00:32:49,440 --> 00:32:51,720 Speaker 1: tangible that we can literally put our hands on them, 444 00:32:51,800 --> 00:32:53,840 Speaker 1: and that we were crude in that way of thinking. 445 00:32:53,920 --> 00:32:56,720 Speaker 1: I call it wookie thinking. In my book Use the Force, 446 00:32:57,800 --> 00:33:04,160 Speaker 1: and essentially, when I talk about tips for things that 447 00:33:04,200 --> 00:33:12,480 Speaker 1: will help you improve your life by enhancing your mentality, 448 00:33:13,800 --> 00:33:17,440 Speaker 1: I'm basing that on some of my own experiences because 449 00:33:17,640 --> 00:33:20,440 Speaker 1: I think it's really important to have tools to help 450 00:33:20,520 --> 00:33:27,920 Speaker 1: you mentally and spiritually. And it's not a crutch unless 451 00:33:27,920 --> 00:33:29,520 Speaker 1: you just want to be mister tough guy and say 452 00:33:29,600 --> 00:33:32,360 Speaker 1: I don't need it. I can will whatever I walk. 453 00:33:32,680 --> 00:33:37,600 Speaker 1: I brute force. Fine, Okay, but I'm the guy who like, 454 00:33:37,640 --> 00:33:41,120 Speaker 1: if I'm going to drive cross country, if the GPS 455 00:33:41,160 --> 00:33:43,680 Speaker 1: is available, I will use it. I like to make 456 00:33:43,720 --> 00:33:47,760 Speaker 1: my life as easy as possible by taking advantage of tools. 457 00:33:48,720 --> 00:33:50,840 Speaker 1: And so that's why, for example, when you go to say, 458 00:33:50,920 --> 00:33:54,320 Speaker 1: Joshua Pewarren dot com, the Curiosity Shop is full of 459 00:33:54,360 --> 00:33:58,120 Speaker 1: some of the best metaphysical tools that I have come 460 00:33:58,200 --> 00:34:01,160 Speaker 1: up with that have helped me. So that's all there 461 00:34:01,200 --> 00:34:04,400 Speaker 1: for you. Well, I say that because I think that 462 00:34:04,520 --> 00:34:08,200 Speaker 1: I'm about to give you an interesting set of tools here. 463 00:34:09,120 --> 00:34:13,120 Speaker 1: And you always need refreshers, and you need inspiration to 464 00:34:13,239 --> 00:34:15,279 Speaker 1: and you constantly need to sort of think about things 465 00:34:15,320 --> 00:34:19,240 Speaker 1: from different points of view. I was watching an interview 466 00:34:19,280 --> 00:34:27,880 Speaker 1: the other day with Amy Newmark, and Amy Newmark is 467 00:34:27,920 --> 00:34:32,040 Speaker 1: the publisher of Chicken Soup for the Soul, which is 468 00:34:32,040 --> 00:34:39,560 Speaker 1: now a big entertainment company. And Amy Newmark she's she's 469 00:34:39,560 --> 00:34:42,560 Speaker 1: always making really interesting points and giving really good tips 470 00:34:42,560 --> 00:34:47,000 Speaker 1: to people about how to do little things that can 471 00:34:47,160 --> 00:34:51,680 Speaker 1: sort of change the direction of life for the better. 472 00:34:53,520 --> 00:34:56,479 Speaker 1: And she gave this tip that I thought was good 473 00:34:56,560 --> 00:35:00,480 Speaker 1: enough to pass along to you, and I might have 474 00:35:00,560 --> 00:35:03,040 Speaker 1: misled you a little bit because I was saying three 475 00:35:03,080 --> 00:35:05,879 Speaker 1: things you can do to easily turn your bad luck 476 00:35:05,920 --> 00:35:09,480 Speaker 1: into good luck. Well that's let me be more specific, 477 00:35:11,080 --> 00:35:16,120 Speaker 1: she said, try this out. Okay, and I'm going to 478 00:35:16,200 --> 00:35:21,640 Speaker 1: paraphrase her a little bit. But take out a calendar, 479 00:35:23,040 --> 00:35:27,560 Speaker 1: mark whatever day it is is day one, and go 480 00:35:27,680 --> 00:35:32,239 Speaker 1: thirty days, and then mark day thirty. So you want 481 00:35:32,280 --> 00:35:36,719 Speaker 1: to basically set thirty days aside for yourself. She didn't 482 00:35:36,760 --> 00:35:38,799 Speaker 1: say us a calendar, but I think that makes sense. 483 00:35:38,840 --> 00:35:41,360 Speaker 1: So you can keep track of it. And then every 484 00:35:41,400 --> 00:35:45,960 Speaker 1: single day, for all of those thirty days, for each day, 485 00:35:46,680 --> 00:35:53,560 Speaker 1: you write down three things, three things per day that 486 00:35:53,600 --> 00:35:57,840 Speaker 1: you are thankful for. And you can't write down the 487 00:35:57,880 --> 00:36:04,120 Speaker 1: same thing twice every day. Come up. It could be 488 00:36:04,280 --> 00:36:08,239 Speaker 1: the simplest things. In my book, Use the Force, I 489 00:36:08,239 --> 00:36:11,520 Speaker 1: have a chapter on gratitude, and I say start with 490 00:36:11,640 --> 00:36:14,279 Speaker 1: just the senses that you have, because not everybody has them. 491 00:36:14,320 --> 00:36:17,120 Speaker 1: Say I'm thankful to have sight, or I'm thankful to hear, 492 00:36:17,520 --> 00:36:20,240 Speaker 1: or I'm thankful to smell or to taste or to feel. 493 00:36:20,520 --> 00:36:25,640 Speaker 1: I'm thankful to have my rational mind. You can be 494 00:36:25,680 --> 00:36:28,520 Speaker 1: thankful for a family member, thankful for the roof over 495 00:36:28,560 --> 00:36:32,560 Speaker 1: your head, thankful for the device that you're using right 496 00:36:32,600 --> 00:36:40,040 Speaker 1: now to listen to me. Every day, just take a 497 00:36:40,040 --> 00:36:44,239 Speaker 1: moment and write down three things you're thankful for. If 498 00:36:44,280 --> 00:36:47,200 Speaker 1: you can do that for thirty days, then when you 499 00:36:47,239 --> 00:36:52,200 Speaker 1: get to the thirtieth day, stop and look back on 500 00:36:52,560 --> 00:36:56,920 Speaker 1: your life and compare your life to how it was 501 00:36:57,120 --> 00:37:00,880 Speaker 1: when you started. I bet you it will be better, 502 00:37:02,600 --> 00:37:06,239 Speaker 1: much better, And you don't even have to try to 503 00:37:06,280 --> 00:37:10,040 Speaker 1: do anything except just be conscious and aware of that. 504 00:37:11,760 --> 00:37:16,120 Speaker 1: This is sort of like counting your blessings. In my 505 00:37:16,160 --> 00:37:18,279 Speaker 1: book Use the Force, a Jedi's Guide to the Law 506 00:37:18,280 --> 00:37:21,000 Speaker 1: of Attraction, which you can read for free if you 507 00:37:21,080 --> 00:37:26,880 Speaker 1: go to my website, I wrote this, Let's face reality, 508 00:37:26,960 --> 00:37:29,600 Speaker 1: no matter how optimistic you try to be, every day 509 00:37:29,640 --> 00:37:31,719 Speaker 1: can be a struggle. You do not live in a 510 00:37:31,760 --> 00:37:35,520 Speaker 1: tiny bubble, and challenges and problems are always apt to arise. 511 00:37:35,719 --> 00:37:38,239 Speaker 1: So how can you further convince yourself that you do 512 00:37:38,320 --> 00:37:41,320 Speaker 1: live in a friendly universe. You do that by taking 513 00:37:41,320 --> 00:37:44,799 Speaker 1: a moment to be grateful. It's often said the law 514 00:37:44,800 --> 00:37:47,279 Speaker 1: of attraction is no different from the law of gravity. 515 00:37:47,440 --> 00:37:50,719 Speaker 1: It doesn't matter whether you believe in gravity if you 516 00:37:50,800 --> 00:37:53,880 Speaker 1: run off a cliff, disbelieving in gravity won't stop you 517 00:37:53,920 --> 00:37:58,800 Speaker 1: from falling In that case, the law is a bad thing. However, 518 00:37:58,960 --> 00:38:00,920 Speaker 1: it is also the law of gravity that keeps your 519 00:38:00,920 --> 00:38:03,200 Speaker 1: feet planted on the earth so you don't go flying 520 00:38:03,200 --> 00:38:07,680 Speaker 1: off into space. Since the law of attraction is constantly working, 521 00:38:07,719 --> 00:38:10,160 Speaker 1: whether you like it or not, it will continue drawing 522 00:38:10,200 --> 00:38:13,759 Speaker 1: good things to you. If you feel appreciative for the 523 00:38:13,800 --> 00:38:24,279 Speaker 1: good things you already have, try this out and let 524 00:38:24,320 --> 00:38:27,640 Speaker 1: me know. Take an old fashioned calendar, if you've got one, 525 00:38:27,800 --> 00:38:31,520 Speaker 1: or if you know. I'm getting getting to be an 526 00:38:31,560 --> 00:38:33,760 Speaker 1: older fellow now, so I got the big wall calendar 527 00:38:33,800 --> 00:38:35,920 Speaker 1: and I write things with an old ink pit. Okay, 528 00:38:35,920 --> 00:38:38,560 Speaker 1: but if you do everything on your phone, fine, use 529 00:38:38,600 --> 00:38:43,759 Speaker 1: your phone. Do this experiment, and then email me at 530 00:38:43,760 --> 00:38:46,560 Speaker 1: thirty days and let me know if your life is 531 00:38:46,600 --> 00:38:49,880 Speaker 1: better after thirty days of doing this writing down three 532 00:38:49,920 --> 00:38:54,440 Speaker 1: things per day that you're grateful for. And so thanks 533 00:38:54,440 --> 00:38:58,879 Speaker 1: to Amy Newmark with chicken soup for the Soul for 534 00:38:59,280 --> 00:39:03,560 Speaker 1: that advice. When we come back, it is time for 535 00:39:03,600 --> 00:39:07,800 Speaker 1: some listener emails. I have a variety of them. I'm 536 00:39:07,880 --> 00:39:10,000 Speaker 1: not sure what I'm going to dig into exactly, but 537 00:39:10,080 --> 00:39:15,400 Speaker 1: I maybe how about Yeah, I got one on doppel gangers. 538 00:39:17,000 --> 00:39:19,160 Speaker 1: That's a topic a lot of people are always interested 539 00:39:19,160 --> 00:39:23,200 Speaker 1: in that and more. When we return. I'm Joshua P. Warren. 540 00:39:23,400 --> 00:39:28,200 Speaker 1: You're listening to Strange Things on the iHeartRadio and Coast 541 00:39:28,200 --> 00:39:31,840 Speaker 1: to Coast AM Paranormal Podcast Network, and I will be 542 00:39:32,520 --> 00:39:33,200 Speaker 1: right back. 543 00:39:39,440 --> 00:39:41,640 Speaker 4: Keep it here on the iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast 544 00:39:41,719 --> 00:39:43,880 Speaker 4: AM Paranormal Podcast Network. 545 00:39:44,320 --> 00:39:46,520 Speaker 1: The Wizard of Weird will be right back. 546 00:39:54,960 --> 00:39:57,200 Speaker 2: We are happy to announce that our Coast to Coast 547 00:39:57,239 --> 00:40:02,520 Speaker 2: AM official YouTube channel has now reached over three hundred 548 00:40:02,800 --> 00:40:06,520 Speaker 2: thousand subscribers. You can listen to the first hour of 549 00:40:06,600 --> 00:40:10,799 Speaker 2: recent and past shows for free, so head on over 550 00:40:10,960 --> 00:40:14,400 Speaker 2: to the Coast to Coast AM dot com website and 551 00:40:14,520 --> 00:40:17,600 Speaker 2: hit the YouTube icon at the top of the page. 552 00:40:18,160 --> 00:40:22,120 Speaker 2: This is free show audio, so don't wait. Coast to 553 00:40:22,160 --> 00:40:25,200 Speaker 2: Coast AM dot com is where you want to be. 554 00:40:31,560 --> 00:40:34,200 Speaker 4: Hey everyone, it's producer Tom of Coast to Coast AM 555 00:40:34,239 --> 00:41:03,879 Speaker 4: and more of the Wizard of Weird starts right now. 556 00:41:04,520 --> 00:41:07,600 Speaker 1: Welcome back to the final segment of this edition of 557 00:41:07,760 --> 00:41:12,680 Speaker 1: Strange Things on the iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast AM 558 00:41:12,680 --> 00:41:17,560 Speaker 1: Paranormal Podcast Network. I am your host, Joshua P. Warren, 559 00:41:18,640 --> 00:41:21,920 Speaker 1: and for hundreds of years, many people around the world 560 00:41:21,960 --> 00:41:26,880 Speaker 1: believed it was impossible for a human being to run 561 00:41:27,800 --> 00:41:33,680 Speaker 1: one mile in four minutes, and then all that changed 562 00:41:34,920 --> 00:41:39,520 Speaker 1: on May the sixth of nineteen fifty four when an 563 00:41:39,520 --> 00:41:44,759 Speaker 1: Englishman named Roger Banister, at age twenty five did it. 564 00:41:45,719 --> 00:41:48,319 Speaker 1: He ran the mile in four minutes, and you know what, 565 00:41:49,960 --> 00:41:54,000 Speaker 1: within a couple of months, two more people did it, 566 00:41:57,360 --> 00:42:01,560 Speaker 1: and now thousand people have done it. As a matter 567 00:42:01,640 --> 00:42:03,520 Speaker 1: of fact, I believe the guy who holds the record 568 00:42:03,600 --> 00:42:06,680 Speaker 1: right now he ran a mile in three minutes in 569 00:42:06,800 --> 00:42:10,759 Speaker 1: forty three seconds. This is interesting because it goes back 570 00:42:10,760 --> 00:42:14,640 Speaker 1: to this idea of mental tools, mental prep, not believing 571 00:42:15,200 --> 00:42:18,480 Speaker 1: that something has to be impossible just because somebody else 572 00:42:18,520 --> 00:42:21,359 Speaker 1: hasn't done it before. And it's also important to hang 573 00:42:21,400 --> 00:42:24,720 Speaker 1: out with the right people that shows you. The people 574 00:42:24,760 --> 00:42:26,960 Speaker 1: that you associate with, if they're telling you all the 575 00:42:27,000 --> 00:42:30,640 Speaker 1: time this can't be done, this is impossible, and that 576 00:42:30,760 --> 00:42:35,120 Speaker 1: affects you, then you're not going to achieve as much 577 00:42:35,120 --> 00:42:37,200 Speaker 1: as you might be able to. If you surround yourself 578 00:42:37,239 --> 00:42:40,080 Speaker 1: with people who make you feel good and inspire you. 579 00:42:41,920 --> 00:42:46,239 Speaker 1: These are little mind hacks that you can use in 580 00:42:46,280 --> 00:42:50,640 Speaker 1: your life, and I hope you'll take advantage of them. Okay, 581 00:42:50,719 --> 00:42:53,319 Speaker 1: let's go to some emails speaking of people that you're 582 00:42:53,360 --> 00:42:57,920 Speaker 1: hanging out with. This is a weird and spooky one. 583 00:42:58,640 --> 00:43:02,240 Speaker 1: This came from a man name Tony, and he said 584 00:43:02,760 --> 00:43:06,000 Speaker 1: it all started in the historic two story brick house 585 00:43:06,080 --> 00:43:10,600 Speaker 1: I grew up in here in Amarillo, Texas. The year 586 00:43:10,640 --> 00:43:15,320 Speaker 1: was around nineteen seventy two. I saw the same female 587 00:43:15,360 --> 00:43:18,759 Speaker 1: apparition in my bedroom on two different occasions when I 588 00:43:18,840 --> 00:43:23,120 Speaker 1: was probably seven or eight years old. The first time 589 00:43:23,160 --> 00:43:26,200 Speaker 1: I saw her, I thought it was my mother, sitting 590 00:43:26,239 --> 00:43:28,480 Speaker 1: in a chair at the foot of my bed. It 591 00:43:28,520 --> 00:43:32,640 Speaker 1: looked just like her. I remember sitting up in bed 592 00:43:32,680 --> 00:43:36,320 Speaker 1: and calling out to her Mom, Mom, and no response, 593 00:43:37,320 --> 00:43:41,319 Speaker 1: just a blank stare slightly to my right. I then 594 00:43:41,400 --> 00:43:48,120 Speaker 1: realized this was kind of a hazy, translucent figure. It 595 00:43:48,200 --> 00:43:50,640 Speaker 1: did not take me long to figure out it was 596 00:43:50,760 --> 00:43:55,000 Speaker 1: a spirit lingering in the corner of my room. Although 597 00:43:55,000 --> 00:43:57,360 Speaker 1: it did not seem threatening in any way, I was 598 00:43:57,400 --> 00:44:00,319 Speaker 1: still terrified and covered my head for the rest of 599 00:44:00,320 --> 00:44:03,759 Speaker 1: the night. I asked my mom the next morning if 600 00:44:03,800 --> 00:44:06,080 Speaker 1: she had been in my room that previous night, and 601 00:44:06,160 --> 00:44:10,200 Speaker 1: she said no. A couple of months later, as I 602 00:44:10,280 --> 00:44:12,879 Speaker 1: was lying in bed at night trying to sleep, I 603 00:44:12,960 --> 00:44:16,839 Speaker 1: rolled over and that same woman was standing right next 604 00:44:16,840 --> 00:44:20,560 Speaker 1: to my bed, looking down on me. She was less 605 00:44:20,640 --> 00:44:23,719 Speaker 1: than three feet from me. She was even wearing the 606 00:44:23,760 --> 00:44:27,320 Speaker 1: same red, yellow and orange flowery gown from the first 607 00:44:27,360 --> 00:44:30,719 Speaker 1: time I saw her. Once again, I just covered my 608 00:44:30,840 --> 00:44:35,080 Speaker 1: head and would not look out until morning. Years later, 609 00:44:35,760 --> 00:44:39,120 Speaker 1: I learned that this phenomenon was known as a doppelganger, 610 00:44:40,000 --> 00:44:42,640 Speaker 1: and then he writes in parentheses, doppelganger is when a 611 00:44:42,680 --> 00:44:45,520 Speaker 1: spirit takes the form of a family member as they 612 00:44:45,600 --> 00:44:48,959 Speaker 1: manifest themselves. It is said that if you ever see 613 00:44:49,000 --> 00:44:55,960 Speaker 1: your own doppelganger, that you will die soon afterwards. End quote. 614 00:44:56,280 --> 00:44:59,520 Speaker 1: That's thank you for that, Tony. And you know what, 615 00:44:59,680 --> 00:45:04,160 Speaker 1: I I actually did a whole show about the doppelganger phenomenon. 616 00:45:05,080 --> 00:45:10,120 Speaker 1: Let's see. It was episode ninety four of this podcast 617 00:45:10,200 --> 00:45:14,279 Speaker 1: Strange Things, and it was called do You Have a Doppelganger? 618 00:45:15,000 --> 00:45:20,200 Speaker 1: It's one of the weirdest topics out there. So I 619 00:45:20,239 --> 00:45:26,200 Speaker 1: believe that, you know, sometimes there may be multiple timelines 620 00:45:27,360 --> 00:45:30,560 Speaker 1: and you a version of yourself maybe out there doing 621 00:45:30,600 --> 00:45:34,439 Speaker 1: something that is not happening on the timeline that you're 622 00:45:34,520 --> 00:45:40,120 Speaker 1: conscious of. And also there may be shape shifting entities 623 00:45:40,160 --> 00:45:45,239 Speaker 1: out there that are trying to blend in by looking 624 00:45:45,480 --> 00:45:48,560 Speaker 1: like somebody that you're familiar with. There's a whole lot 625 00:45:48,560 --> 00:45:51,719 Speaker 1: of weird stuff connected to the doppelganger thing. Go back 626 00:45:51,760 --> 00:45:54,759 Speaker 1: and listen to episode ninety four. Oh yeah, and then 627 00:45:55,040 --> 00:45:57,319 Speaker 1: Tony sent me this other story. Let me let me 628 00:45:57,320 --> 00:45:59,759 Speaker 1: read this one to you, he says. Now, fast forward 629 00:45:59,800 --> 00:46:03,320 Speaker 1: to nineteen eighty two. I was a senior in high school. 630 00:46:03,680 --> 00:46:06,160 Speaker 1: It was just me and dad living at home. My 631 00:46:06,239 --> 00:46:08,680 Speaker 1: mother had passed away in the previous year, and my 632 00:46:08,800 --> 00:46:11,879 Speaker 1: sisters had married and moved away. It was a high 633 00:46:11,920 --> 00:46:14,880 Speaker 1: school night and I had been up late studying for 634 00:46:15,000 --> 00:46:19,160 Speaker 1: a test before falling into a deep slumber. I was 635 00:46:19,200 --> 00:46:22,000 Speaker 1: awakened from my sleep to the sound of the hangers 636 00:46:22,040 --> 00:46:25,919 Speaker 1: in my bedroom clawset rattling and scraping up and down 637 00:46:25,920 --> 00:46:29,360 Speaker 1: the walls. I tried to call out for help, but 638 00:46:29,560 --> 00:46:33,240 Speaker 1: something had a hold of me and I was totally paralyzed. 639 00:46:33,400 --> 00:46:35,560 Speaker 1: I could not move, I could not breathe, I could 640 00:46:35,560 --> 00:46:39,399 Speaker 1: not yell out nothing. It was like there was a dark, 641 00:46:39,600 --> 00:46:42,279 Speaker 1: unseen presence in my room that night, and it had 642 00:46:42,320 --> 00:46:45,120 Speaker 1: me pinned down. And this went on for thirty or 643 00:46:45,200 --> 00:46:48,440 Speaker 1: forty seconds, Although at the time it seemed like an eternity. 644 00:46:49,440 --> 00:46:52,640 Speaker 1: Suddenly the hangers became silent, and whatever had a hold 645 00:46:52,640 --> 00:46:56,719 Speaker 1: of me released and I could once again move and breathe. 646 00:46:56,880 --> 00:46:59,719 Speaker 1: This totally freaked me out, and it was a long 647 00:46:59,760 --> 00:47:03,359 Speaker 1: time before I ever told anyone about that occurrence. It 648 00:47:03,440 --> 00:47:06,080 Speaker 1: was many years later that I learned about the sleep 649 00:47:06,239 --> 00:47:10,040 Speaker 1: paralysis phenomenon. Yeah, a lot of people have told me 650 00:47:10,080 --> 00:47:14,319 Speaker 1: about experiencing this, and some have said that it also is. Well, 651 00:47:14,400 --> 00:47:17,680 Speaker 1: they call it the old Hag phenomenon because they see 652 00:47:17,719 --> 00:47:22,120 Speaker 1: some kind of like old raggedy looking, creepy, kind of 653 00:47:22,160 --> 00:47:25,880 Speaker 1: witch like figure on top of them when this happens. 654 00:47:26,760 --> 00:47:30,319 Speaker 1: And there's like this old tradition that this could be 655 00:47:30,360 --> 00:47:33,279 Speaker 1: some kind of a I don't know, some kind of 656 00:47:33,320 --> 00:47:38,440 Speaker 1: a soul sucking you know, like I guess, like a 657 00:47:38,520 --> 00:47:41,480 Speaker 1: suckubis type of figure that's trying to take your energy 658 00:47:41,520 --> 00:47:45,960 Speaker 1: while you sleep. It goes back into this I guess, 659 00:47:46,040 --> 00:47:47,879 Speaker 1: you know, I guess the idea that maybe we live 660 00:47:47,920 --> 00:47:52,319 Speaker 1: in this dark forest and there are things that wait 661 00:47:52,440 --> 00:47:58,080 Speaker 1: until you're asleep before they decide to pounce. Right, Okay, 662 00:47:58,160 --> 00:48:01,920 Speaker 1: Well thanks again for that, and now let's go to 663 00:48:02,080 --> 00:48:05,000 Speaker 1: speaking of dark forest. I did a show not too 664 00:48:05,080 --> 00:48:11,520 Speaker 1: long ago, saying beware the dark side, and I talked 665 00:48:11,560 --> 00:48:18,040 Speaker 1: some about how that society can be manipulated by unscrupulous 666 00:48:18,080 --> 00:48:21,680 Speaker 1: people using divide and conquer techniques, and I got this 667 00:48:21,800 --> 00:48:26,239 Speaker 1: email from Diane and she said, after listening to your 668 00:48:26,280 --> 00:48:29,600 Speaker 1: most recent show, I'm wondering if you've heard of Edward 669 00:48:29,680 --> 00:48:36,040 Speaker 1: Burne's last name is spelled ber Nays. He was Freud's 670 00:48:36,120 --> 00:48:40,800 Speaker 1: nephew and is considered the father of public relations. He's 671 00:48:40,920 --> 00:48:46,960 Speaker 1: basically responsible for redefining propaganda and revolutionized advertising and marketing 672 00:48:47,000 --> 00:48:50,839 Speaker 1: back in the nineteen twenties by creating campaigns that used 673 00:48:50,920 --> 00:48:56,200 Speaker 1: psychological techniques to manipulate consent on a mass scale. His 674 00:48:56,320 --> 00:49:00,520 Speaker 1: campaigns were so successful he caught the attention of Paula Titians, 675 00:49:00,560 --> 00:49:03,880 Speaker 1: who hired him for their own campaigns and the rest 676 00:49:03,960 --> 00:49:08,799 Speaker 1: is history. If you have not seen this BBC documentary, 677 00:49:08,800 --> 00:49:12,000 Speaker 1: it's fantastic and explains the history of his influence and 678 00:49:12,040 --> 00:49:15,600 Speaker 1: shows how insidious it was and is. We can thank 679 00:49:15,680 --> 00:49:18,799 Speaker 1: him for the manipulation that is used today. His name 680 00:49:18,880 --> 00:49:22,080 Speaker 1: is virtually unknown, but the power he had is disturbing 681 00:49:22,520 --> 00:49:25,760 Speaker 1: and it's had the most profound effect on the molding 682 00:49:25,840 --> 00:49:29,480 Speaker 1: of society. This needs to be seen. She gave me 683 00:49:29,520 --> 00:49:31,600 Speaker 1: a link to a documentary. I haven't had a chance 684 00:49:31,640 --> 00:49:34,160 Speaker 1: to watch it, but I did click and watch the 685 00:49:34,160 --> 00:49:37,120 Speaker 1: first few minutes, and what I found is if you 686 00:49:37,239 --> 00:49:41,600 Speaker 1: just go to YouTube and type in Edward Burnees, there's 687 00:49:41,600 --> 00:49:45,160 Speaker 1: a lot of documentary information about him. Again, that last 688 00:49:45,239 --> 00:49:48,120 Speaker 1: name is spelled b E R N A Y S 689 00:49:48,360 --> 00:49:51,399 Speaker 1: Edward Burne's And boy, you know that kind of thing, 690 00:49:51,440 --> 00:49:55,040 Speaker 1: It really does make you think about just the amount 691 00:49:55,040 --> 00:50:00,520 Speaker 1: of effort that truly has gone into manipu mulating all 692 00:50:00,600 --> 00:50:04,279 Speaker 1: of us psychologically, especially now that we have computers and 693 00:50:04,360 --> 00:50:07,440 Speaker 1: AI working on us. You know that when you when 694 00:50:07,440 --> 00:50:09,160 Speaker 1: you walk into a store, they know if you're going 695 00:50:09,239 --> 00:50:13,320 Speaker 1: to turn left or right. I mean, look at the 696 00:50:13,880 --> 00:50:16,719 Speaker 1: targeting that goes on when you're just seeing ads that 697 00:50:16,800 --> 00:50:20,799 Speaker 1: pop up out of the blue on your computer or 698 00:50:20,800 --> 00:50:22,840 Speaker 1: your phone, and you're like, are they listening to me? 699 00:50:23,280 --> 00:50:24,919 Speaker 1: How did they know that I was going to buy 700 00:50:24,960 --> 00:50:29,680 Speaker 1: some beakers? Well, they may not be listening to you. 701 00:50:29,719 --> 00:50:32,960 Speaker 1: Maybe they are, but it's like there are patterns that 702 00:50:33,200 --> 00:50:36,120 Speaker 1: you know, you fall into, demographics and stuff, and they 703 00:50:36,160 --> 00:50:41,160 Speaker 1: recognize all that. Well, as usual, we've jumped all over 704 00:50:41,160 --> 00:50:43,239 Speaker 1: the place. That's what I like to do sometimes on 705 00:50:43,280 --> 00:50:45,360 Speaker 1: this show because there's a lot happening in the world 706 00:50:45,440 --> 00:50:49,480 Speaker 1: and so much to talk about so little time. But 707 00:50:49,600 --> 00:50:55,439 Speaker 1: I think it's important for us to remember to focus 708 00:50:55,960 --> 00:50:59,520 Speaker 1: on the power of the Augia tatos zuome and to 709 00:50:59,600 --> 00:51:05,920 Speaker 1: always relax and take moments to think about what is positive, 710 00:51:06,400 --> 00:51:08,839 Speaker 1: what is good for you, what's going to bring in 711 00:51:09,000 --> 00:51:12,399 Speaker 1: good fortune for you. So I'm about to play the one, 712 00:51:12,520 --> 00:51:16,840 Speaker 1: the only original good Fortune tone. It lasts twenty seconds, 713 00:51:17,520 --> 00:51:21,080 Speaker 1: and whatever you're doing, try to pause if you can, 714 00:51:21,239 --> 00:51:25,279 Speaker 1: close your eyes. If you can't, that's totally fine. Take 715 00:51:25,320 --> 00:51:29,200 Speaker 1: some deep breaths, and just think about your next week 716 00:51:29,640 --> 00:51:32,680 Speaker 1: and how we can make this the best week for 717 00:51:32,760 --> 00:51:35,680 Speaker 1: you ever. Just think about nothing but good things happening 718 00:51:35,680 --> 00:52:00,920 Speaker 1: to you. Here is the good Fortune tone. That's it 719 00:52:02,040 --> 00:52:04,760 Speaker 1: for this edition of the show. Follow me on Twitter 720 00:52:04,840 --> 00:52:09,520 Speaker 1: at Joshua P. Warren, Plus visit joshuapwarren dot com to 721 00:52:09,600 --> 00:52:12,920 Speaker 1: sign up for my free e newsletter to receive a 722 00:52:13,000 --> 00:52:16,680 Speaker 1: free instant gift, and check out the cool stuff in 723 00:52:16,719 --> 00:52:21,360 Speaker 1: the Curiosity Shop all at joshuapwarren dot com. I have 724 00:52:21,440 --> 00:52:24,320 Speaker 1: a fun one lined up for you next time. I promise, 725 00:52:24,920 --> 00:52:27,960 Speaker 1: So please tell all your friends to subscribe to this 726 00:52:28,080 --> 00:52:33,120 Speaker 1: show and to always remember the Golden Rule. Thank you 727 00:52:33,200 --> 00:52:37,320 Speaker 1: for listening, thank you for your interest and support. Thank 728 00:52:37,360 --> 00:52:40,919 Speaker 1: you for staying curious, and I will talk to you 729 00:52:41,600 --> 00:52:46,480 Speaker 1: again soon. You've been listening to Strange Things on the 730 00:52:46,520 --> 00:52:51,920 Speaker 1: iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast AM Paranormal Podcast Network. 731 00:53:04,680 --> 00:53:08,000 Speaker 2: Well, if you like this episode of Strange Things, wait 732 00:53:08,080 --> 00:53:10,880 Speaker 2: till you hear the next one. Thank you for listening 733 00:53:10,960 --> 00:53:15,920 Speaker 2: to the iHeartRadio and Coast to Coast AM Paranormal Podcast Network.