Paranormal Synchronicity with Ryan Singer
🌿🌿🌿This episode is brought to you by NED.🌿🌿🌿
Use code SYNC at checkout to get 15% off your order.
...
The second part of a cross-contaminated conversation.
Part 1 of this conversation is right here.
Go check out Ryan's new short, Numera Sentia.
Subscribe to Ryan's podcast "Me and Paranormal You"
...
New Moon Instagram Tarot Readings are taking place this week. Follow me on Instagram to catch them live.
...
Rate and Review (🌟🌟🌟🌟🌟) Synchronicity on Apple Podcasts.
Read the transcript
(upbeat music)
Welcome to Synchronicity. What's going on? Why are there so many episodes this week? Is this fucking, what's going on? Is it July of 2019, all of a sudden? No, just feeling in the spirit. Ryan Singer. All right, here's what's going on with this episode. If you wanna hear the first part of this conversation, go over to Ryan Singer's podcast, Me and Paranormal You. Been on there before, he's been on my show. You know what it is, the first part is there. Go listen to that first, 'cause that's the first part of this conversation. This is the second part of this conversation that's on this show, which I probably didn't have to say 'cause it's like, what else could it be?
It's a conversation, it's on this show. We talk about a lot of stuff. We open up talking about tombstone pizzas. Come on, you don't know what tombstone pizzas are. You're gonna hear me talk about Trump. You're gonna hear me talk about pizzas. You're gonna hear me talk about McDonald's. You're gonna hear me talk about a lot of stuff. It's fun times. It's good times. That's all I'm gonna say on this. I don't really need to do a whole big old intro. Go check out Ryan. There are links on this episode to all his shit, me and paranormal you. He just released a little short film. That's gonna be linked there.
It's gonna be links to his Instagram and his Twitter and all of the things you wanna do. Do you have a Patreon yet, Ryan? Get one of those. He's got stuff. Go check it out. It's all there. Tour dates will be coming for him. 'Cause he does the comedy, does the like comedy when people are allowed outside again. We're being forced indoors by our corporate overlords and the military, right? Is that what's going on? Things are good. Things are good. Talk about good things in this episode. I hope you like it. Ooh, let's do a little thing here. The wonderful folks at Ned. Do we like CBD? Do you know it's an essential service?
It's being deemed an essential service in the pandemic times is weed and CBD stuff. So the guys at Ned, they're still shipping stuff out. It's their two year anniversary. Use the code Sink, S-Y-N-C at checkout at helloned.com. Get a magically blessed CBD full spectrum hemp oil from them. People have been writing in. They get it for their parents. People are a little skeptical. It's not psychoactive unless you're on it. They wink, wink. Also, I was just about to stop the ad and go into people sending me weed. But go check that out. Seriously, helloned.com. Use the code S-Y-N-C at checkout. Works out for everyone.
They're happy. I'm happy. You're happy. Win, win, win. It's the best. Also, thank you to everyone who's reached out and offered to send me stuff where I've specifically asked it for. Can you send it faster, please? This pandemic is really making it difficult to get stuff that I need. All right, I appreciate it. Rate and review this podcast. Have a great time. I'll see you next week with a normal regular solo cast episode. We're gonna be doing stuff on viruses and pericelsis and all this cool shit that's going on. Oh man, plants are cool. Plants are really cool. All right, without further ado, here's the second part of the conversation.
The first part on Ryan Singer's podcast. Second part of the conversation with Ryan Singer. Here you go. I'm back. Okay, yeah, I just got back to. Sweet. I've left over Tombstone Pizza down there. I was like, it even looks good. It looks just as good later. Yeah, it stays. I cook a little longer than you're supposed to. What about you? What did they recommend on the Tombstones? I forget. 12 to 14. Yeah, I usually use 13 right in the middle. Yeah, yeah. Here's the trick that I do just because I've had to incorporate it into my cooking of it because I just can't fucking help it. Maybe it's OCD or something.
It's some kind of compulsion. I always check at like 10 minutes to make sure it's not cooking too fast. But that releases heat from the oven. So therefore- You open the oven? I open, I don't have a window on mine. What the fuck? So I have to open, I open the oven, release the heat. And then I do that at least once more. I usually always, I open the oven twice before it's done cooking for some reason. And I think that gives it a very unique cook. You're like an iron chef of Tombstone Pizza Cooking. You have like special techniques of when when precisely to open to get the perfect bake. Yes, yeah, it's all about getting that perfect bake.
I would watch a show where people, three people competed to cook the perfect Tombstone. 'Cause there should do that next time you're in town. We'll just film it. We'll do a Tombstone cooking contest. I'm totally down. We have to find a third person who's into it. Or unless it's just me and you. I wonder if this boy needs Tombstone. I hope he does 'cause Tombstones are so good and everyone should have the joy of a Tombstone in their life. I mean, I really, I just can't stress enough how much I love a Tombstone Pizza. And when are we gonna tell people that this whole episode is sponsored by Tombstone?
(laughing) Well, I was gonna save it for the end so they didn't realize it was such product placement. It's good. It's subtle too. Although if our podcasts don't get sponsored by Tombstone Pizza after this. Failing. Yeah, yeah, it's like, it's gotta happen. It's gotta have like the Tombstone, the frozen pizza for the spiritual community. Right. Walk into 5D with a four cheese. Oh my God. Yeah, I do know. I wish I had better stores to follow up with the-- Cook a 425 for 12 to 14 minutes. Or whatever your conception of time is. You know, time isn't linear, but cook a Tombstone for 40. Cook a Tombstone until you feel it's right.
It's a ballsy ass thing to name your pizza. It's like, especially for something that's not healthy. It's like Tombstone, it's like really puts death right in your face. And we love it. Yeah, we do love it. And I'll tell you there it is, if people are like me, they love a fucking sodium bomb every once in a while. Which is really bad for me. Tombstone has like, it has so much sodium in it. It's like, I don't even really know if, I don't even think I know what sodium really is other than-- It's just salt, salt pizza. That's all. That's why you wake up. Do you get nightmares after you do tombstones?
No, no, no. I always have what's wrong with you. (both laughing) It turns you so, what is it? It turns you so-- Which is surprising because salt's supposed to help you retain water. (both laughing) Oh man. No, you get nightmares after eating tombstone? Pepperoni pizza used to give me nightmares, but I realized now it was just an imaginal thing. Like, it wasn't a real thing, but at some point I must have just believed that it like, that's what happened. So like, it happened a lot. So I just wake up after eating pepperoni pizza with nightmares. I stopped it recently. 'Cause I was like, I think I'm done with this.
That's something that's like a useful belief. Yeah, 'cause you're eating pepperoni pizza like every other day. And you're like, this isn't the life I wanna live. I don't wanna make my life look like tombstones. Holy shit. Yeah, man. It really is though. That is a really ballsy thing to name your pizza when it's unhealthy. Right? And they just went for it. It's like an interdimensional like signal. If you like tombstones, you know, like you're from a certain place where you know, cool shit is good. 'Cause like, I don't know. There's so many frozen pizzas now too. You know, there's so many choices and to maintain the knowingness that tombstone is the best with all the innovations.
Tombstone's like the Richard Pryor of frozen pizzas. Yeah. You can always count on it. And guess what? It does some bad things to you. Yeah, sometimes. Yeah, sometimes it's, but you know what? It doesn't hide it. And I can't recommend this book enough if people like Richard Pryor even a little bit. It's called "Prior Convictions." It's his autobiography. Oh, shit. He literally has full disclosure about everything in his life, including the shit that people wouldn't want you to know about them. He is, you know, he is completely open about his past as a, and you know, being on the, you know, the wrong side of domestic abuse.
Yeah, exactly. There's not a right side of domestic abuse. So, you know. Well, there's a better side, I guess. Yes. Well, yeah, I think it's better. It's the difference between being like a person who's a victim and a nastole. Yeah. Yeah, he was the asshole. Yeah. So, I mean, he's open about all that. He's also open about burning spoons until the fucking day he died, even though he had MS. And it's just like what a, and like that's when I really realized the prison, or what a prison addiction can be. Yeah. What was his take on that? I mean, like, what was he saying about his relationship to it at the end of his life?
Like outside. He was saying it was a fucking, you know, like a sad fucking prison. Wow. You know, he wasn't glorifying it in any way. I mean, see, that's the thing about pandemics, even though this is the first one I've ever been in. This is my third. So, I'm the first. Well, like, this is your third. I've been through three global pandemics. What are you, what are you, a pussy or something? Yeah, I was. What are you new? What are you new? It activates, I'm hyper aware of the activating of certain parts of my brain that are activated by fear. And a big part of my brain that's activated by fear is the addiction part.
Totally. Those wires have been going fucking bonkers. Like, it's almost like a busy switchboard back in the day. Like, I've got all these like switchboard operators. You know, hold please, can you hold please? Thank you for calling Ryan's Addiction Service, hold please. Thank you for, you know, 'cause I got like, you know, nicotine, nicotine, chew, chew, chew. Let's get some coke, let's get some coke, buy a bottle of booze. I did buy a bottle of Jim Beam, but I haven't opened it yet. But like, I keep thinking like, I need $200 worth of tobacco. Yeah, I loaded up. I went into the city and picked up some extracurricular supplies for an extended stay.
So, I don't want to make it seem like I'm above the fray. (laughs) Yeah, I have, and I will continue. To resist the urge to go into the nicotine trap while I'm isolated. I will literally not, like, if I allow myself to do that, once we re-emerge into society as these butterflies or moths, and moths are also beautiful, I will not have a fucking jaw. I will have half my tongue removed from home surgery, probably because all the chewing tobacco I've been using. Do you smoke cigarettes though? I would, see, here's my problem with nicotine and tobacco. Like, when I'm on it, I'm on every single form of it constantly all day long.
So, if I'm-- I have friends who love, do you have, have you done raw pain? Have you done that snuff stuff that, like, you get shot up your nose and it hurts like a motherfucker? It's tobacco. I have never done the snuff correctly. Yeah, it did. When I was a kid, I heard about snuff, and I thought Copenhagen was snuff, and I snorted fucking Copenhagen, which has, you know-- What the fuck is COVID? I thought that's a city. No, Copenhagen is a, it's a dip. It's a very, very fine-cut lip dip fruit, tobacco for your lip, like, skull and cardiac. I've never dipped, and I honestly, I don't wanna say I never will, because then I usually end up doing it, but I, let's say that I have no affinity towards doing that.
Yeah, and save yourself the trouble. There's nothing there. There's nothing, and this is from someone who started dipping when they were, I don't know, 15 fucking years old, and then had as recently as three months ago, had a dip in their lip. There's absolutely nothing. There's nothing there. There's no reason to go there. Why do you do it? It's just an addictive habitual thing. The first time I ever did it, I almost fell down the stairs, 'cause I was buzzing so hard. And then have you just been trying to chase that? And that's all I took. Like, this thing almost killed me, I must do more of it.
You know, like, that kind of thing. Like, oh, I like not feeling normal. Let's do more of this. And then before you realize that you don't wanna do this shit, then you've already got the addiction in you. Yeah, I mean, I guess it depends on what it is. I mean, 'cause there's some things that I would, I definitely do habitually. Like, I'm rolling two joints during disappointing this podcast. But I-- Like, simultaneously? Like two at the same time? I wish there'll be such a fucking skill. Oh my God, don't give me something to do during the pandemic when I'm trapped here. I'll learn how to do that shit, and you do it.
That would be pretty cool. Yeah, definitely do a how-to video. I've got marijuana, I've also got, oh fuck, I've got mushrooms here. Yeah, dude, see, this is what these times are for. Get weird, man. That's exactly what it's for. I also got a tube of itch-x. I'm looking, right next to my mushrooms is a tube of itch-x. If you don't know what itch-x is, it says-- Nice level. It's like a gel you use if you've been, like, ransacked by insects that bite you and that cause an itch. Scabies? I don't think I've ever had scabies. I just found out what they were. I didn't know what they were. They're like these little bugs that, I guess, crawl under your skin and bite you and give you a rash.
Oh, there's also another bug like that that has a very dangerously name, has a dangerous name, if you say it incorrectly. But that's what I had. I had the other bug that does that. What's the other bug? I got them in Florida. They're called chiggers. Chiggers? Yeah, and it just feels weird to even say it. But yeah, so I got them in Florida. They were crazy bad where we were doing that last June. I was doing that paranormal documentary. And because they're smart enough to know to get you in the very sensitive soft skin spots. Why? So they're just evolution. They just figured it out. They just know where to go on your body once they get on you.
They go around your ankles, that spot, that soft spot. They can get behind your knees, your elbow area, your forearm. I'm going to move to the timeline where there's no chiggers. That's a fucking brilliant idea. I've lived there my whole life so far, so I'm going to stay there. Yeah, stay there. I'm just reading you some Alice in Wonderland shit over here. Man, I heard a Neville Goddard talk the other day. You know, what's funny is I hadn't listened to Neville Goddard in like three or four months. Man, that's not true, like two or three months. And I listened to like a few here and there. And the first one I picked up on, it's called He Is Dreaming.
It's this talk. And it's about all he uses is Alice in Wonderland the whole time. That's all he talks about in Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dumb and the King who's sleeping and dreaming, the dream of Alice. It's so bugged out. It's so fucking crazy. I got to send you that talk. I have a couple of things that I think you would really enjoy. Take the mushrooms and listen to that. That's a good idea. I should also read the book. Which one? The Neville Goddard books? Yeah, there's so many of them. Oh, no, I meant the Alice in Wonderland book. Oh, I never read the book. Did you ever read the book? No, never had it.
I never read it. I just watched the movie. I saw the movie, but not in a long, long time. I saw the movie, A Bunch, and I saw it a little bit in college. Again. Yeah, I'm interested to see what happens when I do these mushrooms during this. How much do you have? Do you have, like, a good amount? God, I don't even know a friend of mine. She gave him to me a while ago, and I haven't looked at him since. I totally forgot. I have them in this little tiny little chest that I keep, like, random, like, magical items on my book days. That's the perfect place to put things. I also like charging things with stones, like, substances, or, you know, what people would call drugs.
I think this shit is all alchemy, just to be queer. I think this is what the Greeks were doing. They were just making drugs. And now that we just have them in different forms, because we believe in, like, chemicals and fucking science and shit, but they were doing the same thing. Pretty sure. I mean, I wouldn't, I mean, what else are people doing? You know what I mean? They allude to it constantly in the shit, too. They're, like, soma. Oh, yeah, soma, that is one of the-- this is one of those things that is so elusive to scientists and, like, anthropologists have been trying to find exactly in pinpoint exactly what soma is, or which plant or whatever you know that-- because different-- because soma is, like, I think it's cross-cultural, right?
That's specific phrase. It's in, like, every part of the world. I mean, that used and wrote down stuff, especially in the east and the west, at least the Greeks. It seems to have traveled from at least India and Asia through to aggression times for the Aleutian mysteries. So, like, Egypt, as well. So it's, like, three continents they know that it was used were alluded to. It's pretty crazy. Yeah, I mean, it all comes down to, like, I think-- I mean, I'd be lying if I said that a big part of my life wasn't, you know, this quest for, you know, elusive truth or enlightenment or, you know, just trying to, like-- there's something sexy to me about the occult, you know, hidden knowledge.
So I think that just by the mere fact that it's difficult to obtain creates so much of the drive for me and, like, trying to find it. That's an interesting little situation you've built for yourself there. I like doses of difficulty and effort, you know, balanced with effortlessness as well, just like-- Like, just, like, things given to you, like, just kind of, like, bestowed upon you, almost. I accept that as much as the other stuff. I've learned to not stub my nose at that shit for any reason, because if that's showing up in your life and you get, like, a random-- sometimes you got to go treasure hunting.
There's nothing wrong with that. I love a good treasure hunt. But sometimes, just something is just placed in front of you, which you place in front of you ultimately. You just got to be like, yeah, I'll take that. That's good. Looks good to me, checks out. And trust it, you know, and not think it's, like, some poison fucking trick or something. I don't like a gift or it's in the mouth. You know, yeah, that is, you know, I do like that, too. I do like when something is, like, surprisingly, just fucking poof right there. That's it. Wow, that's so great. That's it. And then you'd be surprised the more you kind of accept that, how often that happens.
If you wanted to, again, it's up to you. I'm also obsessed with-- well, "obsessed" is the wrong word. I'm fascinated and delighted by thoughts of building treasure hunts for people. Oh, dude. And I almost feel like there are certain, like, whenever I'm hiking places, I'm like, this would be a good spot to hide a thumb drive that I will reference through a riddle in my last will and testament. It's like a wizard's, a wizard's magic treasure hunt. I'm with it, dude. Yeah, but it's after I'm dead. It's stuff after I'm dead. Only after you're dead. But I guess it doesn't have to be. But I guess, like, the iteration that I've been kind of playing out for years now in my mind is that there is this-- there's almost, like, the continuation of my quest becomes the quest for many other people, potentially, if they can fiddle out their fiddle out.
Fiddle out, they have to fiddle out. If they can fiddle out the figures, if they can figure out the riddle, if they can figure out riddles that I leave after I'm dead. Because I am going to-- I definitely am leaving, as long as I don't die like right now, because I still haven't ridden them out. I haven't figured them out exactly what I'm going to do yet. But I'm doing the thing where I will have a sealed envelope or something of some kind. I still have to buy a safe to put all this stuff in. Is one of the clues going to be on your tombstone? Well, that's a good idea. But I mean, I guess I could have a tombstone, although I don't want my body buried.
I want to be planted as a tree. I was talking about that with someone else. That's like the best way to do it. Because it seems for me mostly unimportant. But it seems like that's a good thing to do, is to have you be tree food. Dude, I love trees so much. I want to fucking be a part of a tree. What if trees are the dominant life form, right? I don't think you're wrong. I think that they just might be. And we're like idiots. We're like, look at these trees. So boring and just tree ended up. And they're like, you guys are cute and dumb. I've been naming trees ever since I was a kid. And like, you know, I would name trees that I see all the time.
And I had a whole lot of trees. Name you. What if all the different trees-- I would love to know what my name was. What are the different names? What if it's just like, each tree calls you a different name? That'd be weird. You know what I was thinking about regarding trees? It's like, we never hear the wind. We hear the trees. Dude, I literally was on a walk the other day and literally had a conversation about that. Because it was so nice. And I realized like, we're always hearing the wind hitting the trees. Yeah. Yeah, it's the tree we hear. It's not the wind. It has a song and a sound yet. It's crazy.
I love the idea of trees being the dominant species. And also the idea that everything is alive. My buddy who's-- this guy Mark Burone is one of my therapists. And we had a great chat earlier this week because he was talking about how it's quite possible that, you know, if you launch from the perspective that you think the Earth is a conscious being, that it is forced us, through what's happening right now, to stop and take a break and analyze what we're doing. And he's like, if you were the Earth and you were conscious. That's exactly what you do. How could you-- what is the most effective way to make everybody stop what the fuck they're doing?
Virus. Virus is the answer. Exactly. It's not a tidal wave. It's not a worldwide earthquake. It's none of that. It's a virus. Virus. Yeah, and that really kind of like fascinated me. But like, I just did this short film of people who are interested. I put it up on my YouTube, which is Ryan J Singer. But you can find it on my Instagram at ricing2. It's on my Instagram, TV tab. Called "Numericentia." It's a short film I made about the singularity event when we realize that numbers are conscious. That's on your YouTube? Yeah, it's on my YouTube page. You have to put this shit out more, because the algorithms aren't showing me.
You know, I was going to upload to Facebook, and I just-- I don't use Facebook. Fuck Facebook, dude. Fuck this. I don't know where else to put it. I mean, I put it on Instagram. Here's what I'm learning. Instagram, Twitter for people who use Twitter, and then, dude, have you-- I don't know how you upload a video to Twitter, though. Sure, you can't. They're not like a long one, but you do a clip to your YouTube, or tell people to go to YouTube. Oh, yeah, I have been. I've been putting it out on Twitter to-- I linked it at least once or twice. I need to do it more. Yeah, yeah, do it more than you think you should, because then I'll see it.
Because I literally-- I only file like 130 people, but I actually read everything, but only in spurts. So I probably-- I'll miss it the first few times easily. Do it three times as much as you think you should. And just don't worry about it. No one will be like, you're posting too much, dude. What a dick. He thinks he's so cool. It'll just be like more people actually see it, because they'll be like, oh, now I can watch this thing. Because what else people are going to do? Keep posting that shit. I didn't know it was on YouTube. I didn't know that. Yeah, yeah, I'll do that. I'll post it more. It's also on Instagram.
You can just watch it there if you want to watch it on your phone. But it's like a nine and a half minutes. Oh, thank you. But it's like-- because I just couldn't get over the idea that numbers are-- What's it called again? Numera Centia. Numera Centia, cool. Which is just like a scientific-y sounding name I came up with for the sentience of numbers. I love it. Oh, shit. So it's a documentary about what happens with the scientists who discover it, about what happens when we realize that numbers are conscious beings. Dude, you're so cool. [LAUGHTER] Well, it's like the first thing I made during this lockdown, this isolation event that we're in.
But what were we talking about, trees and everything? I just love that idea that these things are alive. And once we get over, I think what might happen as a result of this. And the more of a resonance, the idea of a group of creatures, animals of the same type, all learning a lesson together. Once we reach that tipping point, then everybody in the whole entire species will have this knowledge. And it'll be just transmitted and regardless of their location. And I just love that idea. Because we're born-- I mean, much like creatures, we've all seen the documentary where the lizards crack out of the eggs and run immediately to the beach or to the ocean.
They know it. It's like this embedded knowledge that we have. Turtles. Oh, the turtles, yeah. So it's like we have the same stuff. We also have embedded knowledge. And we're also learning about intergenerational trauma, like trauma that's passed down from the Holocaust to the descendants of the Jewish people who-- [INTERPOSING VOICES] Yeah, and so we have these hard drives that come pre-programmed with files on them. Even that we've never gone out and actively gathered ourselves once after we were born. So I'm wondering, what will this do? Because this is becoming such a worldwide event. And it's affecting everybody in such a way that what lesson could we possibly learn together and what will be the huge big change that happens as a result?
Yeah, man. I think it's just going to be one of the coolest things humanity has ever seen. It's such a shift. I love this stuff. I don't mean to downplay and minimize the loss of life that's going to happen because of this, but as a catalyst for change. Dude, you just said you created and put out this thing. This is the first thing you did during this pandemic. You immediately were motivated to make some cool-ass shit. I mean, that's a huge signal that gets amplified amongst a lot of people, and I think people who are in the fear of what's going on right now, like, I get it. I feel it at times.
That's why I watched the Fox News shit. It's not just to be a reckless asshole, but to tune into those frequencies and just be like, I get it. But man, so much good stuff is about to flood in to this world. And the virus, this thing isn't the end of the world. I watched 12 monkeys. It's not 12 monkeys, right? And in 12 monkeys, they actually stopped the virus. That's what's implied at the end of that movie. Not to ruin it. Just ruin it. The movie's 20 years old, so spoilers be damned. Yeah, fuck you guys. If you haven't watched 12-- Someone's like a 20-year-old. They're like, back when Brad Pitt was fuckable.
Remember those days? Like, anyone's ever said that. Oh, you mean back when Brad Pitt was actually fuckable? No, he's-- No. I'll be a 90-year-old. I think you do, yeah, Brad Pitt's cool. That movie is really good, by the way. I loved it. I rewatched it, actually, about a month ago. Oh, good time. Just randomly watched it again. So you created this whole situation? Yes, I imagined the-- Thanks, dude. Well, because I was going to ask you earlier, you know, because I was like, is it possible that you-- by you-- and I'm not trying to put too much importance on your shoulders here, but by you simply starting to watch Fox News, did you make them all believe that the virus was real?
Like, that's-- [LAUGHTER] I was like, wait, did they all change their mind once Noah started watching? That would be so weird. Nope, I hope not. But you know, that's when, like, we've gone too far. Like, you and I are having a conversation in the future, like-- and so then I started watching Fox News, and you'll never guess what happened. That's right, they all changed. And is it a coincidence that I changed them? No, I can do that. So send me your donations. Maybe I just tuned in at the time where it was more resonant with where I was, and that doesn't say anything about the actual objective of what they're putting out.
But I don't know, man, I'm starting to learn there's not a lot of dissonant notes. It's just like, it's perspective of how we hear it. It's like, I don't know, it sounds-- It really is. I mean, like, I talked to my mom the other day. My mom lives in southern Ohio. I mean, she's in Florida, because there's snowbirds. So we'll be down there for a while. But they're retired. And she said something that I wasn't aware of. And I don't know, you know, I'm not going to go fact check, like everything my mom says to me. Like, I'm not living that kind of life, you know? Because it's just not interested in being that person.
But she's totally-- But she's like, you know, the interesting thing, too, is when we were talking about perspective, in like, how things are framed. And she goes, when Trump-- like, I don't know when it was. I don't want the exact date when he shut down visitors from China coming in. And-- which was before all this. It was like, weeks before any of this stuff has been happening. But it's like, when we knew that, you know, COVID was out there, she's like, he shut down the China travel coming into the United States, and everyone called him a racist. And she goes, it's interesting now that you can look back on that and say, or was he trying to get out ahead of this?
Right. But at the time, he was called a racist by so many people. So it's like, it's perspective on how you're filtering and like, yeah, it's like, like you said, there's no distant notes, but like, how are you? What are you bringing to it that really shapes the nature of what you think it is that you're hearing or processing? Because, you know, people will look, people who support him will look back and be like, what do you mean? He tried to, you know, blah, blah, blah, blah. And it's like, OK, are we going to sit here and argue this shit? Or are we going to focus on what really matters here? And that's like, feeling kind of-- I've never felt more connected to everyone on the entire planet than I do right now.
It's overwhelming in a good way to where I was walking around the grocery store and I almost started fucking crying because I was just so in love with everybody. Isn't it the best when you catch that fucking it out? Best. And I just kind of wrote it, you know what I mean? And to me, it was like, this is, you know, an irony is probably one of my favorite things in the world, just because of comedy and everything else. But like, the fact that, you know, being forced into isolation truly makes everyone realize how connected they are to each other is amazing. It's truly amazing because we're realizing-- those of us who are into the woo and all this other shit, we always, you know, loved and leaned into the idea of our spiritual and our, you know, our conscious connection.
And something like this shows how physically, like literally, physically connected every single one of us are. Yeah, for sure. It's pretty awesome. It is. It's like a tethering web in this dimension that like binds us together. And it's important to enjoy it, too. And that's the beautiful thing about this is like in three months or less when it's not as crazy and we're kind of looking at this, like it's a flu type thing and we kind of have it under control and it's not all happening at once, which is definitely going to happen. Like, people will be so much more appreciative for just like the little shit in their lives.
And also people will have shifted from versions of themselves to completely new versions because of what this is coursing the people that deal with. Like, this is-- it's hard to get the perspective when you're going through it and in it. But if you can sense where you end up, get an idea of what's happening right now. Oh, my God. And you can really start to enjoy it. Yeah. That's what I wanted to say earlier. Yeah. Because what you-- because what you're talking about here, like, you know, I mean, needless to say that, you know, some of this stuff is going to be a little like much for people basically, when we get into the political stuff, right, when we've been-- Yeah, of course.
The things we've been discussing, and that's fine. But I think there's a big difference between someone having a present foresight and being an asshole. Yep. There's a total difference. But here's the problem. When someone has present foresight, which I think is something that everyone is capable of having, but not everyone commits their life onto a path of-- Totally. Trying to enlighten themselves or become-- Oh, recognizing that, everyone's doing that. Everyone's doing that. It's just the recognition and awareness that you're doing that, for sure. So to those people, it could and very likely does come off as you're being an asshole.
You're not thinking about blah, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. When, in fact, it is the ability to have foresight, but in the present that makes it-- I think that's what, like, if I had to guess-- because, you know, I'm not fucking Buddha, you know what I mean? Well, you are. Yeah, I mean, but you know what I mean. If I had to guess what true, just reaching a bliss state, and detachment, it is having that foresight in that almost, like, oh, I can see the force of the trees, blah, blah, blah. But, like, you can always see the forest and the trees simultaneously when you can see the big picture and the smallest detail and understand their relationship to one another, like, in the moment, all the time.
That's, like, the achievement. That's when you unwlock that, you know, the real fucking house. How fun is reality then, number one, and what can you do when you realize that and are still in this dimension of time? That's why I'm getting so jacked up over here. Dude, it's the best. It's literally the best. And then, you know, when everyone starts talking about meditation, it doesn't become this thing you do with your eyes closed when you go to sleep, unless you're sleeping. That's totally. That's fun meditation. It's when you're wide awake. This whole world is open-eyed meditation. When you fucking live from that, what you just described right there, what you just described is just, like, really understanding the rules of how everything works here, and it's pretty fun.
And it is not a detached, not caring, not understanding the suffering of the world and what that means. It's just really, like, understanding that, like, oh, shit, I understand what this game is. I understand the perspective that we can hold at the same time. And, like, see, truly not love your enemies as, like, a nice, goody thing to do. But it's, like, oh, my God, this makes it incredible. And we can actually improve this. And I'm telling you, dude, like, we incarnated as human beings. Anyone listening to this at this point knows this at, like, the best time. Like, literally, this is, like, the best time.
It's, like, hey, watch everything get super fucking amazing. Plant the seeds figuratively, metaphorically, and literally for the future. Like, watch what happens. People, people, I don't want to say on overly utopian, because I'm very, you know, cautious against gassing people up. But I'm telling you, like, people will see the effects of what this isolated, unprecedented period in human history does and the ramifications of it, you know, years down the line. But when you have that present foresight, whatever you want to call it, that awareness in the present moment, dude, it's super fun. And it's not even like, I thought it would be lame at first.
I'd be like, oh, I'm so spiritual, be lame. No, it's just like, you're super fun and cool and happy and awesome, and not 'cause you're crazy, but because things are actually fun and cool. 'Cause you can actually have them be that way, even during a pandemic, and people are really calibrating to that reality. Like, I know a lot of people who have written in to me hit me up on Instagram and they're like, hey, like, is it okay to feel like amazing during this? 'Cause I know it's sad and bad for a lot of people, but I feel great. I'm like, that's totally fine. Like, don't be reckless in an ass and go lick railings and, like, spit on people.
But like, yeah, you're allowed to have a good time and make great art and do awesome things and be with cool people. Like, yeah, I don't know, man, it's the best. I'm really happy and grateful.
I think people will look back at this period of time in history, specifically like our lifetime, like eras. And, you know, maybe it comes off as a little to, like, arrogant, but I mean, can you imagine, like, like the way I see it is that people in the future will look back and like, can you, oh, could you imagine being alive during that period where human beings fucking woke up and, like, to the infinite fucking beauty of what they were, can you imagine, like, being, you know, like, I mean, it's been a long, you know, it's been a long con, thinking we were just these fucking animals with, you know.
So, I mean, so it's been a long time happening. But, like, being at a moment right now where it's like, where it's crystallizing in such a way, and I don't think it's any accident that the paranormal conspiracy, new age, spiritual communities, have all, like, merged, almost like this, like, they were on these three separate roads that they thought they were, like, alone driving their cars on. And so, after a while, they're like, you know what, we don't even need headlights on, you know, it's just us on this road. And then all of a sudden, there's the intersection of woo, and all three cars in the last handful of years just smashed into each other.
And everybody stumbles, you know, so you have a yoga and the structures stumble out of their car, like rubbing their eyes, and then there's like, you know, a guy who's a conspiracy theorist wearing a JFK shirt who stumbles out of another car. And then there's a guy who gets out of a car with like, you know, he's got his night camera, night vision camera, 'cause he's looking for ghosts or, you know, big, with his big foot key chain. They're like, what's going on? Where are, where are, who are you? Oh, we're all the same place, you know. (laughing) And so, like, that's, I feel like that's what's happened and I honestly believe, here's some of the big changes, I think that'd be a fun day.
I wanna like hear from you about what you think, like some of the actual, like the tangible things that we can realize, that we see in the new world. I think one of the big ones is going to, well, there's a couple big ones, and they're related to people's work that I feel like are on the horizon because of everything that's happened right now. And once we're out of it, you'll see this happen. You'll probably see it unfold. It's my hope anyway. That a lot of people are gonna wake up to like, I need to be doing what I want with my life. No more this bullshit job, right? And the second thing that I think is going to make that possible that's gonna be like, in accord with that is many companies are going to realize we don't need offices.
We don't need these big buildings for offices 'cause everybody is being forced to work from home. Of course, of course. And so, companies are gonna realize, holy shit, we don't need to spend all this money on running all this office space this whole time 'cause we are just as effective and we cut costs by having people stay home. So I think what you're gonna have is a major transition away from office space for a lot of big business, medium business, even small business and accord with people having more time to themselves because of that and also because of what they're experiencing right now and really understanding.
Like, I need to stop fucking my life away and I'm gonna start doing what's really good.
That's what this shift is. And people are either gonna go there willingly and accept that they've laid out a very nice path for themselves or they're gonna go there kicking and screaming and being forced to kind of do that. Jessa had the best description of it, which was the washing machine. Which was like, people will get thrown into this washing machine if they didn't wanna do the work and they're gonna get rolled around it and then like plop down into what she calls 5D. And that's totally what's happening right now to so many people. Like, it's just part of the process, but if you can ride the waves and kind of direct, like what you're describing is like what people really need to deal with inside of themselves.
And we're at a point in like society right now where like shit is basically shutting down for the vast majority of people. Like they're being asked to not go to their jobs, not interact with other people. Like this is unprecedented just to even be able to ask this. Like we see a play out differently all over the world in China that, you know, we see that they're using their social monitoring stuff to like kind of kind of force people to do this. Who knows if that's really accurate what we're getting through here. But it seems like it to places where they didn't really do anything and it kind of broke down to South Korea who had kind of like an efficient, you know, manageable thing to all these different spectrum of things.
But like the truth is like everyone is going to have their own reaction to this individually and that ultimately determines the direction of their lives. Like and what better example of that than being isolated like as a hermit, as a person who needs to individually figure out what they want to like do with their lives. Like what makes them feel good? You can't use the excuse that like, oh I have to go to this job now that's just what I'm supposed to do. Like everyone is being asked to reevaluate that shit. And the fact that it's happening collectively is just like mind-blowingly amusing to me.
Like it's like I'm like, yep, definitely moved into the best timeline. Like and I also love that for a lot of us this coincided with kind of waking up or just like recognizing we have the ability to shift our reality with our minds or imagination, whatever you want to call it. Like it really dovetailed nicely into such a global connective thing. Like it's just the coolest shit ever to me. So yeah, man, it's gonna play out in like ways we can't even imagine, but definitely with the office space shit. It's totally ridiculous. Why do we need this stuff to come muting and all that? It's nonsense. So crazy. - Yeah, for sure.
I got a message from an old friend of mine today saying, and it was so random. Basically it was along the lines of, I now understand why teachers drink so much. I have such a newfound respect for you. And keep in mind, I only taught for like three-fourths of one year, as it was the extent of my school teachers. I was a substitute teachers. - What did you teach?
I taught math and science at a public monastery school and they know it, downtown Dayton. And it was fourth, fifth, and sixth grade. And so I got brought in as a substitute teacher, got hired on full time in the second quarter of the school year 'cause two different teachers had quit that classroom previously. - Wow.
Luckily, I had no teaching experience whatsoever or I probably would have quit too 'cause I would have realized how crazy it was. But so my ignorance was bliss in that situation, I guess. But so like he sent me a message, I was a teacher in 2001, 2002, or 2002, I think is when I...
Wow. - 2002, early 2003. So like that's the, so like 17 years later, I get a message from someone saying like, I now understand like what it's like to be a teacher because their kids have been home, obviously. And so I think you're gonna have a newfound respect for the people who are doing the work-
Yeah.
That truly, truly matters in life and that's the education of our children. Those who provide the food that keeps us alive, truck drivers, people who work at your local grocery store, they're fucking, they're out there, they're doing it. And when I was at the grocery store, I just kept saying thank you to people. Thank you for being here at work.
And you start to connect with them on a human level, like where you just, they were just, for me, like, I don't know, I realized, and I think when I went to college in Boston that like, I think it was actually when I started doing acid when I was like 15th, that it's always important to treat people in one-to-one interactions like, like people, like human beings. So, but something like this, you connect on such a deeper level with people, even like simple interactions that would like be nothing in public now are like hyper-meaningful and important. And like, because like people are connecting on a much deeper level because they recognize, even if not consciously, but subconsciously, the importance of what's going on, it's like the weather, if the weather like just turned crazy every single second, like of every day, people are like, what is this?
And it's a suspended disbelief period. I love it. I don't know, man. It's just the coolest fucking thing to me.
I mean, it's unlike anything we've experienced, for sure.
I love it so much.
And it's, you know, and it's actually, and it's just ramping up to what it is going to be. And I mean, I was just at the pharmacy the other day, picking up my flow names.
That good shit.
My sniff sniff. And there was no line, this was just two days ago. There was no line. And I walk up, you know, I do the thing. My birthday and my name and all that stuff, and the young woman working was, you know, ringing me up. And I could, you know, she's in it, you know what I mean? She's like, oh, yeah, she's fucking in it. So I go, so I was like, this is an opportunity, maybe. And, you know, and I was just like, so how are you holding up? And she just looked up at me. And then she just like, deeply exhaled. You know, it's kind of crazy, you know? But it was like, we had a moment, you know what I mean?
We had a moment where we were people 'cause we were being in the moment of our lives.
Yeah, you connected it in a real way.
And it gave her like a second to like take, literally take a breath, you know what I mean?
Right.
And it also gave me a moment to show her that I'm grateful that she's there so I can get my fucking nose spray. I can go without my goddamn nose spray right now. You know what I mean?
No, I look at every situation right now is like so karmically laid in, like in terms of energy exchanges that are like very meaningful. Like even, like I'm saying, like those simple interactions with people who like you're buying something from like, this is some like, we're in the weirdest of times. If you're meeting those people then, like that's some deep shit. Even if it seems like a simple grocery exchange. That's, it's, there's some real service and gift being provided, you know, there.
Yeah, the opportunity, it's fucking overwhelming, dude. The opportunity that we all have to show how much we love one another is unfucking precedented. I mean, it's reminiscent to some degree on a smaller scale because this is worldwide of 9/11. And when 9/11 happened in the United States, that's probably the first time in my memory as a person who grew up here that people were like, so my dad was saying too.
Hyper aware of each other and that we're all people and that we're all so fucking deeply connected and we are like shook by the universe to be reminded of such a thing.
Yeah.
And in this country, yeah, definitely.
Yeah, in this country. And then I think this, you know, 'cause it's happening in most of the world. There's certain places where it's still not like this. I think, you know, in the world, but I think this is like such a gift for all of us to understand how much we love and need each other. And we're given an opportunity to finally truly express it in the simplest of ways. And it's fucking so cool. I mean, you're right. So I'm on board with that aspect of this whole thing. And it's like, you know, when we come out on the other side of it all, which I'm not even worried about right now because that's like taking focus away from, yeah, and it's taking focus away from the moment, you know?
What are you doing right now? Yeah, that's all I'm saying. Like the shit's gonna happen either way. Also like going back to the, every death is a suicide thing. Like if it's your time to go in Corona, then it's your time. It's not an excuse to go out and do like crazy shit, but like do what you really wanna do in life. Like make the thing you wanted to make, learn about the thing you wanted to learn about, you know? Within, you know, if you wanna go like up the mountain, like you were saying, go do that until they say, you know, that's not a good idea to do it. You're allowed to go hike. You're allowed to go to the mountain.
Yeah, I went to the mountain. Yeah, I buried a jar out there the other day.
Totally fine, man. That's amazing. And you're having a very unique, also for people who are going out in these times and being like responsible about it, it's amazing. It's like the world was just yours. No one else is in these amazing landscapes and places, and it's just you and like whoever you're with. It's fucking crazy. It's like a magical, magical time to be alive. And, you know, I think everyone should be savoring it rather than fearing it. And I'm not saying that like, this is an excuse to lead your life as normal. Appreciate the kind of weirdness of what's going on. And it's, I don't know, it's for most people, this is really important for everyone to hear.
For most people, regardless of precautions that are taken, you're going to be okay. There are going to be some people who are affected by this. It's a wave of people who chose to not be on this planet after this, but it's not anything more than most viruses that happen or most other things that take people's lives regularly, every day. But if it makes people appreciate life a little bit more and the experience of having a body and senses, that's great, 'cause this shit is fucking awesome. So, it's a good thing. It's not bad. People are listening to their bodies right now more than ever.
Totally.
Is my throat telling me something right now? Wait, is my head telling me that much?
You're in control of that, too. I say this to people. Have you realized you're a paragon of health yet? Like, you're the epitome of health if you want to be. When you feel a little tickle in your throat, is your immune system amazing? You're going to fight that and you're going to take a nap and wake up and feel incredible? Or are you going to say, "Oh, this is how I get sick. This is all I'm going to get sick now," because it felt a little tickle. Just see if there's a relationship between your immune system and your mind. This is an unprecedented territory for us, and it's a good opportunity, especially if you're quarantining.
It's like, get a little tickle, what's going on there? I know people who are quarantining weeks before this, who started getting little sick things, and they hadn't had contact with people in weeks, 'cause it's just like, they got sick. There's weird shit going on. There's energy hitting this planet from a lot of different places. Notice the relationship between your body and how you feel, whether it's yours, whether you're picking up on other people's energy. There's a whole fucking subtle level of shit that's going on right now that people might not be tuning into, but I don't know, it's the best.
It's a great time to be alive.
Yeah, and I think what you're saying is, what I would argue is an example of present foresight, like we're talking about, and it's also, I would be totally remiss, and it'd almost be unforgivable if I didn't bring up the fact that this is the best time in the history of the world to get into the video game, civilization by city.
Oh, dude, can I buy it? Can I buy it from Mac?
Of course, yeah, it's on the Steam store. Civ six, dude, you have to get my buddy Tim, my buddy Tim Irie, he's a paranormal investigator in Dayton, Ohio area. He turned me on to Gathering Storm, which is a expansion pack. You have to get that because it has global warming and like volcanoes and hurricanes, and it has pandemics. Does it have pandemics?
It doesn't have a pandemic on there.
'Cause I need to enders game this. If I'm gonna do it, you know, enders game where like he saves the world, like he's playing a video game, but he's actually like doing it for real and he didn't know it 'til the end of the day.
Oh, no, yeah, yeah. Yeah, no, this is, well, I just finished an epic game, and 'cause I have it on Mac and PS4.
Wow.
And I mean, I probably put in.
Who were you?
40 hours on this thing. I just finished, I mean, I was staying up 'til six in the morning, wake up at 10.
Like what culture were you?
Oh, this last one, Germany. And I'll tell you why I was Germany before people freak out.
No, no, no, totally.
'Cause Germany Jews, 'cause they hate Jews, obviously. (laughs)
Germany lets you have an extra district in your city, which do depend, you only like to have so many districts in your city, depending on population of city, and your city has to grow, as you know.
Oh, they have to do?
The switch, amazing.
Yeah, they have, I almost bought a switch like a month ago.
I have a switch. - For travel.
Oh, yeah, so you can get it on switch. And it's Civ6, and it's un-bucking believable. I wanted to win through diplomacy or through culture, through science, but Poundmaker, the leader of the Cree, was getting ready to win a cultural victory. So I had to go to war with them. I couldn't, 'cause I was gonna lose.
The leader of the Cree?
The expansion packs have so many different world leaders you can be. There's probably like 50.
Who's the Cree?
If I'm not mistaken, it's a tribe of Native Americans.
Oh, wow.
Yeah, I'm sure with this, oh yeah, I'm gonna get it.
Yeah, and so Cree was a, so Poundmaker, the leader of the Cree, was getting ready to win a cultural victory like very soon. And so I had to start a war with him because I was gonna lose.
Well, if you're gonna start a war.
And then the Canadian started to share with me. And so one thing led to another, and I had to have a domination victory. And I'm not happy about it, but I nuked the Canadians. I dropped nukes on-- - Holy shit, on Toronto.
I dropped a nuclear bomb, and then I dropped multiple thermonuclear bombs.
Just hold on, just hold on, I wanna dissect this 'cause I know the rules of this game. What city did you bomb, Toronto?
No, I bombed, I believe it was Ottawa 'cause that was their capital.
Wow, they posted up in Ottawa, wow.
Yeah, I think Ottawa is the capital. And so-- - How many times did you have to nuke them?
Well, I just nuked the city once, but I felt they only had three, they had like three cities left, and I was just got tired of using my bombers.
So I just dropped nukes on all three of them.
Can you clean up the radioactive?
Yes, you can, but your workers will get sick and die while they're doing it. - Wow, and you made that executive decision.
Yeah, I did, 'cause then I dropped a nuke on the crack, I dropped a nuke on Crack Owl, which is the Polish cow.
How many people did you nuke, do you?
And then I nuked, yeah, and then I nuked the coupe.
You weren't Germany. - K-U-P-E, I nuked the coupe, because they were just kept talking shit to me all game.
What city did you nuke up there?
I can't remember the name of it, it was a two-name thing.
You can't even remember the name of the city you knew.
I can't remember all the skeletons, I can't remember the names of the skeletons I put in the ground, you kidding? (laughing)
I love that game.
Like that game probably took 40 hours of gameplay, I've been playing it for weeks, for two weeks.
What if that's just what 6 in the world is?
What if that's just what this world is?
Someone playing Siv.
Yeah.
Wow, I hope it's not me, because.
'Cause you're nuking those fucking people, and you don't even remember the names.
Well, I wanted to win through peace, but I'm not gonna lose.
No, I feel you, man, totally.
I wanna kinda lose the game, I mean, I--
I think you're--
And I also played on a high difficulty level, I was playing on a very high difficulty, but here's the thing, I didn't even play on the largest map, which the large maps are incredibly difficult.
It's, and the game takes so long.
Like years.
So yeah, so this is the perfect time to start a game like that, that's gonna take you literally, you know, 80 hours of playing the game.
Did you ever play, did you ever play risk when you were a kid?
I love risk, risk is my favorite game of all time.
Oh yeah, oh me too, that's a great game.
It's my number one, it's my number one.
Oh God, I love to risk.
I used to play, you know what, maybe I'll do that again. I used to play solo games of risk.
I didn't even know you could do that, how do you do that?
Well, you can't, you just, you play against yourself.
I had to play against yourself.
I had a four man game of risk going against myself. And my friends thought I was the fucking craziest person in the world.
This is like a, again.
But who better to play than someone you know their moves? (laughing)
Metaphysically speaking, this makes perfect sense.
That was early 2000, this was late 90s, early 2000.
This is when I started to take acid, so it's adding up.
You were taking acid, I was playing four man games of risk alone.
And it makes sense.
Trying to figure out my motivations of, and like you know what, the color of the pieces, like what effect I would have on my motivations, like would it affect the personality style of that leader, of that I was choosing to be?
It adds up, it adds up, that's the best way to play risk. To embody the cultural, yeah dude, I wanna play Siv now though. You definitely gave me the bug, I know exactly what it's like.
Dude, I called you dad on accident.
Dad, you gotta get on Siv, dad.
I'm on it son.
Because we could play online.
Oh, but you're gonna get it on Switch so we won't be able to play online.
Well, maybe I can get it on Steam, my Switch is in quarantine of my sisters.
Oh yeah, so if you download on Mac at the Steam store, I bought it when it was on sale.
Oh, new expansion out now.
Oh, there's a new-- - It's a new--
What, there's a new-- - They say, well, it says--
I'm gonna lose my mind. - expansion out now, yeah.
I'm gonna lose my mind. - No, no, no, no. Release eight October 20th.
Oh, okay, it must be the gathering storm expansion changes the game in such a way that I wasn't ready for. And I was already addicted and playing the, I was playing this game constantly, whenever I needed like a break, so like every couple months I would just kind of lock. I mean, I've text you about it.
Oh, hell, I'm gonna save it. - I save it as good.
Yeah, I'm like a little burned out on it now 'cause that last game took so long that I just can't even think about sitting down and starting a new map right now.
I like new games, they're fun.
But yeah, totally into it. I did buy Love Last of Us at my roommate's recommendation. That game that's like, some people say it's the best game that's ever been made. - The Last of Us, I played that. - Yeah, and so I played, I played the night I downloaded it, I played it for like two hours and I haven't touched it since. It's been like about a week and a half or two weeks.
It gets scary. I'm not a huge fan of scary games and it gets pretty scary, but it is a very good game. I beat it. It's a...
Yeah, I hear it's awesome.
It's really well made, but it's definitely, it's intense, it's super intense.
Yeah, so I mean, I'm not a huge fan of shooter games, but it's not really a shooter game.
It's a puzzle logic or first person. It's like a unique, it's good. It's a good game. - Yeah, it's pretty cool. It looks pretty cool and I was enjoying it. I know that there's like talk about the movie right now and there's an about casting the movie and like who they're gonna cast. But, and I know the... 'Cause the girl in the video game was based on, what's her name? Oh shit, well, I can't remember. But anyway, I mean, I guess it's, what time is it there? It's two in the morning where you are.
Two in the morning. We're gonna, we did this.
Yeah, we did.
We did this during a pandemic.
So what do we do? Are we just releasing this on both of our streams?
No, what we should do is let's, we'll cut it here. We're done. We did it, nail it, high five. Virtual pandemic high five.
Whoop, whoop.
Cut it in the middle.
At the speed break.
Yeah, exactly. And you pick a half, I'll pick a half and...
Upload tonight?
I mean, I'm gonna go to sleep.
Well, how about this then? How about I upload the first half tonight? 'Cause mine's supposed to come out tonight anyway or tomorrow.
Perfect.
So I'll upload my first half tonight before I go to bed. 'Cause I woke up at two in the afternoon today. So I'm gonna be up for a little bit.
Amazing.
And I just reheated about it. There's no way I'm drinking coffee and I'm not fucking...
And you have that delicious tombstone.
Oh, I've got a couple slices left. So I'll upload part one. And then tomorrow, whenever you get around to it.
Perfect.
Or whenever you just upload part two or whatever you get around to it.
Incredible, easy for me to do. We nailed it.
All right, hell yeah, dude. This was fun.
Yeah, sure.
We never once even, either one of us, never once said our names. (laughing)
I think people know who we are.
Yeah.
If they're listening. (laughing)
They're like, what is this? What the fuck? I'll do a little intro on my half. So, you know.
Yeah, I'll probably, maybe I'll do the same.
Regardless, this was fun and I mean, who knows, this is probably the first of multiple ones we'll be doing during this one.
Let's say our names now, just so we have them on. Ryan Singer, thank you for doing this.
Hey, Noah Lampart, it has been my pleasure doing this. Thank you for joining me. Thank you, us for joining us.
Yes, thank you.
We're in this together. That's one thing that's really, really clear. And this is a good example of that. Of how connected we are.
I love it. I love it, bud.
Dude, this was great. You're the best.
You're the best.
And we'll talk soon. Get some sleep, okay?
Amen.
Thank you.
Nighty night. (upbeat music) (upbeat music)
Thanks for listening to that episode. Go check it. Go check it. Go check it. Go work, go work. Where with the DJ? ♪ Let it come get her, she's dancing like a stripper ♪ ♪ Who's on TikTok? ♪ I'm gonna be posting stuff on TikTok. TikTok's the best. Just get on there to watch videos. It's super fun. I love it. Rate and review this podcast. Subscribe, Patreon. That's where all the shit's going down. People know there, we're doing readings. We're doing fun stuff. It's getting fucking weird. Come on, it's fun. You know what it is. Synchronicity, no wait. Patreon.com/synchronicity. There are links on the website, syncpodcast.com.
You wanna send me an email? You've listened this far. You've listened past the music. Noah@synchpodcast.com. All right, see you in a few days. Until then, happy imagining. Polymarket is proud to be the world's top choice to trade football. You mean soccer? Right, soccer. Polymarket is proud to be the world's top choice to trade soccer. Know the game better than the market? You can earn cash trading on tournament and game outcomes, golds, assists, saves, corners and much, much more. Download the Polymarket app and use code free50 to unlock $50 free for your first trade. Trading not available in all jurisdictions.
Check local regulations before trading. Restrictions and eligibility apply.