Broadcasts live every Wednesday at 7:00p.m. uk time on Radio Soapbox: http://radiosoapbox.com
In this episode of the Shelley Tasker Show, we dive into an impromptu discussion with guests Patrick Chenal, Al Von Curt and Mallificus Scott.
We explore various topics, starting with the common illnesses everyone seems to be experiencing post-holidays. We share personal stories of battling flu-like symptoms and discuss the mysterious 'misty fog' reported in Cornwall and beyond, pondering whether it's a natural phenomenon or something more sinister.
The conversation shifts to the controversial topic of chemtrails and weather modification. We debate the evidence and theories surrounding persistent contrails and their potential impact on climate and health. Our guests share their skepticism and insights, referencing documentaries and historical instances of germ warfare tests.
We also touch on the importance of gut health and diet, with personal anecdotes about food intolerances and the benefits of alternative medicine. The discussion highlights the significance of maintaining a healthy lifestyle and the potential pitfalls of modern diets.
As the show progresses, we reflect on the power of positive affirmations and the impact of mindset on our well-being. We encourage listeners to embrace change and self-improvement as we enter the new year.
Join us for a candid and thought-provoking conversation that spans health, conspiracy theories, and personal growth, all while maintaining a light-hearted and engaging atmosphere.
Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. Welcome to the Shelley Tasker Show here coming live out of radio soapbox.com. It's good to have your company. I'm also streaming live on Rumble. So if you'd like to leave any comments or join in some chat, please do so. Today's date is Sunday, 5th January 2025. I know it's supposed to be women's hour, but it all went a bit wrong. So, some reprobates I know said, let's all jump on and just have a chat. So good evening, mister Patrick, mister Al, and mister Malefika Scott.
[00:01:34] Unknown:
Good evening. This is that's the second time already this year that I've earned the accolade reprobate. Thank you, Shelley. I'm I'm off to a good evening.
[00:01:42] Unknown:
You're right, Al. Hello. How are you? Good evening, Patrick. Hey. Good evening there. How are you doing?
[00:01:52] Unknown:
Oh, not too bad. No? Yeah. It's nice. It's beautiful, sunny, cold, cold weather, but, it's good
[00:02:00] Unknown:
good day here. Good. I don't think we'd ever hear you say anyway, oh, wow. I'm not very good, actually, Shelley.
[00:02:07] Unknown:
Yeah. Well, you should've you should've talked to me about a month ago. I was in bed for a week with some sort of, illness. It was terrible. It was like, I I I think it was walking pneumonia I had. Walking pneumonia. Yeah. And it lasted for, like, 3 weeks. I mean, I got over after 3 weeks. It was terrible. I had an bastard in the past. And then the next week was just hacking lungs, and the 3rd week was just recovery from from both of those. So Yeah. Didn't get much work accomplished for at least 2 weeks. Went back to work the 3rd week, but probably shoulda stayed at home.
[00:02:46] Unknown:
It's a bit like that, isn't it? I think everybody Jo's really poorly, hence women's hour, not being women's hour tonight. She's really poorly, and we've all had it. I'm now on the tail end of it, but, like, Christmas, I just couldn't wait for Christmas to be over. Just been exhausted like you for about 3 weeks. It would just come. You would have a day when you feel like you've got a bit of energy and then gone again. You know, take me a day to recover. But, hey ho, I hope the worst is over.
[00:03:14] Unknown:
That's why I mentioned it because it seems like everybody's been getting ill, the past 2 weeks.
[00:03:20] Unknown:
You know, Paul Paul English and a few other people have heard. I've been ill as well. Yeah. I'll put my hand up and say, yes, I've been ill. Mister, I I work outdoors, and I never get ill. Yes. I got ill quite early on Christmas. So yeah. Yeah. And what about you, Al? Have you been poorly?
[00:03:36] Unknown:
Up. I was sort of fortunate enough to have it before Christmas, I think, but, it yeah. I kinda just felt like I stemmed it off with all my elixirs and stuff. Oh, yeah. You take with your tinctures and stuff, don't you? Yeah. I didn't I I wasn't as bad as everyone else. So a good friend of mine was, like, laid up in bed for a good sort of, like, 10 days. So, but everyone I know. Yeah. A lot of people. All around the time, this this mystery fog,
[00:04:03] Unknown:
Yes. That's it. Is it mystery fog? Is it what they're spraying, or are we, like, detoxing?
[00:04:09] Unknown:
What do you think?
[00:04:10] Unknown:
What's misty fog? I don't know. What is misty fog? Well, everybody in Cornwall was been going on about this misty fog. I mean, it's been gray for days. And I was down the beach the other day, and it was beautiful blue skies. And I could see, some crisscrosses in the sky by the lovely sprayers. And I thought, you know, 10 minutes, and it wasn't. So it took 10 minutes. It was all gray. We can't deny that they're spraying us. And, you know, conspiracy theorists or not, people are wondering if if we can't have the jab, those that didn't have the jab, are they spraying it in the air? So we're all getting it anyway. Farfetched, but anything's possible.
[00:04:46] Unknown:
I'm I'm a skeptic. I'm a skeptic, I have to say. I I'll sit on the skeptic's chair on that one for this evening for the for the for the proceedings.
[00:05:00] Unknown:
That's Al doing one of his funny noises again, I presume. No. I think it's Patrick.
[00:05:07] Unknown:
Patrick, you may need to mute, old boy. Oh, yeah. There we go. Sorry, Al. Carry on.
[00:05:16] Unknown:
I was just saying I'm I'm also a bit of a skeptic. I've done a lot of looking into it, but, I think, like I was saying earlier, Maleficast, extraordinary claims, require is it extraordinary evidence? Yeah. And a lot of it is anecdotal, isn't it?
[00:05:32] Unknown:
What do you think it is then? Do you think it's just the weather? Just the weather?
[00:05:38] Unknown:
Mist.
[00:05:39] Unknown:
Well, I definitely think I definitely think that, you know, something's going on. It's it's been reported all over the world, isn't it? And there's plenty of you just only have to go on YouTube and all the other usual sites, and there's quite a lot of information, but it's mainly just people talking about it and showing clips of a weird particulate mist, which is strange. But where's where's you know, out of all the billions of people in the world and millions of people like ourselves, like, where's surely, some some people could do some tests. And,
[00:06:16] Unknown:
I suppose You you you'll be able to do your own myself, but you'd be able to do your own test. It will take a simple pH kit. Yeah. And you can test the pH levels of the of the rainwater. It's not that hard, surely.
[00:06:29] Unknown:
Well, could you do that for us, Millipigas?
[00:06:31] Unknown:
I will. I will. I'll tell you what. Got rid of the fish tank, but I think we've still got the pH testing kit, the water testing kit. So yeah. Good. I'll let you know. I'll let you know. I don't think it's ever been this dark gray. Is it climate change? It's just switched over to my computer. How am I coming through? Oh. Oh, you sound an awful lot better. You sounded like a jackhammer before, mate.
[00:06:51] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. Yeah. Okay. Good.
[00:06:58] Unknown:
Well, he's he's out. I'll have to turn you guys up because it's that sounds like there's an awful lot of acid rain coming down out there.
[00:07:04] Unknown:
Oh, it's crazy, isn't it? Acid rain,
[00:07:08] Unknown:
It's that bad.
[00:07:10] Unknown:
Yeah. You you don't know how lucky you are, Patrick. You really don't. Well, I'm Yeah. We're for a bit of sunshine.
[00:07:16] Unknown:
It's about negative 11 c here right now, but it's it's a sunny, clear day. I think I saw one little streak in the sky from an airplane, and that's about it.
[00:07:27] Unknown:
Do you do you get much spray in where you are in America?
[00:07:32] Unknown:
Yeah. We get it. We get it. We get it because we're kind of near Minneapolis Saint Paul Airport, which is a big hub. And plus we're right in the middle of flyover country between the two coasts. We're kind of right in the middle of everything, so we get tons of traffic going back and forth.
[00:07:50] Unknown:
Can I So yeah? Can I say one one thing? I'm I've been looking up the the chemtrails thing. I don't call them chemtrails anymore. If anyone talks to me or brings up the weather, I sort of just say, well, are you surprised? I mean, look at the the amount of persistent contrails in the sky. And if you say persistent contrails to people, people cannot dispute that. And over the years, they've definitely increased as a, as has and isn't that bad enough? Because a a persistent contrail is modify it's a it's an artificial cloud. So it it it does artificially modify the weather. So it is weather modification.
If you go on YouTube, there's a really good documentary. I managed to find it again recently called Sky Watcher, the incredible story, the incredible true story of artificial clouds and weather modification. And if you type that in, it sort of covers the whole, the the scope of it, really, and gives you a bit of the science and background.
[00:08:54] Unknown:
So Actually, what's going on because there's a lot chair. Me being mister skeptic's chair, does can we synopsize slightly and just say, is it does the video point towards it being, so sort of pollutive contaminants that are already in the air, or does it say that these airplanes are actually carrying tanks of stuff that they're spraying everywhere?
[00:09:18] Unknown:
It's it's more to do with the, cloud seeding. So they'll put a plane up there. So a lot of the lot of the time I was hearing from people that, oh, you know, you see these trails turn on and off. Those those planes are merely flying through different pockets of, air pressure different air pressures if you'd like, different humidities maybe. They'll say, oh, there's one one plane flying next to the other plane. Those planes can be as much of a as a a 1000 feet apart. So one plane is not gonna do the same act as the as the one that you'll see next to it. To us, it looks like they're right next to each other, but they're they're quite far apart. And the sky is in in an air sense is, is quite fluid. So there's lots going on up there. But, it's more to do with the fact that they'll put a plane up there supposedly. And this is, I mean, this is true. They do this all over the world, weather modification, climates, cloud seeding. It's it's provable. So, yes, the the the, climate, is being the atmosphere is being modified. So, yes, it is true, but whether it's being done on a worldwide scale is another thing, isn't it? How can we
[00:10:30] Unknown:
administering, like, illnesses through this, and this is a see, this is a big stickling point for me. Is it before? It's a big sticking point for me. These. Oh, sorry. Go on. It's a big sticking point for me because, there's no if you're dumping stuff at that level, it ain't just gonna fall straight to earth. You've got no way of controlling where that's going to end up. It's got thousands of feet and different air pressures. And you can here's a simple example. From a, you know, from an air pressure point of view. From when you look down when you're when you're on ground level and you look up and there's 2 different layers of cloud, and one set of clouds is moving in one direction, and the other set of clouds is moving in the other direction because you have cross winds and all sorts. There's all sorts of different ebbs and flows and eddies in the wind currents that are occurring between, you know, 32,000 feet up or whatever it is there. You know, roughly 22 anywhere between 22 and 32,000 feet, I believe.
There's no way of controlling dropping particulates that are so, susceptible
[00:11:42] Unknown:
to It's meant to be
[00:11:45] Unknown:
Unless they're sowing it into the clouds, more in the clouds rain it on us. Is that is that what they're saying?
[00:11:53] Unknown:
I think any of that's possible. Plain up there. They'll disperse things, like, supposedly disperse things like well, no. They are. They they they they do this on a local level. Whether they're doing it worldwide is another question in it, but I've just I've just, gone on to just done a really quick search, germ warfare test, parliament dotuk, germ warfare test Westcountry. So, this this was written in 12th November 19 7 by mister Patrick Nicholls Tainbridge. During the 19 sixties 19 seventies, germ warfare test carried out off the West Country coast by the Defence Evaluation and Research Agency. During that period and indeed as late as 1977, testing took place from Lyme Bay to Devonport involving a cocktail of bacteria including e coli 162, b glob I can't say that.
So other bacteria being pumped into the atmosphere, those germs were apparently used for their usefulness, in simulating a biological attack. So these experiments have been done by the MOD. They are capable of doing it.
[00:12:52] Unknown:
Yeah. But, I mean But they are capable of doing it, but how much effect did that have on the general populace? We didn't have swathes of people in 1977 dying of ecommerce.
[00:13:04] Unknown:
That was on a local level again. It was just done around the coast of the UK. So whether they've done it in elsewhere, who knows? I haven't delved that deep into it. But, again,
[00:13:16] Unknown:
32,000 feet 32,000 feet. I'm not being funny. That's probably higher than Cornwall is wide.
[00:13:22] Unknown:
That's just a really, like, it's a really wide drop zone. Do you see what I'm saying? A really wide dispersal area. Yeah. Really, really wide. Yeah. I'm not I'm not so sure. I've I've I've sort of dipped out of it a lot a while back and just said, look. Isn't it bad enough that our skies are being changed by artificial clouds, which are persistent contrails fact? So that's bad enough. It's like taking a Picasso painting with a Tippex pen and just drawing minds across it. To me, our skies are being modified. And if someone talks about climate change, well, there you go. It's artificial clouds. Yeah. They are artificial
[00:14:01] Unknown:
clouds. In fact And, you know, with all the harp stuff that was going on a few months ago and people really thought that they were seeing the Aurora lights. That did make me laugh.
[00:14:14] Unknown:
I just don't think out there to get suspicious about. Yeah. Definitely. There's plenty out there to sidetrack us too also. So Yeah. And and, you know, these people do want us to, you know, these these powers that should not be, as Andy Hitchcock would call them, do want us to believe that they're omnipotent, and it's all hopeless. So the the further they can reach into our psyche with information and misinformation, the better. Do you get what I mean? Yeah. Yeah. I'm just reading waters. Just reading,
[00:14:45] Unknown:
Lauren's comments as any illness cannot be caught. It doesn't work like that. So called germs do not exist. Consequently, germ warfare also does not exist. Spot on, maleficulous. Well, thank you, Lauren. I I So so were you saying that Warren, like, when I say my corner. Yeah. Have we caught this, or is it lots of people saying we are detoxing? But it's just that time of the year because the weather's changing and stuff like that. I don't know. I've never known so many people. Well, then we all get bugs and stuff like that, don't we? Yeah. We all get hit with this flu. But then I'm not sure about the whole germ theory thing neither. You know? People say, well, you can't catch this. You can't but I've been in rooms you know, I had a group full of friends around a year or so ago. And within 3 days, 3 of them went round 3 of them went down with the flu.
Is is that just coincidence?
[00:15:37] Unknown:
I'm not so sure myself. Yeah. Yeah. I I just think, we're all susceptible to viruses and bacteria. These these all these things all live in our in our gut, and, you keep yourself healthy. If you don't keep yourself healthy, particularly over over the winter when we're we're subject to low levels of vitamin d and, and the rest of it and turning on the the heating that, dries out all the the mucosal layer in in in you inside you and and makes your cells susceptible to infections and things. So,
[00:16:15] Unknown:
yeah. There is that. And also, not let's not get it out. Yeah. I I totally agree with what you're saying. The the whole turning on the heating thing in the winter is a because you come in, you think, oh, and you leave it on until you're roasting because it's been a really cold day outside. But what you don't realize you're doing is dehydrating yourself. And as Al said, drying out all the mucosal layer at the back of your nose and your throat, which is there to protect you. You know, because you go from one extreme to the other. That's that's one thing. But also not forgetting, do you remember during the COVID era how time layers upon time?
But we all found out that if you, you know, using something like PCR, we all found out that if you if you swab someone and tested them for meningitis, a lot of people in the UK will be carrying meningitis. It doesn't mean they're suffering meningitis.
[00:17:05] Unknown:
Mhmm. Yeah. There was a there was a large study that was done with the PCR test quite a few years ago where they actually tested people for HIV, and they found that quite a lot of the people actually had these viruses in their in their body. But, Kerry Mullis said himself, didn't he, about the the PCR tests that
[00:17:26] Unknown:
it's about Vauci.
[00:17:28] Unknown:
They shouldn't they shouldn't be using it because it it's so accurate. It's so good that it will pick up on anything, including the flu. So it it was an inadequate test. Yes. It's the gold standard as far as they're concerned, but it will pick up on
[00:17:41] Unknown:
any any viruses that we have in our body. Ramped up that many cycles, is it? I think it was, like, ramped up about 35 times. So we can't Yeah. Any old, illnesses and stuff that you've had. Oh, the good old days.
[00:17:55] Unknown:
They conveniently put it back down to lower cycles once they'd got their, the figures up.
[00:18:04] Unknown:
An an another another prime example oh, sorry, Patrick.
[00:18:08] Unknown:
Oh, I just before we go too far about the fog, I was listening to No Agenda. Are are you familiar with it with Adam Curry and John Dvorak? It's a show that comes out every Thursday Sunday. It's like 3 hour long podcast. Yep. Yep. And they were talking about the fog, and they did a they they did a clip about the fog that I'd like to play. It's about a minute and 41 seconds.
[00:18:32] Unknown:
Do it.
[00:18:33] Unknown:
Okay. I'll do it. Hold on. You tell tell me if you can hear it. Can you can you hear this? I'm gonna play this first just to make sure you can hear it. Ready? Yep. Yep. Yep. It's alright. I'm
[00:18:46] Unknown:
sure
[00:18:47] Unknown:
they Okay. Okay. So here here here's the next here's the clip.
[00:18:54] Unknown:
For the last 7 days the world has been shrouded in a veil of mystery. An unrelenting fog that stretches from the poop covered streets of Portland, Oregon to the quietest corners of the countryside. This is no ordinary weather phenomenon. It's a dense, suffocating mist with an unsettling smell of chemicals lingering in the air. Oh, this is gonna be interesting.
[00:19:19] Unknown:
Have you noticed this strange thick fog that is blanketing cities across the globe? As a matter of fact, drop in the comments if you've experienced this. People are getting sick. They're coughing, struggling to breathe, and posting videos about it all over the Internet. And here's the kicker, they're even reporting
[00:19:40] Unknown:
the scent of chemicals. We have some strange things happening, my friends. This is Tony.
[00:19:47] Unknown:
Fog, this very bizarre fog, very thick fog happening in places that it never happens, and things being seen in the fog. This is
[00:19:58] Unknown:
an emergency livestream because the Internet, it's flooded right now with footage that I'm about to show you, many of, that footage with a weird fog issue.
[00:20:17] Unknown:
Okay. So you guys have sent in some really wild stuff this time. Seriously wild. Videos, social media posts. I even saw a couple of local news clips Right. All about this strange fog Uh-huh. That seems to be blanketing everything. Yeah. It's popping up everywhere.
[00:20:37] Unknown:
Yes. What do you think about that?
[00:20:41] Unknown:
Well, they've got to scare people with it, am I? I think. Doesn't prove anything, does it? No. It doesn't. But I like it. Conjecture. It's conjecture and speculation. It's a Too much conjecture in my opinion. I saw a great meme on Facebook, and it said me going into 20 24, and it was just, like, all happily dancing. And then me going into 2025, just fog.
[00:21:06] Unknown:
Blackbird 9 actually sent me a a a meme of, a a bunch of people crowded around the corner of a of a sort of hallway with and one of them holding a broom, pushing down the handle of a door that was just labeled 2025, and they were all sort of peering around the corner, you know. That was a great one. Now we're going back to things that you carry with you. Another great example I was gonna say is is, like, for instance, like the, you'd use a technical term now, the stethylococcal the stethylococcal bacteria, which is known to apparently cause the common cold and things like that. It's one of the first things you learn about in food hygiene and stuff like that.
It's carried by about 60% of the population with no effect. None. No effect. And you carry it in your in your ears and and nose cavities, and and your mouth and stuff. It's so we are carrying stuff around with us all the time anyway. I think, also, you gotta remember this time of year, everyone, especially in the UK, anywhere anyone that's living anywhere, cold. You've you've run yourself down. You've worked like an idiot until Christmas comes. And then suddenly, you put on the brakes and you relax, and your body goes,
[00:22:26] Unknown:
I've been waiting for that. I've been fighting off all this stuff. Right? Here you go. Yeah. What's this? That's usually the best time is, like, you know that it's gonna end and you're you're gonna feel good again. And and you that that's one thing that kept me going is, like, I can't wait until I I'm done with this. It's gonna feel so good.
[00:22:44] Unknown:
Oh, yeah. I don't necessarily mean about the illness itself, Patrick. I mean, norm it's normally it's when you slow down or stop that the illnesses catch up with you while your metabolism is going because you're working like an idiot every day. You're fighting these things off also, you know. Yeah.
[00:23:02] Unknown:
I can feel it coming on too. I remember that I had this feeling in in, like, the center of my my body that something was wasn't right, but I still had energy. But then it's a few days later, it just killed me. Knocked me dead. But then I'd you know, then then you get better. I wonder how much of it has to do with the weather and how much of it has to do with things like the moon cycle and all that kind of stuff too.
[00:23:30] Unknown:
Yeah. I was told that you did talks on, like, the moon cycles and stuff. Well, it's a theory. Warren's just put another post. Viruses do not exist unless you can find any document which shows conclusive proof of it. You will not find any. Even the chief medical officer stated that SARS COVID 19 was not available. I do know that with COVID, nobody could ever find the, actual virus, could they? But I I just wonder, you know, Warren, perhaps you have to come on morning evening and have a chat, and we can debate this whole virus thing. Yeah. Because I'm just I'm I'm not sure. Yeah. I'd ask him on now, but I don't know how to add anybody.
[00:24:09] Unknown:
I'd be interested to hear that as well because I heard a lot of contradicting Yeah. Con contradictory 3 sort of, opinions or views on on the whole thing to do with COVID. Some people were saying viruses don't exist, and they couldn't isolate the SARS CoV 2 virus. And like the PCR test, they were supposedly using, a very small fragment of the the, RNA or DNA. I I get confused now. But
[00:24:38] Unknown:
The protein chain?
[00:24:40] Unknown:
Yeah. The protein chain to to actually, they weren't using the whole thing. They were using more computer modeling, essentially,
[00:24:47] Unknown:
to I was gonna say, talking we we we COVID does exist. We know that it exists because they even know what the the virus looks like. It's like a little ball with little spike things that come in. Isn't that right? Am I am I have I been misled? Well, yeah. That started out as a coronavirus. Right? Coronaviruses
[00:25:03] Unknown:
are quite common, and you look on bottles of, disinfectant and that sort of thing, even pre COVID era, and they would list coronavirus as one of the the, things that protects against most of them. Like Lysol or any of these other, you know, type of, type of disinfectant sprays.
[00:25:22] Unknown:
I do I do subscribe to terrain theory as opposed to, germ theory, but I do think it's a little bit of both. It's interesting because all the talk of milk lately, and pasteurization and Louis Pasteur and, oh, what's his name? Beauchamp. So there was there was an argument at the time between the 2, and, Louis Pasteur supposedly before he died said that, the other guy was was right. It is about terrain theory more than it is, than germ theory.
[00:25:53] Unknown:
Yeah. Can you explain for the listeners, what terrain theory is?
[00:25:58] Unknown:
Terrain, it is about looking after your system. Right. Okay. So looking after your own your own, immune immunity, which which is you only have to look at go into a supermarket and look around and and and see that 90% of the stuff on sale is is poison.
[00:26:17] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[00:26:20] Unknown:
Yeah. Fresh and local, that's always the best way to know that you're getting good food. If you go to a grocery store and you you see it, it's not all brown and wilted, you know, veggies, and you got fresh meat and that kind of thing. Of course, that's always gonna be better than the the stuff they ship in on big cargo ships from exotic places. It's like Yeah. So and that and that's kind of the nature of things with these big supermarkets where you get all these goods coming in by rail and plane and ship, and it's just you don't know what you're getting. It's all bit one big homogeneous blob of stuff. Just like the milk, you have these large farm networks set up where you're getting batches of milk in from all over the place. You don't know if there's gonna be a bad batch mixed in with a bunch of good batches and what kind of spoilage it could have as an effect. So it it I guess I guess it all depends. I mean, maybe there is a case to be made for pasteurization on that large scale type type thing.
[00:27:24] Unknown:
But ideally Yeah. Ideally
[00:27:27] Unknown:
that you'd want it from your local farmers where you could just go to a place where they all bring it to as a central place to market like it used to be. You would have a central town market where you could go and buy fresh produce, or you'd have vendors that would go to town with, you know
[00:27:44] Unknown:
It's really interesting because when I was about must be about 19, 19, I was about 10 years old, an Asda opened in Saint Austell. And I remember my mom saying to me, going shopping, this new supermarket opened up. She explained to me that, I think they've I must have overheard a conversation, but it was that they had lots of shops around. And in my head, I was building this picture of it at the time. It's only 10. I thought, that sounds like a great idea. So they've got a a massive building, and there's lots of shops around the outside. So you've got butchers, and you've got a delicatessen, and you've got all the rest of it. And I thought, that's brilliant. And in my head, they'd invited all the local butchers and all the local shops to to be in this giant supermarket. And then I was like, I went there years later on my own. I was like, hang on a minute. It's not like that at all. It's actually just one shop. And they've just sort of divided it up.
And and it it got me thinking, like, why did our council sell this land off to a supermarket chain? I suppose for convenience and and ease of just letting someone some big conglomerate there. But why why didn't they sell the land off and open it up like a big market and just open up, section it off and and invite the local butcher in to sell his produce and invite the local greengrocer in to sell his produce and and all the rest of it. And then maybe someone like likes of Astor could open up and just sell the bits that need to be brought in from all around the world. But,
[00:29:14] Unknown:
I could have done Yeah. But then you realized that they wouldn't be making any money from that.
[00:29:20] Unknown:
Well,
[00:29:21] Unknown:
yeah. You know, Tesco's you know, to say that we've been living in a period of, crisis food crisis and stuff, they made an extra £1,500,000,000 this year. So
[00:29:34] Unknown:
From what?
[00:29:36] Unknown:
From their supermarkets, from putting keeping their prices the same, fooling you know, people think they get in the UK, Patrick, you get, like, a card. Like, you would perhaps get a Walmart card. Every time you use it, you get points when you shop. If you've got one of these cards, because Maleficos won't have one because he won't give any of his data away, which I understand, but you get supposedly a more discounted bargain. You'll get something at half the price because you've got your little Walmart card. But, yeah, they're just ripping off the farmers, the butchers, all of them really left, right, and center. Yeah. And I think now we are moving back to those times because more people are beginning to understand what's going on. Well, hopefully, they are.
It's one of the main things I speak is about to a lot of people. They even joked at work a few weeks ago and called me, oh, it's Shelley from the Good Life. Because it is it god. Am I that poor? Compliment. But it well, but it is my thing. I love learning about, you know, how we can be healthy and thrive, and I've learned a lot about food and what's going on at the moment. And, you know, take away the food, take away the farmers. They'll get what they want for their little agenda. When we have no lambs by apparently 2030, we won't be flying in aeroplanes. You know, it's all going on in the background. It's, kicking off big time. It's
[00:30:55] Unknown:
globalism, and we don't need it. Yeah.
[00:31:00] Unknown:
I hope it doesn't happen.
[00:31:01] Unknown:
I don't think it will because I think we're already making our new pathway. People that are awake can know what's going on. They're using their butchers. They're using their farm shops. And if more and more people start to do that, then, well, brilliant. We'll keep the farmers, you know, in work. Ultimately, it's the supermarkets that they're losing money to because they're in contracts that they can't get out of. And I think, you know, then a lots of them at the moment, I know, are making a loss for milk
[00:31:27] Unknown:
because they're signed into a contract. Well, I mean, what about over Christmas when they're all the supermarkets were saying, oh, they're coming and buy all your veg veg for 8p. Yeah. Like bags of carrots for 8p. You know, you haven't been able to buy a bag of carrots for 8p. Well, I was gonna say since the eighties, but last Christmas it'll be because they do it every year because they stitch all the farmers up. Yeah. That's Yep. Or it's just cheap produce from elsewhere. You know? So it's been shipped in, and they take the hit because it gets people through the doors to buy other things. They're known as, lost leaders.
[00:32:00] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah.
[00:32:02] Unknown:
Are they? What does that mean? Sorry. I've never heard of that before. How Like Malefica said, they'll take a hit on a product and and make you know, they know that people will are gonna want lots of edge for their Christmas dinner. So Yeah. So they'll take a hit, not make any money. But when you're in the shop Yeah. You'll be buying loads of Brightly colored signs, offers, and all the rest of it, and you'll buy you'll you'll shop there, basically. You'll be buying all your alcohol and all your yeah. So
[00:32:28] Unknown:
Yeah. I I think we're on a way out, personally. I think so many more people are. Well, hopefully. But then you've got so many people that do know what's going on, and it's just ignorance is bliss, isn't it? I I see some of the stuff of at work that some of them eat continuously every day, and it's just all processed crap. And it's like but they've got ailments and health problems. And it's like, I've literally learned I won't bore you with this, but a few of you knew that I had horrendous, acid reflux and I've had it for months now. And I even spoke to a surgeon a couple of months ago because I was literally and it was Patrick that said to me, Shelley, you're not seriously considering having surgery, are you? And I was like, well, at the moment, I am.
Anyway, long story short, after trying loads of different home remedies and stuff like that, I went and had a food intolerance test, and it came back that anything that came from a cow, basically, I've got an intolerance to. And tea and garlic. Well, I love a cup of tea. Oh, man. Yeah. Yeah. Anyway, the last couple of weeks I mean, this was just before Christmas, and I thought I can't make any drastic changes now. So I've moved, like, from coffee, which isn't great, but to almond milk. I'm still having a couple of cups of tea a day, but I only drink the really skimmed milk. But what has made the difference is not eating butter in the mornings.
And by not eating butter for a week now, my symptoms have almost gone.
[00:33:55] Unknown:
Wow. Oh, that's good news. It is. Yeah. Shelley, I've just I've just been going through this with a friend of mine who I've been trying to tell for a long, long time, and and I've given him links via WhatsApp. I even offered to buy a product for him, and and he's over Christmas went into the hospital because he had stomach cramps. And, so I've I've not been doing much research in all of this for a long, long time. I think the whole of last year, I think I just had other priorities and took took some time off, which is why none of this is really fresh in my head. But I because of this, I spent today looking for a good video, good interview with doctor Natasha Campbell McBride. She's absolutely brilliant. She's she's got a book called the gut and psychology syndrome.
So it's the gaps. It's called gaps, and then she's written a new one called gut and physiology. So this explains I don't know if you remember. I was talking about the the the vagus nerve and the the mind and body connection, to do your central nervous system. But any any intolerance that she says is basically down to the fact, that the damage done to the gut is causes leaky gut syndrome. So food particles, albeit very, very small, get into your bloodstream, and your your immune system, your innate immune system actually attacks or treats that like an invader, which is then why you get an intolerance to something.
So, basically, they don't on the on the on the gaps diet, they don't even sort of entertain, or but they do, but they don't re the the first thing to look at is actually healing a leaky gut, which is done through eating eating like we should be, eating fermented foods like sauerkraut and kimchi and, and and and, kefir and kombucha and all the rest of it. So eating like we used to before we had fridges.
[00:35:47] Unknown:
And do you know the interesting thing, though, was when all of this started was when I started eating butter and full fat milk and stuff. And I was eating it for the health benefits, believing that it would help my gut bacteria. And, you know, we don't want the whole seeded oils and stuff like that to go to butter. And it was only the other day that I twigged. Gosh. That was the time it all started happening. But interestingly, how I've got an intolerance to that.
[00:36:14] Unknown:
It could be forever. But It happened to me. I had to stop eating anything from the, the the nightshade family. So I had to stop eating tomatoes, potatoes. I went over to look at the the GI glycemic index, so less starchy foods and, and, and, literally I was just eating, meat. Well, I'll just, just, I can't, I can't tell you now, but, I, I, I had to do a lot of work with, with the, the probiotics, prebiotics and heal my heal the leaky gut, and I still have problems. I'm I'm over Christmas, I've been drinking the old glass of whiskey here and there, and and and none of this stuff is good for our gut, really. We we we do do a lot of damage to it, but we have to accept that responsibility first and and do something about it to move forward. So
[00:37:05] Unknown:
Yeah. And I did I just find it outstanding why the doctor never at the start said, well, let's get you a food intolerance test. You know? One little test that I paid for cost me £45. Had a wonderful chat with the lady. She's gonna be a guest one evening, actually. Fascinating. But, actually, take a few things out your diet, and you can heal yourself within reason.
[00:37:26] Unknown:
Yeah? Doctors are doctors most of their, as far as I know it, I I I could be corrected on this. And if if, like I said, please do correct me, if if you think if anyone thinks I'm wrong. But a lot of them are a lot of their ongoing training is actually provided by, pharmaceutical reps. So they're there they're there to push push drugs at the end of day. It's what they know.
[00:37:53] Unknown:
Yeah. And I think lots of people now, they realize that, don't they? So they, like, seek alternative ideas and treatments. Well,
[00:38:02] Unknown:
I I do. And lots of people I know in my my circle of friends, you know, always try to go to the alternative route. But yeah, I think This is, again, another thing. It's almost like a slight hand. It's not alternative. Herbal medicine and the old medicines are the true medicine. Yeah. Allopathic medicine, emergency care, brilliant. But but, drugs and if you look into the history of of, the pharmaceutical industry, you don't have to look far. It's the usual suspects. But, but, yeah, there's there's a lot on it. I'm I'm just starting to get back into it all myself.
[00:38:38] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. And, yes, it is January. So, I do have to ask you, are you doing dry January?
[00:38:45] Unknown:
I'm doing slightly moist January. So well, no. The the, the the Christmas supply has literally only just run out. So but, yes, I am, I'm basically going to be doing are you have you have you managed your dry dry January so far? Have you? I have.
[00:39:04] Unknown:
You have? Oh, did you get sponsored? Just no. I didn't get sponsored. I couldn't be bothered. I've been feeling so rough. I haven't been the last thing on my mind. And then somebody did say, well, why don't you that money that you would spend on a bottle of wine every night, why don't you put that to a cause? And I thought as lovely as that is, I'd rather actually just keep the £200 myself. £100? £200 a month. Crikey. £100 a month. I'd drink a bottle of wine every night. So
[00:39:32] Unknown:
I I will do it because I can't let myself down, and I'm gonna lose a stone in weight. I'm I'm not doing another job anymore, so I can walk my dog every day. Big changes. Have you found have you found, what I said? Because a lot of people that drink on a regular basis are worried that they won't get to sleep at night if they don't have a drink. And have you found that if you, don't have a drink, you you you tire out a lot an awful lot quicker and go to bed early.
[00:39:59] Unknown:
Have you found that? I've gone to bed early, I think, the last few nights because I've been bored. I think I've been a bit low, actually. And I've I've said to Darren earlier, you know, it's for, like, it's looking forward to in the evening having a glass of wine, albeit a bottle. It's it's habit. It's habit. It is. And I'm here now with a wine glass, but with blackcurrant juice
[00:40:17] Unknown:
blackcurrant squash in. You're listening to Radio Wind Miller at Radio Wind Miller dotcom.
[00:40:23] Unknown:
Oh. I've gone to bed earlier, I think, the last few nights because I've been bored. I think I've been a bit low, actually. And I I said to Darren earlier, you know, it's the, like it's looking for How on earth did that happen? Sorry about that. Oh, it's alright. And I'm here to know how on earth did that happen? But with blackcurrant juice still doing it, blackcurrant squashing.
[00:40:42] Unknown:
You're listening to Radio Windmiller at Radio Windmiller.com.
[00:40:45] Unknown:
Oh, I've gone to bed earlier, I think, the last few nights because I've been bored. I think I've been a bit low, actually. And I've I've said to Sorry about that, listeners. That's that's quite the bumper you've got there, Shelley. That's it. And you're not supposed to wait between do it at the bottom of the hour or something like that. I just Oh, dear. No. Yeah. No. It will be, I'll do it because I've got it in my head that I'm gonna do it. But I think Once you're resigned, it'll be fine. Yeah. It'll be fine. You've gotta be in the zone, and I think now I've done 4 days 4 nights because I don't drink during the day. And, yeah, it's an odd one because it's my little faithful friend, but I've gotta do this to prove it to myself. And I'm like, is this what normal people feel like? Bored in the evenings.
[00:41:26] Unknown:
No. They don't. They just occupy themselves with different things. I've always got something. You know, distraction is key. Just like with children, our brains don't change. Distraction is key, Always. Mhmm. And I replace most of the time, I just replace, like, a a a glass of beer with a mug of hot chocolate. Works for me. Oh, no. No. No. No. Yeah. No. Totally. It's nice. It's warm. It's like having a hot cup of tea, but it tastes of chocolate. But then I guess you've got this sort of dairy. Can you have powdered milk and stuff then?
[00:41:58] Unknown:
I don't know. That's a good one, actually. But the almond milk and the coffee is alright. But I think I've realized because if I ate chocolate as well, Lindell's, like, half an hour later, I'm a bit like, oh, but it's the butter, and I've changed because I didn't want a seeded seed oil like butter, but I've had to. And it and it's worked. So it's been a week now. So I'm, yeah, fascinating.
[00:42:21] Unknown:
Oh, that's great. Love it. It's great. But it's working. And it's working. It's working. Exactly. And you're doing dry January. Very proud of you so far. Thank you. 4 days in. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Well, I I I always drink on the first anyway, I have to say. Just out of sheer, you know, just to stick my fingers up to the rest of the world, I always drink on the 1st January. Well, we do because it's Darren's birthday on the first.
[00:42:45] Unknown:
I know. Damn his mum conceiving him for that, a New Year's Day birthday. I felt like such a bad girlfriend because, you know, I wasn't feeling very well. And a few days after Christmas, I didn't sort of cake till last minute. I thought any doting girlfriends would be baking a cake or something because it was his big four o as well. So he went to the shop during the day, and he said, shall I get anything? And I said, oh, can you get some candles, please, for your cake?
[00:43:14] Unknown:
Oh, and while you're there, can you get a cake? Yeah. Can you get some balloons as well, please? Yeah.
[00:43:20] Unknown:
But, yeah, it's New Year's Day, isn't it? Yeah. It's a horrible time, I think, for people that have birthdays then. Because I think, like, when they're children, you know, they always say that they get the selection boxes that are left over at Christmas and stuff if they have parties and things. It's a bit cruel. You know, my son It's just been my birthday. As it? When was yours?
[00:43:41] Unknown:
Yeah. Oh, not on New Year's Eve. Oh, wow. Another selfish person.
[00:43:47] Unknown:
Oh, what a night, though.
[00:43:48] Unknown:
But but for family, it's frustrating. Yeah. So do you find that frustrating, Al, that it's it's on New Year's Eve, or has it just been a good excuse for a party each year?
[00:43:58] Unknown:
Yeah. Exactly. I've never taken it personally. Everyone's out on the left day. Well, they used to be. Went into New Year this year, my brother in it. New Year's not the same.
[00:44:08] Unknown:
Well, nobody dresses up anymore. That's it. That was that was one of the amazing things about New Year. It's one of the few well, not one of the few places, but it was one of the major places in the world. All sorts of I think New York do it as well. Everyone dresses up in fancy dress, and they all go out and hit the town.
[00:44:23] Unknown:
It was so funny. I I went I went to the bar. Sorry. Did I cut you off then?
[00:44:28] Unknown:
Oh, I was just gonna say, and now that does apparently, that doesn't happen anymore.
[00:44:32] Unknown:
No. There was there was a few people dressed up, and it was quite funny because I went to the bar, and the kinda nice thing was that you could actually get to the bar and get served straight away. He used to be wait for hours, didn't he? And, and there was a guy who was actually dressed up behind me talking to his friends, and he must have been one of, like, literally one of the only people. And I just heard him go, well, yeah, everyone told me that everyone dresses up in UK. And so I came out, and I got dressed up. And and now I feel like a right idiot. It's sad, really.
Because he'd made the effort. You know? But, yeah. Yeah. It's it's central. Not the same. It never will be, I don't think.
[00:45:11] Unknown:
Do you always get rubbish birthday presents, though, Al?
[00:45:15] Unknown:
Well, when I was younger, it used to be quite good because I used to say to my mom and dad that I want something, but it costs a little bit more than than what you know, they used to give us a limit because I'm I'm 1 of 4, you see. So and, I'd, I'd say, well, so for instance, 1 year I got a skateboard, I got a deck, new new skateboard deck, and I said, well, I can go out and get some new wheels for my birthday. So I combined the you know, I used to do things like that. Yeah. Yeah. So I'd make make the most of it, really. But, yeah, everyone will always be out on my birthday, so it was always it was always good. And, every suddenly, people would always all of a sudden, they'd realize, and they'd go, oh, happy birthday, Al, and everyone would start turning around going happy birthday. So, yeah, I I I don't mind. It was it was it was quite good. I don't know. If your birthday was on Christmas, it might be a bit of a difference different story because it's, like,
[00:46:05] Unknown:
combined. It's on the same day might be a yeah. Yeah. Well, we've decided that Darren's gonna have a birthday later on in the year. When's sorry. When's his birthday? You're New Year's day. New Year's day. Oh, okay. Okay. Yeah. If I haven't been feeling so rough, but I could have done more, but I've just I couldn't wait for it all to be over Christmas and New Year. You know? I only have my parents around Christmas day. They had about 12 of us here on Boxing Day, but just exhausted with that, like, fluy sort of bug. So, anyway, not to worry. It's all seems to be gone now. Fingers crossed.
[00:46:40] Unknown:
But You were talking about the oils. Have you tried coconut oil for cooking? Not yet. No. I've got some of that. Make sure you buy extra virgin coconut. Anything you buy oil wise, always buy extra virgin because otherwise, it's been heat treated, and that basically turns it rancid, and it's no good for you. Like, any vegetable oil shouldn't really be heated, even olive oil,
[00:47:01] Unknown:
which makes you like olive oil. Yeah.
[00:47:03] Unknown:
Yeah. As long as you buy extra virgin. I mean, it's one of those things. It's all depends on how often you're using it. And and, I don't like preaching. This is one of the reason why I kind of stopped, getting into all this because I used to as you're learning these things, you tend to wanna go and tell people what you've just discovered and started getting a bit preachy with it, but everyone's different. You just have to work out what works for you, but there are certain guidelines that I would follow. Particularly if you've got like a leaky gut, gut gut issues, definitely look at, I've I've just put that, Natasha Campbell McBride interview into, the Rumble chat.
[00:47:39] Unknown:
But I'll send it to you. I've got that. Yep. Yeah.
[00:47:43] Unknown:
I'll put I'll put that Sky Watcher 1 in there as well. It's worth a watch.
[00:47:47] Unknown:
Okay. Oh, sounds good. And I'm just gonna leave a message for Warren, actually, to say, send me an email, and we'll get him on because I'd love to know more about this. How he's just said about, there's a book called What Really Makes You Ill, Why Everything You Thought You Knew About Disease is Wrong by Dawn Lester and David Parker, 2019. It explains how we've all been misled, which I'm fascinated by because we know we've been misled by so many things. So who knows?
[00:48:14] Unknown:
Oh, I might as well. Discussing. Yeah. I'll try and get myself a copy of that. Yeah. I've just, I've just bought one of another one of doctor Natasha's, books on the on the basis of looking into it again recently, and it's all about, the vegetarianism. So, we're essentially humans are omnivores. We should be eating meat and consuming animal products. So, but it's yeah, if you're a vegetarian, you can do vegetarianism, obviously, but it's it's a bit of a a minor field because of the amount of chemicals that are sprayed on vegetables and the the the the soil that they're grown in and the rest of it. So yeah. Organophosphates, No natural fertilizers. They're using glyphosate to actually speed up the harvesting harvesting process, I heard today as well. I think that might have even been on that talk.
I might have got that slightly wrong, but there was something to do with that. But glyphosate is disastrous.
[00:49:16] Unknown:
Well, it's it's, it's Hodgkinson's lymphoma, isn't it? It's been linked with lymphoma.
[00:49:22] Unknown:
Mhmm.
[00:49:23] Unknown:
They in fact, I believe Monsanto have paid out vast amounts of money for about lymphoma. People that Mhmm.
[00:49:30] Unknown:
They invented it, but when the patent expired, loads of other people started producing it. So
[00:49:35] Unknown:
Right. Yeah.
[00:49:38] Unknown:
I love it. I wanna learn more all about this stuff. I have thought about doing a course or something, but I've got the GAPS diet book here, Al. I read it a few years ago, actually, because, trying to, like, readdress my son's eating habits and, you know, the theory that if you kind of like what they were doing with some of the, like, really naughty teens and stuff was taking all food away until they get, like, flu like symptoms. And these are picky eaters. You know, they only eat one thing. And then after a couple of days, obviously, they're starving. They got flu symptoms and stuff, and they just have bone broth.
And they have that for a few days, and it resets the brain and the gut, apparently, And we know the brain and the gut are totally related.
[00:50:24] Unknown:
Yeah. I started doing the bone broth, but I was using chicken bones. And chicken bones, can, what is it? Like, they they're high in, I can't quite remember what it is, but they're high in something, and my legs actually swelled up, which is weird because nothing like that ever happens to me. Yeah. My calf, all around my shins and everything swelled up quite a lot. I can't hold it. Is there high in
[00:50:49] Unknown:
I'll try and Google it while you talk. But, Sorry. I'll come to you in 5 minutes when you're talking. Shin fluid, obviously. Obviously, high end shin fluid. Yeah.
[00:50:57] Unknown:
I'll I'll I'll look it up. Just very quickly, just, I'm really interested in that book that Warren's just mentioned, so I'm gonna go and try and get a copy of that. But, the whole so coming back to the terrain and and the, the germ theory thing, one thing that made me a little suspicious is I used to, when I was younger, go out and, have a have a Rolle. And, I found that actually, from after giving up tobacco, I would I would say, oh, I'd be out with a friend, and I'd be like, oh, go on then. I'll have another one. And I'd do this purposely because of the way I gave up was to tell myself, I brainwashed myself. I told myself over and over again as I was smoking, this is disgusting. This is disgusting. This is horror. This is like, I I just say that over and over again in my head, and it got to the point where I was just I couldn't do it anymore. Even even, just smelling of it. But I I actually, the guy one of the guys I work with, he smokes, and I can't even when when when we're sort of having our lunch break and he's smoking in the car, sorry, man. I'm sat in your car, but can we put the windows down? Because I I think I'm allergic to it. It actually Yeah. Makes feel horrible. It makes me feel like I'm coming down with something.
So, the chemical exposure definitely definitely would would make me feel like I was coming down with something. So Yeah.
[00:52:17] Unknown:
Yeah. I think the well, I've been looking at a book. I've been doing loads of reading actually the last few days. I've been looking at a book tonight called creative visualization, and it's all about affirmations and things like that and, you know, trying to train our brain just the things we we say all the time. Like I said earlier, I had a few low days, and all you hear your internal dialogue. Oh, I can't do that. I'm shit doing that. Blah blah blah. Everything was negative. And yesterday, I just had this, like, real moment, and it was like, stop what you're saying because your thoughts are creating your reality.
[00:52:52] Unknown:
So important.
[00:52:53] Unknown:
Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. And the last 24 hours, I do feel much better. But I was pondering on my bookshelf, and that book I bought probably about 20 years ago. And I was like, right. I need to really read this now again. I've read half the book. Just sat down this afternoon. So, yeah, that is one way to look at it. Definitely, the whole I hate cigarettes. Yeah. You become your source. Mhmm.
[00:53:17] Unknown:
Histamines. Chicken brotha can be high in histamines, and that was what it was. So I actually reacted quite badly to it.
[00:53:24] Unknown:
Right. Yeah. Interesting. Is is Patrick back? I know he you disappeared. I don't I don't believe he is at the moment. That's fine. That's okay because I just was very quiet. No. That's alright. Well, we've got 5 minutes left. Oh, wow. I know. Didn't take long to go, did it? Good interesting conversation tonight, boys. Well done.
[00:53:46] Unknown:
Yeah. I'm sorry I'm sorry we weren't I'm sorry we weren't women for the evening, but that's that's
[00:53:52] Unknown:
No. It's fine. It's fine. It's nice. I like these little, chats that we have. We'll have to do more of them if you guys are free coming up because, well, it's just nice to put it's funny how it starts with the weather. We're so very British, aren't we? Everything always starts with the weather. But then these days, the weather is no longer just the weather and and can end up talking 20 minutes about, chemtrails and Yeah. But, yeah. So have you got any New Year's resolutions, guys? Anybody? Not necessarily a resolution, but anything you think, right, this is the year. No.
[00:54:30] Unknown:
Not really. I was just gonna let someone else answer first. Me
[00:54:33] Unknown:
too. Well, Patrick, you're, happy New Year, by the way, Patrick. I haven't actually said hello to you yet.
[00:54:41] Unknown:
Yeah. Thanks. Yeah. It's great to hear your voice again. Yeah. I found it, and I wanna apologize for the the little interruption. I was playing with new software that I've got here that I've I've I haven't really tested it yet, and I Safe for I have my audio. You gave me a call. Time. Yeah. Here. But it it's kinda neat because it it allows me to, play clips just by using my number pad on the keyboard. So when you were talking about cigarettes, it reminded me of this little clip here.
[00:55:12] Unknown:
Can you hear it? Uh-huh. Yeah. What cigarette do you smoke, doctor? Tens of thousands of doctors in all branches of medicine in all parts of the country were asked that question. What cigarette do you smoke, doctor? The brand named most was Camel. Yes. Surveys show more doctors smoke Camels than any other cigarette. Smoke Camels, the cigarette so many doctors enjoy.
[00:55:35] Unknown:
Classic. Brilliant.
[00:55:37] Unknown:
Yep. That's true. Cleveland Indians Oops. Sorry.
[00:55:41] Unknown:
Well, I I my mine was was originally, I think, Golden Virginia, and then after that, it was, a natural tobacco. American spirit, I found way too sorry. I'm advertising here, but, was way too dry. So I started putting a bit of orange peel in there to make it damp, and then I went over to AK Gold, which is old Kendall, which you can get from a tobacconist local locally. So supposedly, there's not all the chemicals that are added to make it continue burning. And then after that, I got a vaporizer and, and just started using that. And then I found out they're bad and and generally just cut cut it out from there. So anyone that wants to give up, Yeah. Tell yourself you shouldn't be doing it over and over again.
[00:56:23] Unknown:
Yes. And I demand all you listeners out there to think of one thing you would like to change for this year and create an affirmation an affirmation of it and keep saying it. Yeah. Just a little change. Yeah. And if you can't do it if you can't do it for yourself, try doing it for somebody else. I think that's always a good thing. Like, particularly children is always a good one. Well, you just the book was saying that you shouldn't affirm for other people because it's not their free will. I suppose it depends what you're you would be affirming about.
But if you're doing it if you're doing it Sorry. If you were just to start with something, anything simple, I love myself. I'm beautiful. Just say it every day over and over again. Yeah. It can be about anything, can't it? Just I can do this as well. Yeah. I can do this. And Jo teaches me that a lot because she always says I can fly a plane, and and I I take that attitude with lots of things now. I can do this. Because there's so many things, especially the last few days. Oh, I can't do this. I can't do that. You know? I know we all have good days and bad days, but I'm flying a plane at the moment.
[00:57:29] Unknown:
When I started getting in into the affirmation stuff, I I really started to notice. I was working in school at the time as well, and I started to notice the people around me, how often they would negatively affirm to themselves. Yeah. So that's in interesting. When you when you get into something, you start noticing just how prevalent it is. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. You often find people that suffer hardships
[00:57:54] Unknown:
really appreciate, you know, people that have suffered more hardships are much more appreciative of life, in that respect. You know, you look at these war torn countries and stuff, and you you find that people really do make the best they can with what they've got. They still manage to laugh. They still manage to smile. All these, war books and stuff I'm reading on World War 1 and World War 2, they still manage to find time to laugh and joke in the trenches. You know? Mhmm. It's about doing the best you can with what you have in front of you. You're always trying to do the best you can with what you've got in front of you. If not for you, for for others. As Al said, you know, you're responsible for how your mood affects other people.
[00:58:36] Unknown:
Definitely. And with that fine note, my friend, we will end there. So, I need some of these things. I need I'm I'm all about Anyway, if you guys are still around for a few minutes, we can carry on chatting. I can leave rumble open, whatever. But to you guys out there, have an awesome New Year. Start that day. Start now telling yourself how amazing you are. And I will be back on Wednesday at 7 o'clock. Have an awesome week, and thank you guys, Maleficos, Patrick, and Al. Thank you. See you soon. For your help.
Introduction and Greetings
Health and Illnesses Discussion
Mysterious Fog and Chemtrails
Weather Modification and Skepticism
Germ Theory vs Terrain Theory
Food, Health, and Supermarkets
New Year Resolutions and Dry January
Affirmations and Positive Thinking