Foreign.
Speaker BDr.
Speaker BPran Yoganathan returns.
Speaker BHe first joined us in March of 2023 for episode 111.
Speaker BHe is a cog in the wheel of the medical industrial complex.
Speaker BHe's a farmer, hunter, writer, thinker.
Speaker BPran, welcome back to Here for the Truth.
Speaker CThanks, mate.
Speaker CLovely to be back with both of you.
Speaker CAnd yeah, look, looking forward to having a bit of a discussion with you both.
Speaker BYeah, absolutely, man.
Speaker BObviously it's been a couple years since we last had a discussion and the world looked very different back then, certainly.
Speaker BI guess just in your own words, like, how has the last couple years been for you?
Speaker BEven from just a personal evolution perspective, what are the textures that you've noticed in your personal growth journey as we continue to evolve on this human journey as well?
Speaker CYeah, Joel.
Speaker CI mean, last two years have been fundamentally been massive.
Speaker CI mean, like from the perspective of our souls, transmutation or learning.
Speaker CI believe experience adds to growth.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker CAnd I'm sure you guys will kind of agree with that.
Speaker CAnd we have to thrust ourselves out of our comfort zone.
Speaker CSo the last two years has been destabilizing geopolitically, personally, professionally.
Speaker CBut in all that process of I've learned and continue to learn, and I experience emotion, you know, whether it's pain, happiness, joy, love, all of that.
Speaker CAnd all you can do is kind of take that and transmute it into something higher, which I believe is just an enhanced level of consciousness.
Speaker CAnd I don't mean that from an egoic sense of I'm growing, I'm just perhaps starting to remember what I am, you know, and it's, it's.
Speaker CIt seems like an amnesia that's, that's kind of fading away.
Speaker BLet me, let me, let me dive in there.
Speaker BWhat, what are you.
Speaker CWhat am I?
Speaker CI.
Speaker CI believe.
Speaker CI believe I am you.
Speaker CAnd, and, and in that is interchangeably used, I, I believe we are the self.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker CA deeper layer of consciousness where we're all interwoven, fundamentally.
Speaker CBut this nervous systems of ours give us a sense of ego.
Speaker ARight?
Speaker CAnd an ego is not necessarily a bad thing.
Speaker CI think it's been painted in these modern spiritual practices as a terrible thing and that we should somehow dissolve the ego.
Speaker CGreat.
Speaker CYeah, you could, you could certainly dissolve it through practices such as meditations, pharmacologically active imagination.
Speaker CThere's many ways to do it.
Speaker CBut the ego is there for a reason, to allow the self to evolve.
Speaker CAnd when I speak of the self, that is the deeper layer, like the way I look at, look at consciousness, Joel, because fundamentally, the question that you've asked is in relation to consciousness that underpins that question.
Speaker CI see consciousness just from a very allegorical perspective as an ocean, right?
Speaker CAnd upon that ocean we have vessels like ships and boats, and some are bigger than others.
Speaker CAnd that's our egos, that's our respective egos upon that, the surface of that ocean.
Speaker CAnd I believe we've got these ancient primal blueprints called archetypes, which are currents that move these vessels, as in they've existed before the birth of time and they're pre.
Speaker CWoven into this simulation, creation, whatever you wish to call it.
Speaker CBut once you start sinking deeper into the ocean, should someone throw themselves from a vessel into the deeper layers, that illusion of separation of the vessel starts separating.
Speaker CSorry, starts, starts losing its, that illusion.
Speaker CAnd I think the deeper you go, the more interwoven we are.
Speaker CYou know, these partitions between ourselves kind of dissolve.
Speaker CAnd that is the process of ego dissolution, I believe.
Speaker CAnd it's this greater understanding of really a respect for each other in that regard.
Speaker CIf I am the same as you and you are the same as me, well, you know, we, we, we've got a responsibility towards each other.
Speaker CAnd I think if the world understood that at a deeper level, if 8 billion souls understood that, I don't think we'll find ourselves in the turmoil that we find ourselves today.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AWhere does like, individuality and selfhood play into all this?
Speaker AWhen you say I am you, you as me, I understand that.
Speaker ALike a foundational base letter layer.
Speaker ABut what are those words individuality and selfhood mean to you?
Speaker CYeah, I mean, the self.
Speaker CThere must be a purpose right behind all of this.
Speaker CLike this elaborate mechanisms or timepiece or chronograph, which is this, which is this matrix of time must serve a purpose.
Speaker CI mean, it's not without purpose, right.
Speaker CLike we understand what a lack of purpose does to a man's soul or a woman's soul.
Speaker CIt, it, it leads to nilism.
Speaker CAnd this is why some of the greater thinkers on, on, on existential topics can sometimes succumb to that.
Speaker CYou know, the, the, the Schopenhauer and there's various thinkers in our time that, that you read their works and it's extremely nistic because if they identify with the ego, right, I am me and this is my purpose in the world.
Speaker CThat there is an issue with that.
Speaker CWhereas when we start looking into the deeper layers, well, you, you, you start unraveling something which is that, well, perhaps the self is, it needs us to become unconscious, to become conscious.
Speaker CI mean, Jung, Carl Jung, Called these deeper layers the deep unconscious.
Speaker CAnd he often wrote that the deep unconscious needs man to become conscious.
Speaker CSo I believe individuality.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker CThis purpose of self and ego allows us to go about the world and evolve each of our souls, which in turn benefits the deeper layer, the self.
Speaker CWhat I'm trying to say very simply is that I believe the self seeks evolution in itself.
Speaker CIt.
Speaker CIt's not a static thing.
Speaker CIt's a dynamic force that seeks growth, and it's using us to grow.
Speaker AWhen you say self, you mean like big S self, ocean self, as opposed to like individual self?
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AI think are obviously a separate human being than me.
Speaker AYour awesomeness.
Speaker ARight now you're on the other side of the world and we're having a conversation.
Speaker ASo I'm just trying to get some clarity there.
Speaker CYeah, I think Rumi said it beautifully.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker CJalal Rumi, the Sufi poet and mystic.
Speaker CBeautiful writer, great writer.
Speaker CAnd he said like, we've got this, We've got this perspective that we are the drop in the ocean, when in reality we are the ocean itself.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker CAnd, and, and that's what I'm speaking to.
Speaker CI.
Speaker CI'm speaking to the fact that, that it is very difficult for us to separate the fact that we are all interconnected because everything we've built is based on our individuality.
Speaker CBut at the deeper levels, I do believe there's a great level of interconnection.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BSo in that context, when I guess this human experience ends, what is your perspective on the soul's journey there forth?
Speaker BIs there still a sense of, like, individuality, a separate soul, a separate entity, or.
Speaker BI'm just.
Speaker BObviously there's no correct answer here.
Speaker BI'm just curious where you're currently out with that.
Speaker CYeah, absolutely.
Speaker CLike, for me to claim absolute knowledge over something like that would be.
Speaker CThere's a real danger here, guys.
Speaker CWhich is.
Speaker CWhich is that when the ego starts transcending some of these deeper layers, it confused with some of these archetypes and it confused with the self, which then leads to this messianic complex as this is how cult leaders are born.
Speaker CAnd it's a very, very tricky journey here to navigate because sometimes I read my work, my writing, and I'm embarrassed at the absolutism that I've shown in some of that.
Speaker CAnd realize that I'm in dangerous territory that, that, that my ego is in danger of fusing with the self.
Speaker CAnd, and in, you know, I'm.
Speaker CI'm at danger of speaking almost prophetically in the sense that, you know.
Speaker CBut that's ego.
Speaker CThat's ego.
Speaker CI can see through it.
Speaker CAnd it's something that I continue to, to work on.
Speaker CYeah, but you know, and, and to kind of dance around the question that you've asked.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker CIt's impossible for us to know, but looking at many, many, many reports of near death experiences and there's plenty of it, even in my field, in the medical literature, there seems to be an overwhelming sense of a singular emotion, which is love predominantly.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CThis overwhelming sense of belonging and unity.
Speaker CAnd that makes sense because the deeper layers, as I said, these partitions of us fall away.
Speaker CAnd what is love but kind of this trend towards unity, it's unification.
Speaker CAnd I suspect that that's what occurs.
Speaker CLike these partitions fall away and we start seeing the deeper layers of the game.
Speaker CBut for us to exist, there has to be an amnesia about that process.
Speaker CLike we can't remember too much because the self again seeks evolution.
Speaker CWithout the ego, there is no emotion in the game.
Speaker CAnd I often wonder guys, you know, like these, a lot of these Buddhist monks and so forth that, that you know, are deep in meditation and, and touch on the deeper unconscious layers like have what purpose do they serve the self?
Speaker CAnd you know, that's something that I sit with because they're fundamentally remembering.
Speaker CBut do they help evolve the nature of the self?
Speaker CBut perhaps the aim of the game is for each of us to individually remember who we are and head back to that deeper layer.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AEarlier you kind of mentioned the last couple years of, you know, definitely had their challenges.
Speaker AAnything specific you like to get into and like, you know, what your journey has brought you and how you've worked through it.
Speaker AAnd just like, you know, what's been going on more specifically in the last couple years that's inspired kind of, you know, where you stand currently in your life, your world view, etc.
Speaker CYeah, these are, these are some difficult layers to, for the mind to walk.
Speaker CIt's a process of unraveling and, and in the, in the process of unraveling you can really lose a sense of who you are.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker CAs a person.
Speaker CYou know, as a, as a businessman, I've been very successful as a doctor, I've been very successful as a father, as a husband.
Speaker CBut in that process of unraveling you can, you can lose your grip on all of that, fundamentally lose your grip on sanity.
Speaker CAnd, and I would say that that certainly happened to some degree.
Speaker CI, I've suffered my, my bouts of a particularly serious bout of depression.
Speaker CAnd you know, and I think the depression was the final Straw that broke the camel's back.
Speaker CBut, but as Rumi has said, you need to be broken to allow the light to enter.
Speaker CSo if I could go back and change that, I wouldn't, I wouldn't because it, it really allowed for me to see something deeper, something darker, and it allowed me to kind of bring in my light, which I've always lived in.
Speaker CYou know, everyone's kind of looked up to me as this successful guy, you know, and, and, but to see the darkness allowed me to kind of balance the two halves of myself.
Speaker CAnd of course, that had a massive impact on, on my marriage and on my relationship with my children and, and so forth.
Speaker CBut I'm glad to say that I've been able to work through all of that and sort of emerge out of it, I believe, a more, more enlightened soul, you know, and I've had the support of an amazing wife who's sort of, you know, really kind of helped me through it.
Speaker CAnd a good partner is just incredible, incredible in this journey.
Speaker CAnd, you know, it seems that as souls, we're on this individual path, but there are some that just kind of hold your hand along that path and you diverg, but you come back and, and it's a beautiful thing, you know, I believe we're all kind of walking towards the same destination.
Speaker CWe're just doing it at separate paces using different parts.
Speaker CAnd it's a beautiful thing.
Speaker CYou know, there's no such thing as right or wrong in this game.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AAre you still practicing as a doctor?
Speaker CI am, I am.
Speaker CI.
Speaker CI really enjoy what I do.
Speaker CYou know, I'm a gastroenterologist, which, which is, you know, a doctor of the gut, supposedly.
Speaker CBut, you know, most of what I sit with in my, in my consulting suite is just an abdominal discomfort.
Speaker CLike there's a pain in the guts.
Speaker CAnd we do colonoscopies and tests and blood tests and so forth.
Speaker CMost of these are normal.
Speaker CMy industries called it irritable bowel syndrome, But I'm starting to realize this is a.
Speaker CA primordial primitive memory within this beautiful nervous system in our gut that's being triggered.
Speaker CSo what I've realized along the way is that this, when the environment or the external world turns toxic, right, the primitive memory is being activated.
Speaker CAnd to write that off as irritable bowel syndrome, I no longer do that.
Speaker CSo I sort of delve into the psyche and in the course of this journey, I've really become more of a psychologist.
Speaker CBut I don't really believe in labels anymore, mate.
Speaker CI.
Speaker CI Feel that, that, you know, I don't need a degree as a psychologist or a psychiatrist to be able to delve into one psyche.
Speaker CIt just, we just need to do the kind of inner work and it's been a really beautiful thing to be able to merge that allopathic knowledge of, of medicine, that logic with some of the more esoteric concepts around psyche and mind.
Speaker CAnd I, I've been able to benefit a lot of people in that regard and it's not something that I want to give up on ever.
Speaker CYou know, it's not just income for me.
Speaker CIn fact, you know, sometimes I grapple with the embarrassment of having to charge for that service because it's such a, it feels more honorable.
Speaker CIt feels so honorable that I struggle with it being transactional.
Speaker CSo that's my inner sort of grappling with, with the industry.
Speaker CBut I really enjoy kind of giving back and allowing people to understand the inner labyrinth of their, their minds and the minotaurs that lurk within it.
Speaker BYeah, thank you for sharing, man.
Speaker BHas there been any kind of conversations or dialogues or potential pushbacks from colleagues with, I guess, your unique approach or even, you know, dropping, you know, the allopathic terms like ital bowel syndrome, etc.
Speaker BIs there, has there been anything spark in that arena with, I guess, more conventional peers?
Speaker CYeah, look, I think, I think when I started, you've been with me for a fair bit in this journey, Joel.
Speaker CLike when I first started, I was certainly more brash in my approach, but as time's gone on, I've become fairly esoteric and I, I think people have kind of witnessed that journey.
Speaker CMy colleagues, you know, I'm pretty open on social media and platforms like that with my thoughts.
Speaker CI think initially it allowed some sort of spectacle where they could, you know, peek in and sort of laugh and speak about it perhaps behind my back.
Speaker CAnd not many have said it to my face, but, you know, over time I think, I think it's just kind of evolved into, you know, this man's just crazy.
Speaker CWe'll just kind of leave him alone.
Speaker CAt no point have I ever compromised the safety of my clients.
Speaker CAnd everything I've done has been pretty, pretty simple really, mate.
Speaker CI've said, look, farming is a problem.
Speaker CModern day agricultural methods are leading to a system of food supply that may be contributing, that is strongly likely to be contributing to illness.
Speaker CAnd so there's very few people, people that can argue with that type of rhetoric.
Speaker CAs a doctor, with regards to my, my focus on the esoteric aspects of this realm, I I genuinely believe my colleagues don't grasp that.
Speaker CI, I think medicine is so rooted in logic.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker CAnd science and reductionism.
Speaker CWhen you start touching on some of these, you know, other, other mythical aspects of our existence, they, they just write that off.
Speaker CSo it's to a point where initially it was a spectacle and then speaking about me, perhaps in sort of hush tones behind my back.
Speaker CAnd now I just kind of get left alone to practice the way I want to practice.
Speaker CAnd I, I think I must have pretty thick skin too, Joel.
Speaker CIt just seems to sort of bounce off me and I don't, I don't pay too much attention to it because I have a strong understanding of who I am.
Speaker CI know my ego and, you know, I know there's a considerable ego.
Speaker CI acknowledge that.
Speaker CBut I know who I am.
Speaker BBeautiful man.
Speaker BI really, really appreciate that your osmos recently had a little getaway where I guess if you're not speaking to it, you're asking.
Speaker BPrime's a hunter as well, and I feel like we get into a deep conversation about nature and spirituality.
Speaker AYeah, I just wrote an article called Returning to the Land.
Speaker AInitially it was just about my wife and I.
Speaker AYou know, we moved about five years ago from Santa Monica to Topanga.
Speaker AWe have more land.
Speaker AYou know, we've been really getting more into permaculture and cultivating our land and bring, bringing life back to the land.
Speaker AAnd we have chickens and yeah, it's been amazing.
Speaker AI've been working with this guy Eric, who's a friend, who's just like a permaculture agroforesty wizard and like we've completely transformed the land.
Speaker AThat being said, I've always been really curious about hunting and just connecting more to our food in that way as opposed to, as, as Bruce, the teacher at this hunter course said, like hiring a hitman to do the dirty work for us, you know, and we just show up to the store and everything's neatly packaged and yay, let me get my protein.
Speaker AWhich I get it.
Speaker AThis is the modern world that we live in.
Speaker ABut I went to a five day hunting course, this is Guy Bruce McLennan held in Washington.
Speaker AAnd it was really beautiful experience.
Speaker AI went with a dear friend of mine.
Speaker AWe just kind of learned some foundational things.
Speaker AWe shot some guns.
Speaker AWe.
Speaker AIt wasn't hunting season, but, you know, he ended up shooting a goat that he had on property and we field dressed it and butchered it and went through that process.
Speaker AAnd it was really deep, man, like to connect.
Speaker AI mean, I granted I wasn't hunting.
Speaker ABut even, even to witness the process of taking another animal's life and to be there for.
Speaker AAnd to see it happening and then to go through that process to take a living being and then turning it into something that.
Speaker AThat looks like something that when you go to the store, you know, like that.
Speaker AThat process.
Speaker ASo yeah, it's kind of reawakened this desire to.
Speaker ATo want to hunt and to as someone who does eat meat, to get closer to it and to build a greater connection to the land and to my food.
Speaker AAnd something I've told Joel and I've told some other people is, you know, about 15 years ago I took part in this other.
Speaker AIt was like a weekend course with someone known at the time as a locavore hunter.
Speaker AAnd we went and learned about deer ecology and deer hunting.
Speaker AAnd then afterwards I went to a hunting course in Vermont and I met this guy who's been a lifelong hunter and between.
Speaker AThis guy that I met 15 years ago who led this class and Bruce, who's a third generation hunter, like these two men are two of the most present centered, grounded human beings that I have ever come across.
Speaker AThey're not out there studying with some guru or like, you know, calling themselves a priestess or a goddess or whatever, you know, on social media.
Speaker ALike, these are some real men of the earth that are connected to the land and connected to themselves in a way that is rare and so that, you know, and it's.
Speaker AIt's a kind of hunting that honors the animal, honors the land.
Speaker AIt's not just like, oh yeah, look at me.
Speaker AI'm just shooting animals and taking pictures with the animals.
Speaker AAnd so, yeah, man, I'm looking forward to.
Speaker ATo, you know, cultivating my more.
Speaker AMy connection to food in a deeper way.
Speaker ASo I'm curious what your experience has been as a hunter and you know, any comments that you have on what I just said.
Speaker CBeautiful, man, it's really nice to hear your.
Speaker CYour journey there.
Speaker CAnd it's.
Speaker CIt's very similar, very similar to mine.
Speaker CYou'll remember that we spoke on.
Speaker COn archetypes.
Speaker CYou know, Nature herself is an archetype, one of these.
Speaker CShe's a maternal energy.
Speaker CI.
Speaker CI don't think anyone can, you know, who sat in nature long enough would say it's a.
Speaker CIt's a masculine energy.
Speaker CYou enter a city, right, with all its lines and tall buildings and logic and order, and you say, well, that's logic, logos.
Speaker CAnd logos predominates in that masculine energy.
Speaker CWhereas nature to me is just a mother.
Speaker CYou know, she's a mother and she, she's a producer and, and she's a creator.
Speaker CAnd, and what you've done there by, by hunting is you've aligned yourself to the algorithm of, of her, of her cadence fundamentally.
Speaker CAnd, and it's the same with farmers, man, like farmers that are truly deeply connected.
Speaker CYou know, permaculture farmers and regenerative farmers, just farmers in general.
Speaker CEven the ones burdened by these modern day agricultural systems that have shackled them, they are so deeply connected to the land and it's all about connection.
Speaker CSo we spoke on love as an energy that seeks to unite.
Speaker CWhen you go into a grocery and, or a supermarket and you pick up a piece of meat, there are so many levels of disconnection in that supply chain system.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker CSomeone's grown the beef, someone's killed the beef, then someone's cut it up and someone's driven it and delivered it and then someone's put it on the shelf.
Speaker CLike there's levels of disconnection.
Speaker CThere is no love in that food.
Speaker CWhereas with, with hunting you've, there is just you and the animal really.
Speaker CAnd that level of connection is, there's an element of love to it.
Speaker CAnd, and I think that's the beauty of it.
Speaker CIt's a sense of connection.
Speaker CAnd when you say you find these men to be deeply present, of course, because again it comes down to, to, to connection.
Speaker CThey are just deeply connected to the land.
Speaker CThe most primal and beautiful algorithm that, that exists.
Speaker CYou know, civilizations are, you know, they, they're cyclical.
Speaker CYou know, great civilizations are built, great civilizations burn and we, we reemerge out of, of those.
Speaker CAnd, but nature always kind of stays constant.
Speaker CAnd when civilizations do burn, there is a tendency for mankind to return to her womb to kind of recultivate that ancient knowledge that we've, we've, we've always known.
Speaker CAnd hunting to me is just a deeply spiritual process.
Speaker CSpending time in mountains and I bow hunt.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CAnd, and it's a, it's a, it's a difficult art and there's a lot of frustration with it that can sometimes come about and it's humility.
Speaker CYou know, as a bow hunter, sometimes you can injure an animal if you're not careful and not kill it cleanly.
Speaker CThen stalking it through the mountain and watching an animal suffer, etc.
Speaker CMakes you appreciate the food that you're butchering and taking back to your, your family.
Speaker CBut as I've gotten better as a bow hunter, that there is min.
Speaker CSuffering for the animals that, that I'm taking the Lives off and man, I, I think it's the most beautiful process.
Speaker CYesterday I put on a dinner for a few of my farmer friends here on the farm, surrounding neighbors of mine.
Speaker CAnd it was a, it was a couple of goats that I'd killed and butchered a few months ago that I pulled out of the freezer and did a beautiful curry for them, an authentic Sri Lankan curry.
Speaker CAnd though you know they had, they must have consumed a few liters of water while eating it, there was just so much love in that food that I'd made for, for these dear friends of mine.
Speaker CAnd that's ultimately what it kind of comes down to.
Speaker CIt's this connection, AKA love.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AHow long have you been hunting for, mate?
Speaker CI got into hunting actually.
Speaker CMy wife booked me this surprise trip a few years ago, probably I think it was about five or six years ago with, with a guy who's gone on to become one of my best friends.
Speaker CHis name's Eamon Waddington.
Speaker CHe runs a business called Broadside Hunting which teaches people, you know, it's exactly what you did, you know, it's a course, three day course where people are kind of taught how to, to hunt with guns and, and bows and so forth and butcher up meat, et cetera.
Speaker CAnd initially I was very skeptical.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker CLike I, I'm, I've been in medical school since I was young, you know, I was about 16 or 17 when I was in medical school.
Speaker CI've really had no time to learn some of the more practical aspects of life, you know, with, with my hands my entire life, science based existence.
Speaker CSo when she initially booked it, I was pretty, pretty reluctant because you know, I thought hunting was something that was cruel etc.
Speaker CBut those days in the mountains with Eamon was, was some of the most spiritually enlightening times of my life.
Speaker CAnd as time's gone on, you know, Eamon's been more one on one with me, teaching me how to hunt on my farm and, and, and butcher and it's just gotten better and better with time and it's something that, that not only do I enjoy, I believe should be essential for many men and, and some women who, who seek interest in that.
Speaker CI think it's a, it's a, it's a beautiful thing.
Speaker CEveryone should know where their food comes from.
Speaker AYeah, my wife did the same thing.
Speaker AShe met Bruce's wife at a, it was a, a workshop up north in Canada and so she came home, she's like I met this woman in her husband.
Speaker ABruce leads these, a third generation hunter and he leads these five day experiences called Awaken the Hunter.
Speaker AAnd his business is called Human Nature Hunting.
Speaker AAnd so she sent it to me and I was kind of busy.
Speaker AAnd then like a month went by.
Speaker AShe's like, are you gonna check it out?
Speaker ASo I checked it out and you know, the way he spoke about everything on his website just really resonated because it was more holistic and had this spiritual vibe with a spiritual vibe.
Speaker AAnd as I, you know, connected with him over the last five days, we had some opportunity have some one on one time.
Speaker AI mean that is a deep spiritual practice for him.
Speaker ALike his connection to the land, you know, it goes beyond like, oh, let me go into a church or let me go in to some, you know, kirtan.
Speaker AI'm not saying those things are inherently bad, but it's just a, a direct relationship to like the mother to creation, to earth.
Speaker ASo yeah, I find it interesting that our wives are the ones that help give us a little bit of a nudge to, to be, be a little bit more open to this.
Speaker AI mean, I was open to it, you know, 15 years ago.
Speaker AI did had that experience.
Speaker ABut just to find that and have that synchronicity and then to go on this experience and you know, to, to be there with several other people.
Speaker AOne of my really dear friends came with me too, who has had some hunting experience and he, I mean he, he works all the time.
Speaker ASo for him to spend five days in the woods and a break from everything was, was like really, really important.
Speaker ASo.
Speaker CThat's beautiful, man.
Speaker CThat's beautiful.
Speaker CAnd that's what a marriage is.
Speaker CIt's a very sacred act.
Speaker CYou know, these vows that we take are fundamentally been commodified.
Speaker CBut at a deeper level, marriage is exactly that.
Speaker CThe, the, the, the girl in her becomes a woman through your presence and the boy in you becomes a man through, through hers.
Speaker CYou know, we lead each other along that, that path of completion, you know, and we need one another.
Speaker CYou know, we need these, these mirrors of our, of our spouses with their energetic opposites to be able to, for us to be able to unite the halves within ourselves.
Speaker CUltimately, that journey as you we've spoken about is solitary.
Speaker CLike it's a solo journey, but these beautiful souls that we meet along the way and you know, especially for me, you know, the spouses are just so critical in allowing you to, to sort of complete yourself.
Speaker CAnd I don't think it's coincidental that, that, you know, our respective spouses did that because they're pushing us to Become the men they see in, in us, you know, and, and it's very humbling for a lot of men to hear that, that, well, am I a boy and is she pushing me towards manhood?
Speaker CWell, I'm a man.
Speaker CI know, but no, it's, it's that maturity comes through, through agitation and, and that's how we grow.
Speaker CSo it's a beautiful thing, mate.
Speaker AYeah, man.
Speaker AWell said, Pran.
Speaker BHow does the modern day human kind of, I guess, consume animal products in a way that I guess is more spiritually aligned when not everyone can really has the opportunity or really has the accessibility to kind of go about it in the ways that we've discussed?
Speaker BWhat are like proactive steps that one can take to, I guess, bring more love into consumption in the midst of modern disconnect?
Speaker CBeautiful question, actually.
Speaker CThat's a glorious question, Joel.
Speaker CWhat I'm starting to realize again, with great humility here is we, we live in, let's simplify it, right?
Speaker CAs a population, we live in a paddock, right?
Speaker CThe, the, the barbed wires that hold us are probably technological, they're monetary, they're ideological, they're chains or gates that, that enclose us, right?
Speaker CThere are few amongst that herd that will gravitate to the edge of that fence, right?
Speaker CLike yourselves, like me, right?
Speaker CWe gravitate.
Speaker CWe see beyond at the freedom, right?
Speaker CAnd, and we yearn that.
Speaker CThe vast majority do not.
Speaker CThey are quite happy grazing in the middle of that paddock.
Speaker CThey're quite happy with, with their lives, right?
Speaker CSo we can't speak to everyone broadly.
Speaker CSo when you say, when you say, how can the modern human do this?
Speaker CI can't speak for those that choose to remain within those barbed gates, right?
Speaker CAnd so I speak to those that wish to step outside that not only have stepped outside, but those at the edges looking with longing at that.
Speaker CNow, those that choose to stay and graze, there is a deep pain within them, right?
Speaker CThere is the pain of not being free.
Speaker CYet they would still prefer their chains than seek the discomfort of freedom because freedom is extremely uncomfortable.
Speaker CYou defy tradition, customs, laws, values to, to seek that, okay?
Speaker CYou essentially, in their eyes, you're considered a, a wild animal when you exist outside those gates.
Speaker CBut they have an existential pain which the, the system, the, the herders within this paddock throw them hedonism, alcohol, gambling, whatever it is.
Speaker CAnd this is why the herd is sick, okay?
Speaker CThey, they consume not because they're hungry.
Speaker CThey consume because there's a void within them.
Speaker CAnd the herders throw them what's needed to keep them overfed and not volatile.
Speaker CBut for those that choose to leave, if you are asking me, how do they consume?
Speaker CWell, the fundamental question here is time.
Speaker CWhen you're burdened and you've given away time, you really have no option but to, to sort of, you know, consume what they, they feed you.
Speaker CSo one must free time because I believe our soul like to look at it again, allegorically, we've got a universe.
Speaker CWe've got the gate that opens into the universe.
Speaker CAnd, and, and as we enter into the universe, the gift that like the actual currency you're given is time.
Speaker CUse it wisely.
Speaker CSo how do you free time?
Speaker CYeah, and that's the big question.
Speaker COnce you are able to start freeing yourself and increase your, your time, I believe, I believe, I believe that now you've got the option to start looking at nuance, like, how do I, how do I eat?
Speaker CI think a deep connection to the land is not only critical, it, it's absolutely essential.
Speaker CAnd I, I think it's connecting with people that have a similar mindset.
Speaker CI think community is important and, and, and little things like learning how to fish, learning how to hunt, learning how to butcher an animal.
Speaker CJust little things that reconnect us back to that algorithm which is, which is nature.
Speaker CI think when I looked at my cattle today, when I went to inspect my cattle, it was beautiful to see.
Speaker CYou know, I put out a little bit of molasses for them for some energetic needs, but the rest of them were just grazing on, on grass in a, in a beautiful open paddock.
Speaker CAnd you know, it's so beautiful to see that there is a bit more of a connection to what I'm going to consume there.
Speaker CAnd whilst not everyone can economically have that freedom, I think we can seek it.
Speaker CWe can seek it.
Speaker CWe are trapped within these enormous mortgages, within Citi, debts to banks that are incredible.
Speaker CYet regional centers offer a much, much lower, you know, entry point into, into land.
Speaker CBut the fear is that we can't leave the city behind or these urban, urban regions behind to pursue that.
Speaker CSo what holds us back towards achieving connection is, is fundamentally fear.
Speaker CAnd, and I can't speak for the herd, I can only speak for those outside the gates or close to the gates.
Speaker CWe have to seek connection to the land like Erasmus did.
Speaker CYou know, I think those sort of hunting courses are beautiful because it sparks something, it spirals into a, into a need to explore something, something greater.
Speaker AYeah, you hit the nail on the head with the time thing because you do need to have time if you're on the grind, you know, 10, 12 hours a day, you know, and then if you have a lot of responsibilities and family to take that time away to go hunt or to butcher an animal, like, it takes time also.
Speaker ALike, as opposed to, I just swung by the supermarket and picked up a couple ribeyes, threw them on the grill and there we go.
Speaker CSo, yeah, I'm not, again, I'm not sort of speaking ill of people that are doing that.
Speaker CAnd I think, you know, seeking meat as sustenance is the first step in realizing connection and the importance of nutrition.
Speaker CIt's a gateway that opens up all these possibilities.
Speaker CFirst to get your health in order through the consumption of nutrient dense foods.
Speaker CIt doesn't necessarily just need to be meat.
Speaker CIt can be, you know, well grown vegetables and fruit that are grown in an organic setting on good soils.
Speaker CThe entry point into that realm outside the gates is nutrition.
Speaker CHow do I nourish my body so that I might free my mind?
Speaker CBut to do that, look, time is a critical thing because people are so energetically depleted after these days that just strip them of their energy and power in these jobs that take away these jobs that take away their autonomy and sovereignty through bureaucracy.
Speaker CI mean, most jobs are so laden with this evil that is metastatic and parasitic bureaucracy that people are just depleted.
Speaker CSo at the end of the day, what they want to do is just pick up a simple meal, order a takeaway, have some alcohol to calm the nerves and some hedonistic treats and so forth, just to be able to regulate themselves.
Speaker CIt's a tragic set of circumstances.
Speaker AYeah, yeah.
Speaker AAnd to the people you were talking about, the ones that are more at the edge of the, of the paddock, you know, that care a little bit more about freedom, I mean, there's levels to the food thing.
Speaker AI'm not saying everyone's going to go out there and hunt and so, sure.
Speaker ADo you even know where your food comes from?
Speaker ALike if you're a meat eater, do you know the farm?
Speaker ADo you know the person who butchered your food as well?
Speaker ASo it's like, sure, you don't need to pick up a rifle or a bow or learn how to hunt, but what are the different levels of it that then go down to the supermarket where you're getting factory farmed meat and you have no clue where it comes from.
Speaker ASo, you know.
Speaker CYeah, absolutely, Absolutely.
Speaker CI think, you know, there's a big difference between a cattle fed in a feedlot that is extremely sick, cramped for room, you know, in its own waste products.
Speaker CLike that, that cattle lives poorly and, and that karma, to use a vedantic philosophy, that that negative energy that that poor animal carries has to translate into, into the consum.
Speaker CSin in putting these animals through that.
Speaker CAnd I'm not saying that I'm absolved of that transgression of holding my own cattle in these paddocks, but largely speaking, they are given an element of freedom and care.
Speaker CYou know, a few cattle I, I picked up from up north and they have, they were held on a farm that were, was super crowded.
Speaker CThey've arrived with liver flukes, skeletal, and I picked them up at a good price, but I will nourish them back to health, you know, on, on the, on the land because I look after my land very, very well.
Speaker CAnd, and that's what this game of farming is.
Speaker CAnd it's not free of sin, trust me.
Speaker CYou know, we, we sell cattle and we separate mum and calf and you know, the, the, the, the, the, the mothers cry in pain for three, four days and it, it absolutely breaks my heart.
Speaker CBut I am aware I'm conscious beef on the shelf, which most people are not, so that, that they would deem a farmer such as myself a cruel man or a hunter a cruel man.
Speaker CYet they've, they've got no clue what, what happens.
Speaker CSo it's a sense of disconnection, a lack of consciousness.
Speaker CTheir perspective is very narrow.
Speaker CAnd, and, and when your consciousness is, is narrow, well, it's not just narrow in the realms of nutrition, it's probably narrow in many aspects.
Speaker CAnd, and this is what, what we're fighting against.
Speaker CIt's, it's that apathy and, and lack of perspective.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker AHow many animals do you have?
Speaker ALike, what does your farm look like?
Speaker AWhat does it consist of?
Speaker AYou know, do you focus on fruit trees as well?
Speaker AVegetables, different types of animals?
Speaker CYeah, look, I've got quite a number of cattle.
Speaker CIt's a quite a large commercial sized farm.
Speaker CI don't grow any crop on it.
Speaker CCropping generally is a very labor intensive process and you know, it's not something that I'm interested in.
Speaker CThere's a few wild fruit trees that grant a few ugly fruit during summer.
Speaker CBut that's the, the beauty of it is when fruit is wild, it's a fairly ugly thing.
Speaker CIt's not this beautiful pretentious thing that you pick up in a supermarket that lacks blemishes.
Speaker CIt's beautiful and tasty, it's nutritious, but it's seasonal.
Speaker CFruit is seasonal on this farm and it's on wild trees.
Speaker CI've got plenty of wild goats here that we've got to control the numbers of them.
Speaker CAnd so I do hunt them, and we gather them sometimes as well.
Speaker CThere's not much money in goats, although I don't quite understand that because there's such an incredible source of protein.
Speaker CDid you try some of that goat that you hunted?
Speaker AWell, yeah, that was the whole thing.
Speaker AThe first day of the five days is we went through the process of.
Speaker AOf hunting and butchering the goat and then that.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker ABut the chef that was there, that's all the meat that we ate was the go.
Speaker APrepared in a bunch of different ways, used for different meals.
Speaker AAnd so, yeah, it's beautiful.
Speaker CBeautiful, delicious.
Speaker AWe actually also, for practice, you know, with.
Speaker AWe had air rifles, and we went out hunting squirrels.
Speaker AAnd the Last day, like, 10 minutes before, you know, we were to finish and, like, head back to kind of of, you know, line things up.
Speaker ALike, I.
Speaker AI shot my.
Speaker AI shot my first animal, and it was a squirrel.
Speaker AIron sights, no scope.
Speaker AI'm proud.
Speaker AI don't know how far away it was, but.
Speaker ABut it was like, whoa, man.
Speaker ALike, that was a real thing.
Speaker AGranted, it's a squirrel, and I have an interesting relationship with squirrels because we have ground squirrels here in Southern California that love to go after our fruits and vegetables.
Speaker AAnd over the years, I've been a little frustrated, so there was that part of me that was like, yeah, use, you know, squirrel.
Speaker AI got you.
Speaker AYou know, and then also, like, man, this is a live animal.
Speaker AAnd no, I.
Speaker AWe decided to.
Speaker AWe decided to process it, and I.
Speaker AI skinned it, and my friend taught me how to kind of clean.
Speaker AIt was pretty simple how to clean a squirrel, and we ended up cooking it that night, and I had squirrel.
Speaker AYou know.
Speaker AThat's brilliant.
Speaker CThat's so awesome.
Speaker CYeah, that's beautiful.
Speaker AAnd it wasn't.
Speaker AAnd it wasn't that bad.
Speaker ASo, you know, it's.
Speaker AIf you told me 10 years ago, in 10 years, I'd be telling you how I ate squirrel, I'd probably be like, really?
Speaker ABut, yeah, I mean, if you're gonna kill an animal, I mean, and especially if it has meat on it, then I feel like on some level, it's your duty to honor the animal and.
Speaker AAnd.
Speaker AAnd eat it.
Speaker ANow, I know hunting and meat eating is controversial to some people, and there are ethical considerations that some people make arguments about, but I don't know, man.
Speaker AI.
Speaker CIt's.
Speaker CIt's only.
Speaker CIt's only ethically controversial or a paradox to those that disconnected, you know, on and on neighboring farms, we've got to, there are, we've got a huge pig problem.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker CAnd these pigs are so destructive to crops, not so much to my property, it's a cattle property, but they're hugely destructive to the fencing that we put in.
Speaker CSo I've got to keep the numbers down.
Speaker CSo we kill a lot of pigs.
Speaker CBut the crop farmers that farm grain, right, which is used to feed the, the pretentious in, in urban regions, right, Those that espouse, that consume a bloodless diet.
Speaker CThe, the whole, whole concept of a bloodless diet is so flawed because there are so many pigs that die in Australia to allow that grain farming to occur.
Speaker CAnd that again goes back to what I said.
Speaker CIt's a sense of disconnection.
Speaker CThey can't preach morality because they don't know the truth.
Speaker CThey're only seeing their get very narrow perspectives.
Speaker CSo I mean, there's so much battles online and I guess I used to sort of get involved with them and so forth, but I, I, I don't get myself involved in them anymore.
Speaker CI just refuse to buy into all that polarity.
Speaker CYou know, I just do what I do.
Speaker AYeah, you do what you do and then you can do what you do.
Speaker AYou know, like, as long as you allow me the freedom to, to live my life the way I see fit, you know, I'll do the same to you.
Speaker AI think the problem is when there's people become a little bit morally superior and virtue signal and, and think they're better than you because, you know, they don't eat meat.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CAnd it, and it speaks to moral absolutism, which I believe is a curse, which a lot of ideologues can do.
Speaker CAnd as Nietzsche said, like, we murdered God.
Speaker CRight, he said that.
Speaker CAnd he didn't, he didn't speak to atheism.
Speaker CHe said we've killed God, like metaphysically, we've got his blood on our hands.
Speaker CWhat, what ridiculous thing will we dream of so we can worship?
Speaker CAnd that's fundamentally what a lot of these moral arguments regarding diet have become.
Speaker CIt's a form of replacing one form of worship with another.
Speaker CAnd that's why they can deal in moral absolutism, which is a very black and white.
Speaker CAs a farmer, I've just explained to you that, that I farm cattle.
Speaker CI am broken when I separate the mother and calf.
Speaker CI go through pain, and yet I gotta do what I gotta do.
Speaker CSo there's many areas of grave there, there is not just, you know, I'm a good man or a bad Man.
Speaker CWell, there's so many, you know, there's so much nuance to that.
Speaker CAnd I think these people that, that argue about the black and white, the light and dark, evil and good, they miss the point.
Speaker CThey've been drawn in by the duality, and that's a problem.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker AThanks, man.
Speaker BNo, I appreciate this conversation a lot.
Speaker BI guess maybe to play devil's advocate a little bit for those that might be listening.
Speaker BYeah, sure.
Speaker BThere might not be such a thing as a bloodless diet, but, I mean, is there such a thing as, like, a reduced level of suffering diet?
Speaker AWell, that, Well, I mean, that's, I think one of the arguments is when people bring up the fact that, like, you know, how many animals, how many gophers, how many squirrels, how many, you know, whatever are, are killed in order to clear fields to grow corn and soy, they're like, well, we're doing less harm.
Speaker AYou know, it's, it's further down.
Speaker CThere's, there's been scientific studies, actually, I think it was done in Australia a number of years ago that shows.
Speaker CI can't remember the absolute numbers off the top of my head, but the amount of death to produce grain and fruit and vegetables is like, many multiples higher than that which is required to feed someone whose diet is primarily meat.
Speaker CYou know, a cattle, one cow could feed an entire family for a year and a half.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker CAs opposed to a bowl of cereal.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker CIf you extrapolate that over the year, I can tell you plenty of animals have died for, for that.
Speaker CAnd, and this is the nuance that people have to grasp that that whole concept of a bloodless diet is, is, you know, it's, it, it just doesn't exist.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker BGot you.
Speaker BAnd what do you think about, like, on, like, an individual karmic level, is there anything that's preferable in terms of.
Speaker BSure, it might not be bloodless to an extent, but when it comes to just the individual consuming something that, you know, it has been more sentient than others, by the way, I agree with you philosophically.
Speaker BI'm just.
Speaker BYeah, the questions back.
Speaker CNo, no, I, I, this is a brilliant question, actually, Joel.
Speaker CI, I have to be honest, you know, that, that I do believe that to reach the deepest, deeper levels, there's an element of sacrifice that needs to occur, whether it's through fasting, abstinence, and sometimes even kind of letting go.
Speaker CTo reach the self, you've got to let go of the ego a bit.
Speaker CA very unsettling journey.
Speaker CVery, very unsettling journey.
Speaker CWhen I eat well, when I exercise, when I consume meat and other nutrient dense foods, I'm very much wrapped up in me pran.
Speaker CI've got to maintain my health.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker CBut if I am to reach that deeper level, there is almost a sense of having to let go of that, you know, And I think fasting is an example of that.
Speaker CYou allow your, you know, prolonged fasting.
Speaker CIn particular, you break down your own muscle, bone fat in the process of reaching an element of clarity.
Speaker CAnd I've said it before, I love aging.
Speaker CI love aging.
Speaker CI love the fact that I'm breaking down, that I'm getting older because there is more clarity in my own decay as my body's as is fundamentally, to use a grotesque term, rotting.
Speaker CI am becoming more clear and conscious.
Speaker CAnd so, you know, I get what you're trying to say, which is that, you know, a lot of these great sages of India and so forth, they eat a plant based diet.
Speaker CI think they do that because they are fundamentally sacrificing their body in the pursuit of, of, of a, a greater an awareness.
Speaker CSo it's a sacrifice.
Speaker AYeah, yeah, interesting.
Speaker AI think, yeah.
Speaker AI think also too know, it's interesting to think about historically.
Speaker AFor so much of human history we were hunters and gatherers and for people to like stand on their pedestals and soapboxes and be like, you know, aren't like a huge part of our history was based on eating meat and to be like all that and where we came from was evil and wrong just seems ridiculous to me.
Speaker CWell, it's anti, it's anti mankind really.
Speaker CLike it's a form of self loathing.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CRemember I said at the center of the paddock where they graze, unwilling to move from where they stand, there is a pain.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker CAnd that pain has to manifest not only through mindless consumption, but a form of self loathing.
Speaker CAnd you will see it in modern day society.
Speaker CI mean I see it all the time.
Speaker CA lot of these disenfranchised people claim that we must coal populations and reduce farming and stop farming altogether, so forth.
Speaker CIt's an anti human rhetoric.
Speaker CIt's a Malthusian mindset which actually deviates from the divine and it's, it's a horrible, horrible way to think about things that we have to respect where we came from.
Speaker CAnd I understand what, what Connor Joel's saying is what is the karmic aspects of, of, of taking another animal's life.
Speaker CI get that and I get that we need to sacrifice to have some clarity, but that whole rhetoric of us not Appreciating our origin, our primal roots.
Speaker CThat to me is a lack of knowledge about the past.
Speaker CAnd a species that is unaware of its history can never create a future.
Speaker CThey are forever trapped in that recursive time loop.
Speaker CAnd it's, it's horrific.
Speaker BIf I can.
Speaker AAnd I also, I just want to real quickly say like I, I have friends that are plant based or vegans and I have the utmost respect for them and they tend to not be ones that look down at me, look down on me as some like evil killer.
Speaker ASo there's a difference there.
Speaker AI think it's those people that are like we talked about earlier, like moral absolutists is where you know, it kind of rubs me the wrong way.
Speaker CAbsolutely.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BIf I can return serve again.
Speaker BI guess your initial comment, your asthmas in terms of, you know, rejecting our history.
Speaker BLike also you could argue that a big part of human history is slavery and human murder and all the rest of it.
Speaker BIt's like does that.
Speaker ANo, I, I hear you man.
Speaker AI mean I don't, I don't claim to have all the answers and nor do I think everyone should hunt and everyone should eat meat.
Speaker AIt's the absolutism that I have an issue with, with in that regards.
Speaker AAnd maybe, I don't know, maybe one day we'll get to a point where we don't eat meat and we don't kill animals.
Speaker ABut again blood will still be on the hands of everyone that eats because things need to die like nothing lives forever.
Speaker AAnd if you're cultivating land, if you're, you know, removing a natural ecosystem to clear away, to grow certain things, there are things that are going to displace and there are things that are going to be, that are going to die.
Speaker CAbsolutely.
Speaker CAnd, and I think we'll reach the stage of a bloodless diet when we transcend our own flesh and blood.
Speaker CWhen our consciousness is fundamentally unlinked from our corporeal bodies is when we establish a bloodless diet.
Speaker CTill then it doesn't matter.
Speaker CEven if nutrition is packed into a pill, that nutrition has to come from somewhere which is the soil.
Speaker CYou know, there is no other way of, of growing nutrition outside of that.
Speaker CSo it's, it's a tricky one.
Speaker CIt's a tricky one.
Speaker CAnd, and the important thing is, is making sure that we don't deliver judgment on, on others.
Speaker CYou know, you do you and I'll do me, but you know, I'm not out here protesting people that choose to eat in a way that, that you know, destroys Farmlands.
Speaker CI'm kind of out here just raising awareness and.
Speaker CAnd that's the end of that.
Speaker CLike, I don't think we're capable of judging another human being.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BThank you, man.
Speaker BWhat is your perspective or I guess, personal relationship with, I guess, death in terms of.
Speaker BI'm talking primarily human life.
Speaker BLike, what is, what.
Speaker BWhat is the real role of the elderly and the death cycle for a human in your understanding?
Speaker CBig question, Joel.
Speaker CI.
Speaker CI've had a fascination with death ever since I was a child.
Speaker CNot a morbid one, but just a curiosity.
Speaker CYou know, I've always been a curious child.
Speaker CAnd as I've grown older, I've lost that curiosity.
Speaker CI was actually reflecting it on.
Speaker COn it yesterday.
Speaker CDuring my 20s and 30s, I lost curiosity and became more rational and became deeply unhappy as a.
Speaker CAs a man.
Speaker CBut since re.
Speaker CSparking my curiosity, I'm very much more childlike in my approach to everything.
Speaker CI ask questions and I research, I read.
Speaker CAnd death, for me has been a source of fascination.
Speaker CI'm actually fascinated about my own impending mortality.
Speaker CAnd some, some people.
Speaker CIt makes some people very uncomfortable when I say that, but I actually look forward to when I die and saying that.
Speaker CI'm not saying that I'm not appreciating life.
Speaker CI'm appreciating every moment, every minute that I spend with my children and wife and people that I love is deeply.
Speaker CIt means something to me.
Speaker CI'm making memories for that repository, which is that deep unconscious.
Speaker CI'm merely a camera, an instrument for something bigger.
Speaker CSo I'm gonna.
Speaker CI'm gonna give that something a great time.
Speaker CI'm gonna give it experience.
Speaker CBut when death finally comes, it's a lifting off the veil, right?
Speaker CBecause gotta remember something, Joel.
Speaker CWe have this vision which we think is immutable, yet we see less than 1% of the, of the, of the, the light spectrum.
Speaker CYou know, we've got these years that hear things, but we hear less than 1% of the auditory spectrum.
Speaker CYou know why?
Speaker CWe are limited by our own five senses, by our own nerves.
Speaker CSo death is an unleashing of your consciousness from the capacitor or the limiter, which is our flesh and blood.
Speaker CYou know, I'm.
Speaker CI'm very fascinated by Vedantic philosophy because it says that your true self is God, right?
Speaker CAnd that sounds blasphemous to anyone who's from an Abrahamic faith.
Speaker CBut even the Messiah, you know, the Redeemer, Jesus Christ spoke to that when the Pharisees were persecuting him.
Speaker CHe said, ye, Are gods, right?
Speaker CAs in there is something divine about every single one of us.
Speaker CAnd I think at the deepest levels, death is a fusion with the self where your consciousness becomes the singularity.
Speaker CAnd that's hard for people to visualize because what I'm fundamentally saying is we are gods, we are a deep awareness.
Speaker CBut people interpret that from an egoic perspective where I'm saying if we are gods, then we are omnipresent and you know, omnipotent and all powerful.
Speaker CThat's looking at it from an egoic sense.
Speaker CI'm saying we are consciousness and consciousness collapses into one awareness.
Speaker CAnd I'm very, very confident of that.
Speaker CAnd people say, well show me the evidence.
Speaker CTo ask for evidence is to ask for a corporeal, reductionistic, data based system that's typical of a world ruled by technocracy with the high pries, the scientists.
Speaker CI'm coming from imagination, I'm coming from the realm of thought and dream and, and myth.
Speaker CAnd you know, it's so interesting to me that almost all religions, when you, when you strip away the commodification of them and the, and the, in the, the levers of control that have been used to control population, they are all basically saying the same thing that you know, we're all just one and you know, and, and love thy neighbor.
Speaker CMakes so much more sense in that context, doesn't it?
Speaker BYeah, definitely, man.
Speaker BIt's interesting to think about that perspective universally in our current, I guess emanation when it comes to like concepts like love thy neighbor, like is everyone worthy of that level of love, you know, despite us all coming from the same source that on some deeper level like what role do behaviors and actions and self responsibility in this existence play in that.
Speaker CIt's beautiful question.
Speaker CI think we have to have boundaries, Jo.
Speaker CI think a existent without existence without boundaries is problematic because you, we, we like Joel for instance, or Pran, your assimilation.
Speaker CWe are, are possessed by specific archetypes, those primal currents.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker CAnd we think we are having thoughts.
Speaker CNo, we are possessed by thoughts.
Speaker CRight, okay.
Speaker CAnd, and this strips away individuality and free will.
Speaker CNow what I'm talking to is, is a deterministic cosmos.
Speaker CSo but once your self starts becoming aware, you can step outside yourself and observe.
Speaker CBut what you'll see is people possessed by darker archetypes.
Speaker CAnd to allow them into your boundaries would mean that you're letting, you know, you're letting problems into your life.
Speaker CSo you need to establish your gates and allow people very selectively into that inner sanctum.
Speaker CSo love them.
Speaker CBut Love them from afar is what I'm saying.
Speaker CDon't unravel your boundaries.
Speaker CI remember a very dark point in my life.
Speaker CAll my boundaries had unraveled.
Speaker CProbably my lowest point.
Speaker CI couldn't go to the shopping mall.
Speaker CI could sense everything around me, me, you know, And I'd look at a person and just weep.
Speaker CI could see their pain and.
Speaker CAnd I'd unravel completely.
Speaker CAnd that's a very, very dangerous place to be.
Speaker CWhat I've learned is to be selective in the way I dive into the deep unconscious.
Speaker CNow I'm back on the vessel upon the ocean.
Speaker CI know my ego.
Speaker CI know myself.
Speaker CAnd some.
Speaker CSometimes this process of individuation carries with it narcissistic traits.
Speaker CYou start when you're starting to understand who you are.
Speaker CYou really have to delve into.
Speaker CInto who you are.
Speaker CSo there's this deep focus on self, right?
Speaker CAnd some people get caught in that recursive loop forever.
Speaker DRight?
Speaker CAnd that is pathological narcissism and.
Speaker CAnd messianic traits, et cetera, that were.
Speaker CThat we've discussed before.
Speaker CBut now when I dive into the deep unconscious, and I do it through the process of active imagination and music, et cetera, not through meditation, I've got an anchor from which I can pull myself out and back onto the ship.
Speaker CAnd that, to me, is my purpose as a man and my duty as a father and a husband.
Speaker AYeah, Fran.
Speaker ASo just because I'm trying to get some clarity here, because, you know, when we talk about oneness and things of that nature, so at the deepest levels, we're all one and we're all connected.
Speaker ABut then in life, you know, we talked about having boundaries.
Speaker AHow can you have boundaries if separation is an illusion?
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker AYou know what I mean?
Speaker ASo, like, what's.
Speaker AWhat's the delineation?
Speaker AIs it like in the realm of ego and flesh and blood, that we are these separate individual beings, and then as we dive deeper, deeper, we connect to that, let's say, that ocean of.
Speaker AOf interconnectedness and oneness.
Speaker CAbsolutely.
Speaker CYou.
Speaker CYou've hit the nail on the head.
Speaker CHead.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker CAnd to.
Speaker CTo dive into those deep layers is not fundamentally, you know, it's not content.
Speaker CIt's not compatible with existence, with life.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker CLike, what use am I to my children if I spent my entirety in meditation?
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CWell, I don't teach them anything.
Speaker CIt's.
Speaker CIt's actually, in a way, it's almost a selfish existence.
Speaker CAnd I do sometimes ponder the lot life of these Buddhist monks that choose solitude.
Speaker CPerhaps they're older souls and, and they're on their final, you know, stages of their reincarnation cycle, whatever it is.
Speaker CBut to me, I need to, I need to have a strong ego.
Speaker CI need to be upon that vessel so I can grant my children the ability to help navigate themselves.
Speaker CIf I'm constantly immersed in these deeper layers, that's fundamentally a form of psychosis and you know, you're almost dead to your society.
Speaker CSo I, my children didn't choose to come into this world.
Speaker CI've brutally snatched them out of a realm of souls and, and given them these bodies of flesh, myself and my, my dear wife.
Speaker CSo it is my duty to kind of equip them with the weaponry to go to war in the, this realm.
Speaker CBecause this realm, this four dimensional reality that we exist in is no utopia.
Speaker DRight?
Speaker CIt's no utopia.
Speaker CWe, we know this.
Speaker CWe, we, we are in a, in a very difficult and dense realm where there is a massive spiritual war being being waged.
Speaker CAnd so I need to be able to equip those I love with the, with the, the shield and the swords to be able to combat that, that.
Speaker AYeah.
Speaker APr.
Speaker AAre you open to the possibility, I'm not saying this for everyone, but when we talk about these individuals from, let's say, the east potentially that are looking to transcend flesh and blood and connect to those deeper layers, that, that ultimately could be a trauma response.
Speaker CYeah, absolutely.
Speaker CIt's a form of dissociation.
Speaker CI think you've hit the nail on the head.
Speaker CAbsolutely hit the nail on the head.
Speaker CAnd I don't mean to speak ill of these spiritual types.
Speaker CI see them on social media a lot, you know, kind of, you know, they're always in the light.
Speaker CThey're always in the light, but you know, they have fundamentally forgotten the dark.
Speaker CAnd Jung said it beautifully, right?
Speaker CWhen we pray to the light and we constantly focus on the light, the dark grows in silence.
Speaker CAnd then where we are forced to go to war, world war, to discover the wretches that we are, you know, and, and that's the issue, mate.
Speaker CI, I, I, I, I think, I think people dissociate from this very, very difficult reality.
Speaker CBut we're here to play this game and play it well, straddle both sides, you know.
Speaker CCan I play within the matrix?
Speaker CIs, is the big question that needs to be asked.
Speaker CRather than existing outside the Matrix, we, we have a responsibility within this difficult realm to the greater self.
Speaker CThe self thrust itself into a difficult zone.
Speaker CIt's like a hall of mirrors where the self walks into a hall of Mir.
Speaker CAnd it's looking at all these reflections which are fundamentally us.
Speaker CBut within that hall of mirrors is one consciousness, and it is trying to learn, but it requires us as an instrument.
Speaker CSo I say, well, use me as an instrument, go for it, because that's what we are.
Speaker CBut to speak like this strips away that whole concept of I'm an individual and I've got free will and so forth.
Speaker CNo, the only free will you've got.
Speaker CWhat is the free will to observe a predetermined set of events that, that, that, that are occurring.
Speaker CAnd that's what synchronicity and deja vu and so forth is.
Speaker CIt's the self having a flashback of something that it programmed itself well before it stepped into the hall of mirrors.
Speaker ASo you don't think we as individuals have free will at all to make certain choices?
Speaker ALike, is it just like a program that's running that's guiding you to, let's say, even say yes to come on the podcast with us again?
Speaker CYeah, no, I, I don't think, I don't think we got free.
Speaker CWell, in the, in, in the way that the Abrahamic fates determine says that if you, you, if you make wrong choices, you burn eternally in hellfire.
Speaker CI don't think that, I think the, the, the actual gain itself has a certain amount of energy within it.
Speaker COkay.
Speaker CAnd it's like any role playing game, you, your character has the ability to make choices, right?
Speaker CBut they're fundamentally predetermined by the programmer of that role playing game.
Speaker CAnd there is a final end point that can be reached and that end point can't really be changed.
Speaker CI think the only free will that we've got is to kind of step back and, and become a bit of an observer of your own life.
Speaker CIt's not dissociation, feel the emotions, but, but understand that your true self pre programmed your fate before it stepped into this game.
Speaker BSo are you saying you think like there's free, there's free will in terms of, there's, there's options that we have to choose from, but there's not unlimited options.
Speaker BThere's a predetermined set of options.
Speaker BAm I understanding that correctly?
Speaker CYeah, that's exactly right.
Speaker CBecause like, if you think about it in, in a fifth dimensional state, like, fundamentally like beautifully done by Kip Thorne and Christopher Nolan and Interstellar right, are such a great movie because there's so many scientific concepts in there that can be broken down.
Speaker CBut when, when he's in the tesseract, you know, which is this Fifth dimensional place where, where time is experienced both, you know, as past, present and.
Speaker CAnd future.
Speaker CYou.
Speaker CHow can there be free will when time in itself is a creation?
Speaker CIn a dimension above us, time is experienced simultaneously.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker CSo within that you can see in the tesseract in interstellar, there is a series of events all kind of filed away.
Speaker CSo a few predetermined choices that he can take.
Speaker CAnd I don't know how many of these predetermined parts there are.
Speaker CThe game is so complex and obviously coded by an exquisite coder or programmer.
Speaker CBut I don't think you're granted free will in the sense of you can rise is above the game.
Speaker CI think there is a certain amount of fate written into our, into our code.
Speaker CYou Carl Jung actually wrote to this.
Speaker CSome of his more esoteric writings are not well known.
Speaker CHe said if you look at a murder victim's true past or the, the part that's been coded for him, you will see that he has chosen to murder himself.
Speaker CAs in the self makes the choices before it sets into the game.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker CFor that particular ego, lots to come.
Speaker AContemplate and chew on.
Speaker BInteresting.
Speaker BTrying to wrap my head around that for sure.
Speaker BYeah man.
Speaker BBecause definitely seems like there's been like key threshold or per chance moments in my life where you know, key decisions could have led me in different directions which are drastically different.
Speaker BYou know, and it seems as though the more that, that I learned to understand myself, the more I build coherence, the more I grow authentic self esteem, the more power I have to make higher decisions in my life.
Speaker BSo maybe more options and more beneficial and better options.
Speaker BMaybe they're always there, but I guess they become more visible and more accessible as you gaze more inwardly.
Speaker BAnd do you know self work?
Speaker CYeah, absolutely.
Speaker CI mean I can see it in your writing.
Speaker CYou're within your psyche.
Speaker CYou're navigating your own psyche.
Speaker CYou've gone within.
Speaker CAnd it's just like the Redeemer said, the kingdom is within.
Speaker CYou're now walking the kingdom, right.
Speaker CYou're navigating these dark beings, light beings, etc, all within the that in that realm.
Speaker CAnd the further in you go, the, the more chances of meeting your authentic self which pre programmed this whole process for you that your authentic self wants something out of Joel.
Speaker CJoel's the ego Joel.
Speaker CJoel's the avatar of flesh.
Speaker CBut your experiences and your emotions go towards the evolution of that little fragment of the self which is your soul, which then leads back into that greater repository that allows it to grow.
Speaker CAnd this is what we struggle Sometimes as a society, as a species, to wrap our head around is that our purpose might be for something greater than ourselves.
Speaker CThan ourselves.
Speaker CSo what I'm speaking to is fundamentally ego dissolution.
Speaker CAnd that makes a lot of what I write about or talk about not so popular because it feels like I'm stripping power away from the individual.
Speaker CBut I think if we thought collectively like that as a species, that there certainly wouldn't be wars, you know, we would kind of work.
Speaker CWork together in a more efficient way.
Speaker CYeah, yeah.
Speaker BIt's interesting the way.
Speaker BThe way that you're framing it, you know, because for me, it's like, I feel as though, I guess from a Randian perspective, that.
Speaker BThat as a society we need to embody more healthy selfishness in the sense that we're currently at a place where we think the most moral thing that we can possibly do is to continually sacrifice ourselves.
Speaker BYet what is the place, the deeper place that that sacrifice is coming from?
Speaker BI feel like it's coming from an external collective moral code that one feels they must adhere to through mechanisms of guilt and obligation, etc.
Speaker CYeah.
Speaker BAs opposed to what if.
Speaker BYou know, the greatest thing that I can actually do for the collective and for humanity is walk this individuation process, which also can be seen as an inherently selfish act.
Speaker BBut for me, it's like.
Speaker BYeah, for me, it's like the more that I become who I am born to be, the more that I tap into the deeper wellspring within me, and I see that.
Speaker BThat reflected external to me in greater purpose and greater mission, you know, despite that from the outset, being a selfish act, to walk away from a family business, to move across the world, to say.
Speaker BTo say no to so much more than I ever have before establishing.
Speaker DThat's right.
Speaker CThat what you've.
Speaker CSorry to cut you off there.
Speaker CGood job.
Speaker CBut just.
Speaker CI've just got the stream of thought which is.
Speaker CYou established clear boundaries.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker CWhich I said was critical.
Speaker CAdditionally, the initial process of individuation to the, to the, to the herd or the sheep appears to be narcissism.
Speaker CThey perceive that as a narcissistic act, you going inward to kind of really understand yourself.
Speaker CBecause these people get their morality externally.
Speaker DRight?
Speaker CBut true morality is only possible once you've really united those aspects of yourself, once you've understood your darkness.
Speaker CTherein lies true morality.
Speaker CAnd so what you're forging is you're, you know, allegorically, you're archetypically, you are Moses going into the mountains to forge these, These.
Speaker CThese commandments.
Speaker CAnd you're doing it for yourself rather than being told to the rest of the herd that you must follow these rules.
Speaker CYou are, you are writing your own rules.
Speaker CAnd, and society will hate the, that they will absolutely hate that.
Speaker CEveryone becomes an Agent Smith within the Matrix.
Speaker COnce you've got an individual doing that.
Speaker CAnd, and the Matrix spoke beautifully, did it.
Speaker CYou know, when, when you've got a member of the herd witnessing someone from outside the Matrix, aware that they were outside the Matrix coming in, Agent Smith would come into that body.
Speaker CEveryone becomes an Agent Smith around these dinner tables.
Speaker CWhen you, we, when you speak of your plans openly and, and the more it goes on, you speak less of your plan because you know that you're on this path for yourself and those that you truly love.
Speaker CBut part of that requires letting go of, of, you know, society's preconceived notions of what love is.
Speaker CThat I must be faithful to my father, mother, brother and sister because, you know, they're my bloodline.
Speaker CWell, no, you respect them, you love them, but you've got your boundaries that allow you to walk this path of individuation because not all people are on that path.
Speaker CYou must protect yourself against the darker archetypes that will continue to keep you trapped within this illusion because that is their role.
Speaker CYou know, when we talk of demons or dark entities, they're not dark so much as they are the sentinels of this program.
Speaker CThey're the ones designed to keep you forever looped in that central of the paddock.
Speaker CThey don't want you getting out.
Speaker CThat's their role.
Speaker CThey were designed for that.
Speaker CBut, you know, once you step outside, those darker archetypes are no longer really dark.
Speaker CSo you just see them for what they are.
Speaker BYeah, that's right.
Speaker BWhich is primarily weak, really.
Speaker CYeah, yeah, yeah, that, that's right.
Speaker CThey don't really have as much power as, as we think they do that, that they were designed for that purpose.
Speaker CIt was like Agent Smith in the Matrix, right?
Speaker CHe was designed to be a guardian within that Matrix and he resented his role but had no way to transcend it.
Speaker CThere was an event in the Part one of the Matrix towards the end where he's liberated from the Matrix and he runs havoc within it.
Speaker CBut fundamentally, again, he's eliminated these things, these archons or sentinels of the simulation.
Speaker CI believe they're truly envious of our ability to see beyond the gap and therein lies our free will, you know, as opposed to these sentinels that lack the free will, you know, we are more dear to the Creator than the angels and demons that patrol this Matrix, if that makes sense.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd it's curious, you know, from the perspective of Earth being a school or a playground, to learn and to evolve.
Speaker BLike, the real role that these sentinels and these Agent Smiths play is, is for the Neos to develop courage, for them to learn their own power, for them to know themselves, for them to build, you know, build upon that as well.
Speaker BLike, Neo never knows himself as powerful Neo, if it isn't for, you know, The Agent Smiths 100.
Speaker CThat's right.
Speaker CAnd Neo's character is the Christ character, and that's what he's built on.
Speaker CAnd Agent Smith is the Antichrist character.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker CBut beyond them is a.
Speaker CIs a unfathomable energy that allows these two polarities to spark up a simulation, to play the game.
Speaker CBecause if Agent Smith didn't exist, you'd have complete utopia.
Speaker DRight.
Speaker CIf the Devil didn't exist, you would have complete utopia.
Speaker CAnd if Christ didn't exist, you would have a dystopia.
Speaker CThere is nothing to be learned from that.
Speaker CIt's through these two polarities that you can spark creation, which allows us souls to be able to navigate and learn and transmute, which then feeds back to the greater self, which.
Speaker CIt in itself is a process of evolution.
Speaker CIt seeks to evolve and grow.
Speaker CAnd we've got, you know, we've got a responsibility to that self to give it a damn good time.
Speaker CYou know, I had this profound moment on the farm where I was sort of deep in thought about these sort of concepts that are often ponder.
Speaker CAnd outside was my wife, and she's.
Speaker CSo in the moment with the three kids playing on the skateboard.
Speaker CAnd.
Speaker CAnd there I was able to step outside myself and think, well, I could either enjoy that moment or go back into my thought.
Speaker CAnd in that liminal space, I had free will.
Speaker CAnd that's where free will exists.
Speaker CIt's not so much that I could go outside and kind of play with her, with them, or be here.
Speaker CIt's that ability to step outside and to be able to observe the actual events that are playing out, which, as I've said, I think are predetermined.
Speaker BAnd.
Speaker BAnd this is.
Speaker BThis is deep.
Speaker BI love how broad reaching this conversation has been.
Speaker BAnd you know, that that friction and that tension that you speak to that exists within that duality, like, that's really the catalyst for all of life, you know, and it's that which most people actually call evil, that which gives birth to life.
Speaker BBecause if it wasn't for that that friction, that tension, that resistance, then growth is not possible on any level.
Speaker CNo.
Speaker CAnd I had this profound moment in the mountains with my son.
Speaker CWe'd just killed a nanny goat and the baby was bleating close by.
Speaker CAnd we didn't realize this nanny had a baby.
Speaker CWe didn't see it.
Speaker CAnd I'd shot it and my son had butchered it.
Speaker CAnd we were sitting there and this baby was bleeding.
Speaker CAnd my son was really like, he was emotional about it.
Speaker CHe knew that we had to harvest meat.
Speaker CWe hadn't eaten good quality protein for about a day or two.
Speaker CAnd you know, we, we, we needed that.
Speaker CBut he said to me, dad, there's a, there's a lot of devil in hunting, isn't there?
Speaker CAnd I said, yeah, absolutely there is.
Speaker CThere is.
Speaker CAnd there's so much wisdom in that little statement, which is that, dad, I love what I do in terms of hunting, but there is the devil in it.
Speaker CSo the, the, the, the light in the act of hunting is that I'm going to feed my family.
Speaker CThe dark in that act of hunting is I've got to take this life, you know, this mother goat's life.
Speaker CAnd that duality allows for there to be a story where a man and a boy can step into these hills and, and, and seek sustenance.
Speaker CWithout those two, there is nothing.
Speaker CSo I think, I think it's critical to understand duality.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BAnd you know, really all personal growth is, is growing the tolerance to withstand both, both, both of those opposites, you know, and absolutely, yeah, most people want to avoid those and shy away from them and yeah, wish, kind of wish upon that they weren't there.
Speaker BBut I think engaging with them deeply and as Russ most often says, learning to sweat between the tension of opposites and building that capacity is what personal development really is.
Speaker CAbsolutely.
Speaker CAnd, and most, a lot of my writing reflects that.
Speaker CYou know, I speak to a man's lust, I speak to a man's rage.
Speaker CYou know, very, very few people can ever speak about me because I'm speaking about myself.
Speaker CRight.
Speaker CI'm essentially unraveling myself.
Speaker CAnd I understand that I contain both dark and light elements.
Speaker CAnd that's what.
Speaker CI'm a reflection of.
Speaker COur Creator, who is the creator of both the light and the dark.
Speaker CAnd therein lies our truth.
Speaker CBecause we are, are closest to the Creator, because we embody exactly that, the light and the dark.
Speaker CWhereas these creations or these emanations that have come forth and we've called them the guardians of the simulation, they don't embody those Halves, and they can never embody those halves.
Speaker CThey serve a purpose to allow the game to exist.
Speaker CAnd I don't mean to reduce it down to a game.
Speaker CIt is not.
Speaker CIt's an exquisite creation that.
Speaker CThat is serving a huge purpose.
Speaker BYeah, man, I just appreciate you so much.
Speaker BI think you're just such a rare individual, you know, to come from such a, you know, conventional medical background in many ways.
Speaker BYeah.
Speaker BNot relinquish you going on your own personal journey, diving into the depths, you know, having this whole hunting branch of who you are as well.
Speaker BI just appreciate the ability to have these conversations and.
Speaker BYeah, man, thank you.
Speaker BThank you so much.
Speaker CMuch.
Speaker CI really appreciate the platform you both have given me to speak on some of these thoughts.
Speaker CI don't do podcasts very much nowadays because everyone kind of just expects me to talk about, you know, eating meat and vegetables and they expect me to kind of, you know, engage that polarity that exists in nutrition and health.
Speaker CI no longer engage it.
Speaker CSo, you know, when you reached out, Joel, I've always loved your.
Speaker CYour writing.
Speaker CI think you're a fantastic writer and, and, you know, both of you guys are just a pleasure to deal with and I'll definitely do it again with you, you guys, sometime in the future.
Speaker BThank you so much, man.
Speaker BWe appreciate it.
Speaker BI guess in.
Speaker BIn closing, is there anywhere that you'd like to direct our audience to engage with you further or to, you know, consume your content to a bigger capacity?
Speaker CYeah, sure.
Speaker CLook, I.
Speaker CI write a lot of my thoughts on my.
Speaker COn my Instagram profile.
Speaker CI think it's an instantaneous platform in which to kind of push these thoughts out.
Speaker CI'm working on a book, but that'll be some years away, I think, think.
Speaker CYou know, I'm not in a rush to push that out, but my, you know, handle is Pran Yoga Nathan, which is just my name.
Speaker CAnd, you know, I.
Speaker CI speak to a varied variety of topics.
Speaker CPhysics, metaphysics, light, dark, etc, and I just post whatever comes to mind.
Speaker BYeah, yeah, man, I, I love your content, you know, especially like your poetry.
Speaker BIt's just.
Speaker BParticularly in today's day and age, I think, with the continual.
Speaker BThe continual rise of.
Speaker BOf the homogenization that's taking place with AI in particular.
Speaker BSo.
Speaker BBreath of fresh air for sure, man.
Speaker BSo keep doing you.
Speaker BI definitely recommend people to go check you out on Instagram and yeah, we'll do it again one day for sure.
Speaker BEveryone else, thank you for listening.
Speaker CThank you guys.