Is the school system failing our kids? 🚨 Tune in now for the alarming evidence and thought-provoking insights on the Digital Social Hour with Sean Kelly! In this eye-opening episode, we dive deep into the outdated educational systems and the impact of
Loading summary
A
Hey, music fans, there are some great concerts headed this way. Don't miss out on all the shows in your favorite venues like Deftones at Madison Square Garden, Eagles at the Sphere, and Foster. The people at the Ryman Auditorium. Tickets are going fast, so don't wait. Head to livenation.com to get your tickets. Now that's livenation.com I don't feel like it's right for the school system to really tell you it's circumstantial. We toured Egypt. We went in the Great pyramid. We went in the bent pyramid, the red pyramid. We went to so many places. Something that is a once in a lifetime opportunity for somebody. Compare that to seven days of sitting in class and looking at the chalkboard with the teacher writing on it. I'm still gonna do what. What I feel is right for my child. And if that means I have to fight the school system, then I will.
B
All right, guys, Part two with Elizabeth Carson. Man, we pissed off the Internet with that video game.
A
I know, I know. People are very angry about it. I know. I made some gamers really mad.
B
Wow.
A
Yeah, I was just talking about a study. So it's just literally fact. So there really is a study that compares an alcoholic's brain to a gamer's brain. So, I mean, it's just facts.
B
It's hard to argue with studies. I mean, video games really affect your brain.
A
They do, they do. And I'm not even against video games. Video games like that. I'm just against the overuse of video games. So I just, you know, my son, I have a time limit for him, but I game too. So it's not like I can really. You know, I'm not saying it's a horrible thing. I'm just saying we need to watch it because the young brain is not equipped for all the stimulus of video games. And to be playing it all day long. The brain is expecting that stimulus, stimulus, stimulus, stimulus, which is providing the brain dopamine hits. So now the brain is expecting all of these dopamine hits all the time. And if they're not getting it all the time, like in sitting in school reading books, then they're gonna add. They can't focus. They're everywhere. They're. They're pissed off now. Now they have crazy mood swings and, and they're overactive. I mean, these are all symptoms of probably playing too much video games. I mean, the screens are babysitters.
B
Yeah. They're giving kids iPads at 8 years old.
A
Yeah.
B
IPhones.
A
Yes.
B
There's a lot of Apps and games.
A
Yeah, yeah. It just, you know, it's not, it's not great because when I was young and I don't know, I think I was, was 12. I remember gigapets. Do you remember Gigapet?
B
No, I remember Neopets. I don't remember Gigapets.
A
Okay, so it was probably Neo was probably after. But it were like these tiny little things that you would carry around and you were basically raising a little digital animal.
B
Oh, is that Tamagotchi?
A
Yes.
B
Okay.
A
Yes, yes, I remember that. So I remember that as a child and being so obsessed, obsessed with taking care of this little digital animal. So to even think of the, the games that we have nowadays, like Fortnite and Minecraft, it's like I can't even imagine being enthralled in that as a 7, 8, 9 year old. Right. It's just so interesting. And then you move from that to, oh, now you have to read a book. I mean, no kids want to read books anymore. It's not giving them what the game is giving them. So I'm just trying to show. Be devil's advocate for, you know, the other side.
B
Monitor that for sure.
A
Yes.
B
Yeah. Games are dangerous and what they're teaching in school. Now I remember one of the clips when you got in trouble for pulling your kid out. The comments were crazy on that one.
A
I know. Yeah. I, I pulled Gabriel out of school while we went and toured in Egypt because we take people to Egypt every year. And you know, the school system got really mad. Well, they didn't get mad at me, but it's like he missed so much school within a short period of time that I got in trouble. And so they were about to set a court date and do all these other things if he were to miss one more day within that semester. So I was just like, you know what? So, you know, Billy and I made a different decision for next year. We won't be sending him to public school anymore. But I just was speaking on the fact all around that I don't feel like it's right for the school system to really tell you. Like if I think it's. It just. It's circumstantial. Right. So for us, we took Gabriel all in the pyramids. Right. We toured Egypt. We went in the Great Pyramid, we went the Bent pyramid, the Red Pyramid. We went to so many places and he was able to experience all of these beautiful things in Egypt. Right. Something that is a once in a lifetime opportunity for somebody. Now compare that to seven days of sitting in Class and looking at the chalkboard with the teacher writing on it. You know what I'm saying?
B
Yeah.
A
Like, which experience is going to give you more life? Information, knowledge, education? I think that Egypt will. So no matter what, I'm still gonna do what I feel is right for my child. And if that means I have to fight the school system, then I will. Like, I don't think there's anything wrong with that. And, you know, I just, I feel like they need to change their ways because it's not working. I mean, every, all of these systems, they're in old school ways. It's like the world is changing and these systems need to catch up with the world.
B
They're going to have to change because a lot of conscious parents now are pulling their kids out.
A
Yes.
B
Every year the numbers are getting more and more.
A
Yes, it is. Yes, it is. Exactly. Because, I mean, first of all, they're teaching old information that's not even relevant anymore. They're teaching old history. I remember when I was in school, a cell was just a round thing with a nucleus, you know, and now we find out it's just so much more. Right. So it's like, you know, it's just so different. We just have to catch up to the world, how the world is advancing. I don't think that all these systems are advancing with it.
B
Yeah, they need to redo history class. A lot of their stuff is so, like, skewed one way also.
A
Absolutely. Absolutely. And I feel like it's whitewashed.
B
It's whitewashed.
A
They program a certain, A certain narrative.
B
They, they teach you that America's like the greatest and all this stuff. They never teach the bad side about it. No, they just brush over it.
A
Exactly. Well, that's, that's media, that's school. That's all of these, these different systems that are trying to program us to, you know, fit into their little way of. The way they, they want us to be.
B
Yeah.
A
And it's been working for a very long time. And I, I'm seeing the change now. People are starting to wake up.
B
Yeah, it's exciting, I think, because of social media, actually.
A
Absolutely.
B
There are pros to social media.
A
Yeah. Yeah, I do think there are definitely pros because now everything is like on blast. Like, you can't do anything without it being on blast.
B
And right now what's on blast is politics. I know, but I noticed you and Billie never post politics.
A
No, no. You know what I mean. I'm so happy Billy feels the same way as I do. I mean, I grew up with a Republican father and a Democratic mother and they got along perfect. But it was just so interesting for me to see both sides and just to know that, that I just don't. I'm just not in that system of the way that they run things because in my mind they have no real power. Right. Like the president. Like all this madness about let's vote for the president. He has no, he's the puppet, he is the one that's the face. But these people over here are pulling his strings. So it's like, why, why, why am I feeding into this that is going to change my life. I don't think that it'll change my life because no president has ever changed personally my life. I feel the same way as Billy. Billy says he's the president of his own person. He's the president. I'm the president too. So I run my own life the way that I would like to run my life.
B
Yeah. Some people get so emotional over, it's, I know, crazy to me and.
A
I know, but that's what, you know, what people's opinions, it's like, that's what makes life so dynamic. And people get so triggered. They're like, oh my God, how dare you say. It's like, come on, man. It's just the way that I feel and think, you know, like, you don't have to hate me because I have a belief that's different from yours.
B
Yeah.
A
I love people that have different belief system. It's interesting.
B
I think it's interesting. And a lot of people react triggered like you said.
A
Yeah.
B
I've had to remove that completely. Like that never happens to me anymore.
A
Yeah.
B
You know.
A
Yeah. I want to be open on social media. That's the only.
B
Yeah. I need to be open minded because you know, my opinions can change.
A
Exactly, exactly. As more life experiences happen, opinions will change. Of course.
B
Yeah. Like 10 years ago, like I didn't want kids. Like all my friends were like, yeah, we'll never have kids. But yeah, you know, as you get older, you, you seek purpose.
A
Exactly.
B
And kids are a great way of that.
A
Absolutely. Absolutely. Yes. My kid is, is my whole world.
B
Absolutely. And you were a single mother for a bit, right?
A
Yes, I was a single mother for, wow, eight and a half years. Which was the most rewarding but challenging mission of my life. Just because it's. The struggle is real.
B
Right. Because you had to make money, you had to raise the kid at the same time.
A
Yes. And teach the kid to be a whole great human being while you're stressed out trying to make a life, you know, and money. So it's very difficult, especially for unconscious people who cannot catch themselves when they're triggered, because that's when you get a lot of parents that are in stress. A lot of time, they'll take out their stress on the child, and that comes in beating and yelling and screaming and cussing out. And, you know, it's really not about the child. It's about their bad day at work.
B
Right.
A
So, you know.
B
No, that's so true.
A
Yeah.
B
A lot of parents take it out on their. On their kids.
A
Yeah.
B
And they don't. Some of them don't even know I know.
A
No, a lot of them don't even know a lot of them, because if they knew better, they would do better.
B
Right.
A
So since I know better now, I do better. But for instance, the first maybe five years of my son's life, I was not conscious.
B
Wow.
A
So I was taking out anger, stress of my day on my son. Unconsciously, I didn't know any better, but I would be reactive about something that he did. And then all my anger that I was holding in from the day because I don't want to get in trouble with my boss and let it out on my boss. Now that comes out on child.
B
And that's so many people.
A
Yeah.
B
You know.
A
No, it's every day. It's every day, all day. And so, I mean, consciousness, we have to come into awareness because that's what creates these generational curses, is because, you know, the parent yells at the kid and beats the kid, and now the kid grows up thinking, oh, this is how I receive love. I beating. Right. So now the kid's gonna beat his wife, and then now the. The child of that family is going to see the beating. And then, you know, it's just a cycle. Yeah, it's a cycle.
B
On my dad's side, it was physical. So he grew up on a farm, got beat up. And my mom's side, the Asian side, was verbal, like education and all that.
A
Yeah.
B
So I got both traumas.
A
Oh, my God. Yeah. Yeah.
B
I had to break that curse, though.
A
Yes. Yes. Because you come into consciousness, and it's a beautiful thing. It really is a beautiful thing. I take my trauma and all of the things that I experienced as a young child and young woman, and I. I love my trauma because they made me who I am today.
B
Right.
A
I would not be as strong as I am, as focused, as. As driven as I am today, if I didn't experience all of the bullshit that I experienced a lot of the.
B
Most successful people have trauma.
A
Oh, yeah.
B
A lot of deep trauma.
A
Tons.
B
Almost everyone I know, at least.
A
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, because it really wakes you up. Trauma woke me up. I was in so much pain, so much anguish, I wanted to die.
B
Wow.
A
Yeah. And I just figured out one day it was like, boom. It hurt so bad. I was like, something clicked at me and shifted. And it was one thing in my mind. It was like, wow, my thoughts. I was like, I can control my thoughts. I was like, so that means I can control my moods. So that means I can observe my thoughts. So that means I'm not my thoughts. This was a one day thing. I was running around my house like, oh, my God, you guys control your thoughts. I wrote in my journal. I was reading my journal from years ago and I was writing like, we are not our thoughts. We are the observer of our thoughts. And if we are not our thoughts and our thoughts create emotion, then we can control our emotion. Now we can control everything. It was like a big boom that clicked in my head.
B
I love that. And then from there, you surely met Billy after, right?
A
Yeah, yeah. Well, I met Billy about seven years after my awakening.
B
Oh, so a good amount of time.
A
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I met him. I was working at a mental health facility and we had brought him in to do a show on the mental health facility for Better Knowledge tv. And so that's how.
B
Oh, that's awesome.
A
Yeah.
B
Was that in Miami?
A
No, it was actually in Detroit.
B
Oh.
A
Yeah. We actually flew him in from Florida come Detroit. I was living in Detroit at the time. And yeah, he came in and. And yeah, did a show.
B
And you had the right energy to attract him into your world because he gets pulled in so many directions.
A
Yes. It was so funny because I was the one that actually reached out to him. I had no idea who he was, so I reached out to him just to book him to come to the facility. And I was like, you know, I'll be here this weekend if you want to come this time or if you want to come this time. You know, my assistant will be able to be able to take care of you. And he's like, no, I'm going to be there when you're there. I was like, oh, okay.
B
I was like, that's his way of flirting. I love it. That sounds like him.
A
I would be there when you're there. Like, okay.
B
I love it.
A
Yeah. Yeah.
B
You guys just had an amazing wedding, right?
A
Yes. And Bora Bora. We had a wedding in Bora Bora. It's about to be a year, actually. December 4th.
B
Beautiful. Time flies.
A
I know. It really does. Wow.
B
What's that relationship evolution been like? Because that's where you really get to get to know yourself.
A
Oh, man. You know what? I'm just so grateful to have met, you know, someone that is just understands me and works with me and gives me what I need, because so many relationships I've had, they just, you know, something's missing. It's always something's missing. And with him, it just feels like everything just fits like a puzzle and it's complete.
B
Right.
A
And we've definitely grown together a lot because, you know, he didn't really know too much about trauma and, you know, the emotional healing. So I was able to teach him about that as he was taught me about everything else that he's taught me. So we've grown together in that way because he's worked on a lot of his trauma. And, you know, that's my life's mission, is to keep working on myself and optimizing, getting better, better, better every day, and that's what he's doing. So we've really grown together since we've been together, and I've seen it in him, and it's beautiful.
B
Yeah, that is beautiful. Because sometimes relationships can enhance the trauma.
A
Yes. Yes. Sometimes relationships are toxic. So, you know, you meet. You're. You're. You have a toxic bond with that person. And, you know, people think that it's a good relationship because it's so fiery. Right. There's that spark. People talk about the spark all the time, but I think that spark is trauma. Like, that spark is, like, not. I don't think that. That when you get that spark.
B
Puppy love stage.
A
Yeah. I don't think that you should really follow the spark too much because that's trauma. Like, you know, it's like, oh, this is exciting. It makes me feel like, oh, I'm. You know, adrenaline, that stress hormones being released, like they're causing some sort of something, and you just spark up and now you're all excited, but, you know, it's just toxic. Relationships can take you down in a really horrible way.
B
Oh, for sure.
A
Yeah.
B
They say you're actually attracted to people with similar trauma as you.
A
Yeah. No, you are. Well, you know what it is? I think that we attract what we haven't learned. So let's say, for instance, me, when I was a teenager, I was in a horrible relationship with one of the biggest drug dealers of Michigan. And it was horrible. It was abusive mentally, physically, emotionally. It was just. It Was all the way bad. And I was in a very traumatic state. I did not know what trauma was. I was wounded severely inside emotionally feeling empty. I was, you know, doing a lot of drugs and I was out partying. So I was attracting people that were kind of in that realm of energy. Right. So I didn't learn my lesson through that relationship. I broke up and then got into the same relationship with another person. It was like the same thing, another huge drug dealer. And it was just basically the same relationship in another body. And that's what you'll continue to do until you learn your lesson. And then once you learn your lesson within the relationship, then that cycle is broken and you can meet another partner, which is different, that will teach you different lessons.
B
Wow.
A
Yeah.
B
It's crazy how the universe will test you like that.
A
Yeah.
B
But you see it so many examples. Like, I used to have a lot of girl, like, friend girls I was friends with.
A
Yeah.
B
In college. And they would just keep attracting like.
A
Or. Yeah.
B
I always wondered, like, why.
A
But they have not learned their lesson. Well, trauma will make a person want someone like a drug dealer. It's exciting, you know, it's, it's. It just stimulates something within that person. Right. And so it's like you want that bad boy when you're not healed. You want that fiery relationship when you're not healed because you like the drama. You're addicted to your stress hormones that are being released. You look for that hit of drama like your body really does get addicted to it. So if anyone is in a toxic relationship, they might want to turn themselves back on themselves and see, am I really addicted to these feelings? Am I searching out things to cause big blow ups and toxic, you know, conversations? People do that because their bodies are physically addicted to the adrenaline cortisol that is released during a stressful moment. So they'll unconsciously look for issues that will cause these big blow ups.
B
Absolutely. You see that in, you know, high school with the cheerleaders going after the football guys.
A
Yeah.
B
Classic example.
A
Exactly. Exactly.
B
A lot of new videos on semen retention.
A
Yes. Semen retention. I believe that men, men should definitely learn how to do this, because as men release semen. Right. First of all, your testosterone plummets completely. Semen, I believe, for a man is his life force energy. So the more it's released and released and released and released, you're losing energy each time. Not only are you losing life force energy, you're losing your testosterone. So if you can learn semen retention, it is so much healthier For a man. A man can still orgasm. And a man can orgasm for a long time longer than if he is to release his semen. So men can have hour long orgasms. I've read about it. Yes. That sounds crazy. I actually read about this one guy that had an hour long orgasm and he said it was awful, it was too much. Make it stop. It was like really bad. So I wouldn't recommend.
B
Yeah, an hour is pretty insane.
A
It's too much.
B
I think a minute's pretty long.
A
An hour is an hour.
B
Oh my God.
A
But semen retention, that's what you can train your body to do. Now men are able to have multiple orgasms or longer orgasms. You know, you can kind of control it. And then after you have sex, it's like you're not tired, you're not. Your legs aren't shaky, your knees aren't weak. Now you can go play a full game of basketball and win.
B
So for men, you recommend. What about women?
A
Women, I mean, women. I recommend women have nine places that we can orgasm from. And if a woman can experience a cervical orgasm, I think that woman will become enlightened. That's when women see God.
B
What?
A
Yes.
B
Cervical. Where is that?
A
Cervical orgasm. So it's deep. That's deep within.
B
Is that the G spot?
A
No, it's deeper.
B
Deeper than the G spot.
A
Cervical. It's deeper inside. Yes. The cervical orgasm literally makes your whole. Whole body. Your whole body orgasms.
B
And you saw God?
A
And you see God. You can see God. Women have become enlightened over this. Over this.
B
I need to look into this.
A
Yes, it's called a cervical orgasm.
B
Yeah. I've never heard people talk about that one.
A
Kim, Kim Anami. She's a sexologist. I think she's a sexologist. But she talks a lot about it. A lot about it. And she talks about her experience in seeing God. I think that's how she became enlightened.
B
Damn.
A
A cervical orgasm.
B
So were you on psychedelics or just naturally you saw them?
A
No, no. You know what it is? It's like, it's natural. It was natural.
B
Wow.
A
But it's like psychedelics, it's like you be. You see the oneness. Like you become one with everything. It's like it brings you to the place that psychedelic, Psychedelics will take you.
B
That's interesting.
A
Yeah.
B
And you don't label yourself religiously, but you do believe in a God?
A
Yeah, yeah, I believe there's a God. I believe there's a creator God, Source. I don't know.
B
All the same, I'M the same way. I won't label myself.
A
Yeah.
B
Like, everyone asks, like, what I like, Christian or whatever, but I just say I'm, you know, open.
A
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I'm very spiritual. I believe that there's a lot behind the veil that we don't see. I believe that, you know, I just. I. I know that there's a creator.
B
Yeah.
A
I know there is. There has to be. Yeah. But I know I'm part of that. Right. I'm part of that brilliance. I'm part of the one. So in my mind, we are all gods walking on the planet. We're all gods working.
B
Yeah. Billy says that all the time.
A
Yeah.
B
Yeah. And Anaki.
A
Yeah.
B
That was a good premiere, by the way.
A
Oh, thank you.
B
You guys crushed it with that premiere.
A
So good. Yes. Thank you so much.
B
Yeah. Super impressed.
A
It's been great. All the premieres have been sold out and we're looking forward to season two, so.
B
Can't wait. When does the full season one come out? Is it out yet?
A
We filmed it all, so I think it will be out completely by December. We're trying to drop the episodes very sporadically because, as you can see, the episode, it's just like a mini docu documentary.
B
It took a lot of digestion, so.
A
A lot of people are going to take weeks to digest one episode.
B
That's true. That's not a show you could just binge watch, like the new Game of Thrones.
A
No. There's so much. So much information.
B
Yeah. I'm super careful what videos I watch now.
A
Yeah.
B
Because I know how much programming and, like, stuff goes into those.
A
Yeah.
B
Like TV shows, movies.
A
Yes. You know what? I went through that stage, Sean, it's so funny you say that, because after I realized that I was not my thoughts. Right. I went into this whole phase of when you become enlightened, you kind of come unbalanced. Right. And then you kind of fall back into balance. So there was a period of time, two, three years where I didn't watch tv, I didn't listen to music.
B
Wow.
A
I was only reading books and researching and listening to podcasts and books. Like, I. I was only on my knowledge road. Right. And I was like. I used to love horror movies. You know, I was a horror movie buff.
B
I used to be, too.
A
Yes. But it's. It is bad for your consciousness.
B
Oh, I used to have nightmares.
A
Yeah. Yeah.
B
And it was from those. No, I literally had nightmares every day.
A
Really?
B
But I loved horror.
A
But you loved horror movies.
B
Love them.
A
Right. So it must have been Something in you. You know what? Can I analyze that for a second? So that must have been something. How old were you?
B
This was probably high school. College.
A
High school, College. Okay, so when you were a child, you said you got verbally abused and physically abused, right?
B
Not my mom slapped me. But yeah.
A
So it's just not. It was like a little. You were probably real stressed. Were you stressed as a child?
B
Yeah.
A
Yeah. So your body might have went into something called freeze. And that's when you kind of disassociate from yourself. Right. So a horror movie would be something exciting for a person in freeze. That's what I'm talking about. These relationships, when people want to, you know, get in toxic relationships and create these big fights, and they love it. It's kind of like the same thing because their bodies are in freeze. Their bodies are looking for something to feel because they can't feel on a normal basis.
B
Right.
A
So maybe you would have been in something like a freeze state because of some trauma from childhood, which is very common. A lot of us are walking around in freeze and fight or flight. Fight or flight. More common than freeze. But a freeze person will look for things to excite them, like a horror movie or a fight or, you know, just unconscious things that will trigger that, you know, feeling within them.
B
I definitely was in that because I would put on the scariest movies. Like, I would look them up. Top 10 scariest movies wouldn't get phased.
A
Yeah.
B
And then I'd show it to a girl or a friend of mine. They would jump.
A
Yeah.
B
So I was definitely dissociating.
A
Yeah.
B
Disassociated with every emotion, too. I would watch, like, sad videos. Wouldn't feel anything. Happy videos.
A
Yes.
B
I probably didn't laugh for years, like.
A
You know, and that's what's so sad about so many people, because they don't even know that they're in the state. They just are looking for something to feel.
B
Yeah.
A
And I can only relate because I was in freeze for basically my whole life. Damn. So that's why I was in these relationships with these huge drug dealers getting beat up.
B
Looking for, like, adrenaline.
A
Yeah, it's adrenaline. But I was unconscious. But I wanted to feel and I wanted to feel anything. So pain and hurting was better than nothing.
B
Wow. So that's deep.
A
A lot of people are. Are in that state.
B
Damn.
A
Yeah.
B
Did you forgive those guys?
A
Yeah, of course I did. Yeah. I mean, you know what? It's like, it's interesting because I see where their lives are now, and I see where my life Is now. And it's just like I'm. I'm grateful for and what they've taught me.
B
Lesson, right?
A
Yes.
B
Yeah. Because some people hold on to that.
A
Oh, yeah. No, it's deadly. Yeah, I, I really am grateful because they taught me what I don't want. They taught me. They just taught me so much and so many lessons. And I love that mindset.
B
So many people talk bad about their ex.
A
Yeah.
B
No, I hate. I actually, when people do that to me, I don't like that.
A
Yeah, no, it's like a red flag to me. Yeah. I don't, I don't. I don't tend to. Because I don't. I mean, I was in it.
B
Yeah.
A
It's like, you know, I'm talking bad about myself and I'm talking bad about my ex. Right. I was in that.
B
Right.
A
So I associated. I'm talking crap about. You know what I realize it's a.
B
Bad look when they talk negatively about their ex.
A
Anybody.
B
Friend.
A
Anybody.
B
Because that means you're going to talk badly about me.
A
Exactly. Exactly. Yeah.
B
That's the biggest red flag. Me, I cut people off when they do that.
A
Oh, yeah, yeah. If someone's talking to you about their friend, like. Yeah. Okay.
B
Yeah. They got much learning to do.
A
Yes.
B
The karma side.
A
Absolutely.
B
Because you're going to manifest everything you're saying exactly into your life.
A
No, they do. You see, people are manifesting all day and every day, Whether it's good, bad, ugly, normal. This is all a manifestation. We manifest as we move throughout our days. That's just what we do. We manifest through thought process and then action. So everything is a manifestation. Everything.
B
You got to be careful too, because your brain doesn't know jokes.
A
Exactly.
B
When you say, like, I'm dead, like.
A
Your brain does not know jokes. And your brain does not know if something is not real. So if you're sitting back, right, and you're meditating and you're imagining something, that it's real. It's real in your brain. And your brain starts releasing these chemicals and hormones that will make you feel these ways. That's why we're so powerful as beings. Right. It's because we. We all just want to be love and in peace. Right? And if we can learn to take back our power and recreate that within ourselves and not needing anything outside of ourselves to make, to create that feeling within us, that's real power. Now you need nobody and you need nothing. So we feel all these emotions inside. Right. These people are just a mirror for our emotions. So that love Feeling when you're like, whoo, I'm in love. Like you get that deep feeling. You're creating that feeling, not the person. Your body is creating that. So if you can learn to create that on your own without the body, then man power.
B
Absolutely. Do you feel like our powers are being suppressed?
A
I absolutely feel like our powers are being suppressed by so many different systems. Especially one because. No, no. A couple. The stuff they're putting on our food, right. And our water, our light is toxic. I mean, old infrastructure, like Detroit, where I'm from, old infrastructure, asbestos, lead based paint, lead in the water. I mean old water pipes.
B
It's just mold everywhere.
A
Horrible, horrible. And this is all neurotoxins. So now we wonder why these kids are growing up and having all these issues. They can't think, they can't graduate there in the streets. I mean, why? Of course, because they're living in a toxic home, they're going to a toxic school, they're going back home to a toxic environment. And then now we expect these people to succeed.
B
Yep.
A
How?
B
And they're eating toxic food.
A
Toxic food. I mean, why do we have to add all of these chemicals into our foods? It's ridiculous. You know, I was drinking Celsius for a short period of time and I think was like a week because I really didn't have any energy. I wanted to get back on my workouts and I was drinking it and then the next week I was like, wow, I want to Celsius so bad. And it was like, I want to sell, like I wanted one. So I was like getting addicted to Celsius. It's like, yo, what are they putting in this stuff to make us addicted after a week? Wow. Yeah, it's, I mean, it's really, really crazy.
B
It's bad.
A
And the amount of drugs that, that, that these systems are giving to, to kids, adolescents, I mean, it's, it's, it's horrible.
B
It's bad.
A
Yeah, horrible. And you know what? I have a personal experience with one of the systems that's really, really causing us to stay unconscious and be controlled. Little sheep. Because so my father went in to get knee surgery, right? And he went in to get knee surgery and a week later he died.
B
Geez.
A
From knee surgery. When my brother was a very young child, he was having issues and the doctor didn't catch what that issue was, which led to him having kidney failure, which led to him needing kidneys at a very young age. So my mother actually gave him one of her kidneys. They were a match like, they're not even blood related, too. This is crazy. And now he's had to live with this illness for the rest of his life. And he's been on dialysis now for eight and a half years because his kidney is failing. They don't last forever. And I watch him take hundreds of pills every single day. And I. I'm looking at these pills and I'm looking at him, and he's a shell of who he used to be. And it's like the system, they're. They're telling him that he needs to lose weight to be able to get this kidney transplant, but yet he can't drink a lot of water, he can't eat certain fruits, and he can't. He can eat, you know, grains and pasta and rice. And I'm like, if he's fat and big and you won't give him the surgery, why are you telling him to eat pasta and rice, you know, when he should be eating vegetables and fruits, trying to drop? You know what I'm saying? So it's like the. The. The Western medicine is just so backwards in my mind because they just want to keep you between sick and healthy so they can collect their paycheck every single month. So therefore, they won't give you what you need to actually heal the root of the problem. They treat symptoms. Symptoms treating is band aiding. So you're putting a band aid over your problem. You never get to the root of the problem. The system. Right. What system is going on? You're only treating the symptom, so the symptom can always be there because they never treat what the root is. So now you just literally have to go get your pills every month. And what does that mean? That's money. It's just money. They have capitalized health.
B
They've capitalized 98 margins.
A
Yes.
B
Crazy.
A
Yes.
B
They charge, like, thousands for stuff. They make for, like, sense.
A
Do you know that my migraine medicine costs like thirteen hundred dollars for, like, three pills?
B
What?
A
Yes.
B
For migraine?
A
Yes. Yeah.
B
Probably make it for a dollar.
A
That's what I'm saying.
B
Crazy.
A
Health care should be free for everybody. For everybody.
B
Yeah. No, it should be a lot of countries. It is, right?
A
I'm really not sure. I think it is. Yeah. Like, I see it. I scroll and see it. I try not to look because it makes me.
B
No, I have heard America's like, the most expensive.
A
Yeah. No, the most expensive. I just. I don't get it. It's like, we should take care of our people. We have the resources. Right? We send billions of dollars over to other countries to help them. So why can't we help our own people.
B
Yeah.
A
That are sick and in the streets? Why are people hungry? Why are people homeless? What is the reason for this? If we're sending billions and trillions of dollars over to other countries to support wars, we can't support our people. It doesn't make sense in my head.
B
Super weird.
A
Why is there people on the street? There's enough houses, apartments, resources for no one in this country to be hungry, no one in this country to be homeless. No one in this country really to be stressed. These are basic needs. As long as people's basic needs are taken care of, the low level stress is gone. But if people have their basic needs not taken care of, they are stressed and they're walking around in a state of fight or flight nonstop. Cortisol, adrenaline, hormones always releasing. Now they create an autoimmune disease. Now they're getting sick. It's just, it's, it leads to disaster 100%.
B
And a lot of people live that way. Paycheck to paycheck.
A
Yes.
B
I'd say if you're living paycheck to paycheck, the odds of being stressed are probably about 50%.
A
I'd assume your basic needs are not taken care of. There's always low level stress there. I was a single mother and I was living paycheck to paycheck and there was always low level stress. Even when I was having a great day, there was always a low, low stress.
B
Subconsciously, you're like thinking about the next payment.
A
Exactly. Like, when are you going to eat next? Are you going to be able to pay this bill? Are you going to be able to keep your car this month? You know, it gets hard, but it doesn't need to be this way. I don't feel like it needs to be this way. I feel like all of our basic needs should be taken care of and our health should be taken care of. We have the resources.
B
We do. I mean, look what you built. You built an empire here and you barely even talk about money. I noticed.
A
No, yeah.
B
Like, it just.
A
Money is just an exchange of energy to me.
B
Yeah. So if you're just providing great energy, you think money can come out?
A
Oh, yeah. If you find a problem, you solve it. And you're. You have good intent behind that. I really feel like the, the universe will bless you. You know, I don't pay attention to money. I've never paid attention to money ever. I mean, I would have that low level stress like, worried about how I'm going to pay this or how I'm gonna pay that. But at the same time, I never really hyper focused on money in general because I feel like if you don't have any and you're hyper focused on the fact that you don't have any, then the universe is going to give you that right back. They're going to give you a bunch of lack.
B
Yeah.
A
So. And then if you're hyper focused on your riches and like, oh, my God, I got to keep my riches. And it's this. It's like that creates a whole nother ego thing. So it's. To me, you know, that's an interesting.
B
Take because a lot of women and men focus on money.
A
Yeah.
B
That's if you ask them what's most important in dating. That's my top three in most people.
A
Last, I swear, is the last thing in my. In my.
B
Wow.
A
My importance list. Money. Because I know I can take care of myself. I know that I'm always going to be good. No matter who I'm with or what I'm doing, I'm always going to be good. And I just. I mean, I don't think, like, I just don't need money from people. I make my own money, which is an energy exchange off of doing things I'm passionate about. So really, it's just, you know, I know the universe is always going to take care of me.
B
I love it. Elizabeth, what do you got coming up next? And where can people find you next?
A
Let's see here. We have so much, man going on. I mean, Egypt. Yeah, you're going to be coming to Egypt. So we're taking a lot of people into Egypt this year. Couple of weeks. We're leaving for Turkey to take people to Turkey. We have a couple more Anunnaki premieres. And, man, I'm looking forward to December taking it off because we're back to back. This year has been, you know, crazy.
B
Oh, so you take the whole month off every December?
A
Well, we're going to this month because this year has been literally back to back. We've been not in the same state for more than three days at a time.
B
Oh, my gosh.
A
It's just been exhausting and I just need to rest a little bit so we can, you know, get right back at it and change. So.
B
Cool. We'll link everything below. Thanks for coming on again.
A
Awesome, Sean, thank you for having me.
B
Thanks for watching, guys, as always. See you next time.
Digital Social Hour: Is the School System Failing Our Kids? The Alarming Evidence | Elisabeth Carson DSH #848
Host: Sean Kelly
Guest: Elisabeth Carson
Release Date: October 31, 2024
In episode #848 of Digital Social Hour, host Sean Kelly engages in a profound conversation with Elisabeth Carson about the current state of the school system and its impact on children. The discussion delves into the deficiencies of traditional education, the influence of video games on young minds, the role of trauma in personal development, and systemic failures in healthcare and societal structures.
Elisabeth Carson begins by passionately critiquing the traditional school system. She argues that it fails to provide meaningful, life-enriching experiences compared to real-world learning opportunities.
Elisabeth Carson [04:00]: “Compare that to seven days of sitting in class and looking at the chalkboard with the teacher writing on it. I'm still gonna do what I feel is right for my child.”
Elisabeth emphasizes the importance of experiential learning, sharing her own experience of taking her son Gabriel on a tour of Egypt, exploring the Great Pyramid, Bent Pyramid, and Red Pyramid. She contrasts these invaluable experiences with the monotonous classroom setting, advocating for educational reforms that prioritize real-world interactions over traditional methodologies.
Elisabeth Carson [05:10]: “I don't feel like it's right for the school system to really tell you. If I think it's circumstantial, then I will fight the school system.”
The conversation shifts to the pervasive influence of video games on young brains. Elisabeth references studies comparing the brains of gamers to those struggling with alcohol addiction, highlighting the addictive nature of excessive gaming.
Elisabeth Carson [01:12]: “There really is a study that compares an alcoholic's brain to a gamer's brain. So, I mean, it's just facts.”
She discusses the overstimulation caused by constant exposure to video games, leading to dopamine dependency. This dependency results in diminished attention spans, mood swings, and overactivity when children are not engaged in gaming.
Elisabeth Carson [02:00]: “The brain is expecting that stimulus, stimulus, stimulus, which is providing the brain dopamine hits. So now the brain is expecting all of these dopamine hits all the time.”
Sean Kelly echoes these concerns, noting the prevalence of devices like iPads and smartphones among young children and the proliferation of apps and games that contribute to this issue.
Sean Kelly [02:20]: “They're giving kids iPads at 8 years old. IPhones.”
Elisabeth shares her personal journey of removing her son from the public school system due to its rigidity and inability to accommodate unique educational needs. She recounts the challenges she faced, including threats of legal action for missing school days due to their educational trips.
Elisabeth Carson [03:20]: “I pulled Gabriel out of school while we went and toured in Egypt... They were about to set a court date if he were to miss one more day.”
This decision underscores her commitment to providing a tailored education that nurtures her child's growth beyond the constraints of traditional schooling.
A significant portion of the discussion delves into the impact of trauma on personal relationships. Elisabeth explains how unresolved trauma leads individuals to seek out toxic relationships, often mirroring past experiences in an unconscious attempt to find familiarity.
Elisabeth Carson [15:54]: “The universe will test you like that... Big blow ups in toxic conversations.”
She shares her own experiences with abusive relationships in her youth, highlighting how trauma can drive individuals to seek adrenaline-inducing interactions as a means of feeling something amidst emotional numbness.
Elisabeth Carson [23:02]: “Your body is physically addicted to the adrenaline cortisol that is released during a stressful moment.”
Sean adds to this by discussing his own familial traumas, emphasizing the cyclical nature of generational curses perpetuated by unresolved emotional wounds.
Sean Kelly [10:18]: “I'm the president too. So I run my own life the way that I would like to run my life.”
The conversation takes an unexpected turn as Elisabeth introduces topics related to sexual health and enlightenment. She advocates for semen retention among men, suggesting it preserves life force energy and enhances physical performance.
Elisabeth Carson [18:07]: “So men can have hour-long orgasms. They can control it.”
She also discusses the concept of cervical orgasms in women, linking them to spiritual enlightenment and a deeper connection with the divine.
Elisabeth Carson [18:50]: “The cervical orgasm makes your whole body orgasm and you can see God.”
Sean expresses his curiosity about these practices, indicating a blend of spiritual and physical well-being in Elisabeth's philosophy.
Elisabeth emphasizes the power of consciousness and the importance of controlling one's thoughts to manage emotions and manifest desired outcomes.
Elisabeth Carson [25:02]: “Everything is a manifestation. Everything.”
She warns against the manipulative nature of media and societal systems that suppress individual power, advocating for self-awareness and intentional living to break free from subconscious programming.
Elisabeth Carson [25:19]: “Your brain does not know jokes. When you say, 'I'm dead,' it's real in your brain.”
Sean concurs, highlighting the need for mindful consumption of media to maintain personal autonomy.
A poignant segment of the episode addresses the failures of the Western healthcare system. Elisabeth shares personal stories of her family's struggles with inadequate medical care, emphasizing how the system prioritizes profit over genuine healing.
Elisabeth Carson [28:10]: “The Western medicine is just so backwards in my mind because they just want to keep you between sick and healthy so they can collect their paycheck every single month.”
She narrates the tragic loss of her father post-surgery and her brother's prolonged battle with kidney failure, criticizing the system's reliance on symptom treatment rather than addressing root causes.
Elisabeth Carson [30:17]: “Health care should be free for everybody.”
Sean echoes these sentiments, questioning the allocation of resources towards wars instead of addressing domestic issues like homelessness and hunger.
Sean Kelly [30:39]: “Why are people hungry? Why are people homeless? What is the reason for this?”
Elisabeth reflects on her journey of self-awareness and healing from trauma, emphasizing the importance of consciousness in breaking generational curses. She shares her commitment to personal growth and her plans to lead educational tours in Egypt and Turkey.
Elisabeth Carson [34:06]: “We have so much going on... We're taking people to Turkey. We have a couple more Anunnaki premieres.”
She expresses gratitude for her supportive relationship, highlighting mutual growth and healing as key components of her personal life.
Elisabeth Carson [13:26]: “With him, it just feels like everything just fits like a puzzle and it's complete.”
The episode concludes with Elisabeth and Sean discussing the importance of maintaining balance and consciousness in everyday life. Elisabeth announces a planned hiatus in December to rest and recharge before continuing their mission to enact change.
Elisabeth Carson [34:37]: “We've been not in the same state for more than three days at a time. It's just been exhausting and I just need to rest a little bit so we can get right back at it and change.”
Sean wraps up the discussion, expressing gratitude for Elisabeth's insights and encouraging listeners to engage with the content thoughtfully.
Elisabeth Carson is actively involved in educational tours to Egypt and Turkey, aiming to provide transformative experiences for participants. She is also working on season two of her project, Anunnaki, with episodes expected to release sporadically throughout December.
For more insights and updates, listeners are encouraged to follow Elisabeth Carson's upcoming events and premieres.
This summary provides a comprehensive overview of the key discussions and insights shared by Elisabeth Carson on the Digital Social Hour. For a deeper understanding and firsthand experience, tuning into the full episode is highly recommended.