Saturn Returns with Caggie - 8.2 Zach Bush on Reconnecting with Nature and Healing Our Earth
Episode Date: September 25, 2023Caggie continues her fascinating conversation with Dr Zach Bush, a physician specialising in internal medicine, endocrinology and hospice care. Dr Zach also founded *Seraphic Group and the nonprofit F...armer’s footprint to develop root-cause solutions for human and ecological health. His main mission is to educate and reconnect humanity with nature. In this episode, they peel back the layers of human fears and discuss our strained relationship with the natural world. Caggie and Zach delve deep into the heart of these pressing issues and explore the notion that it all stems from one shared human fear – the fear of not being enough. Dr Bush further unpacks the current state of our relationship with nature and highlights how Earth itself is struggling to breathe under the weight of human impact. He explains why regenerative agriculture is a path towards healing, not only for our planet but also for our understanding of our place within it. You can find Zach on Instagram, Twitter and YouTube, or on his website and Farmer's Footprint. --- Follow or subscribe to "Saturn Returns" for future episodes, where we explore the transformative impact of Saturn's return with inspiring guests and thought-provoking discussions. Follow Caggie Dunlop on Instagram to stay updated on her personal journey and you can find Saturn Returns on Instagram, YouTube and TikTok. Order the Saturn Returns Book. Join our community newsletter here. Find all things Saturn Returns, offerings and more here.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello everyone and welcome to Saturn Returns with me, Kagi Dunlop. This is a podcast that
aims to bring clarity during transitional times where there can be confusion and doubt.
Today is the second part of my conversation with the one and only Zach Bush. I enjoy this
conversation so much. There is so much wisdom in what he has to say that it's
the kind of episodes that you can listen to again and again and again and there will always be
something new that you can take from it in this part of the conversation we get into our relationship
with the earth and the sort of complexity of how we are essentially in an abusive bond, he said, with nature.
We are abusing it.
And it's part of our journey now, I'd say, as a collective to heal this relationship.
And that's where Zach's work really centralizes.
really interesting from this conversation was how Zach feels that at the heart of this is this idea that it all stems from our human fear of not being enough, not feeling worthy.
And that then creates the sort of scarcity and this disconnect between us and the earth,
which I found really, really fascinating. And I think that that's something we can all relate to
on a on a personal level but also understand that and the impact that has collectively.
What I also really found interesting because of Zach's work at Farmer's Footprint and all of the
stuff that he's doing to try and heal this relationship we have with nature. This concept that earth itself is struggling to breathe
under the weight of human impact.
I think we can all feel that.
And when people say, you know,
that they're feeling anxious about the future
and this sort of baseline uncomfortable feeling
that I know because I've spoken to a lot of people regardless of how
into the space they are they just feel it and I think that that's why we know that the way we are
operating at the moment and have been is not sustainable and that something has to change
and that's something that we have to do on an individual level. But we also, you know, astrologically speaking,
this is a time where the systems that govern us are disintegrating.
And I think we are all waking up to this now
when we're recognizing that things don't need to operate the way that they have.
We assume these truths that they are absolute,
but actually there are so many of them are constructs.
And so we're in this very interesting paradigm shift at the moment. And I do wholeheartedly
believe that Zach is one of the people that's going to lead the way for us on a global level
to fully not only understanding it, but to healing and to paving the way for a different type of future.
One of Zach's main missions is to reconnect people with nature and to heal our relationship
with the earth because he recognized that a lot of health and disease related issues that we have
is to do with the way that we consume and make food. Food is no longer our
medicine, it's pharmaceutical chemicals and drugs. And so he created Farmer's Footprint to help heal
this. It's all around regenerative agriculture to help cultivate soil, human and planetary health.
To support this, you can enter at bit.ly forward slash farmers footprint uk prize draw and it's 25 pounds
donation to enter and you might win a free course the saturn returns course and a one-on-one call
with me wouldn't that be lovely so if you guys to enter, there is a link in the show notes and
best of luck. And you also mentioned something that I'd like to dive into a little bit, which
is the virus in terms of people saying that bacteria is good or bad or anything is good or bad.
You speak about viruses, that how many exist
and how there's this idea as if there's 10 bad ones
or this particular bad one that we all went through
that is a threat to life on earth.
So would you be able to sort of demystify that a little bit for our audience?
I'll mystify it for you.
Because the numbers are, again, mystical in nature.
Well, I guess we can begin real quick at what is a virus.
A virus is simply a genetic possibility. It's just a little gene, a series of nucleotides that are coded into a little strand of DNA or RNA.
little strand of DNA or RNA. And it can travel in an envelope of kind of like a cell membrane that envelopes it and protects it from the environment. So it can travel great distances
as a protected piece of genetic information. But the whole belief system that viruses can
take over your cellular system and proliferate until each cell blows up with the virus. I don't
know if you've seen pictures of that, but that's kind of like virus 101
in all of our biology classes.
Viruses take over the machinery of cell proliferation
and reproduce themselves inside your body
until all your cells rupture
and they can kill you and blah, blah, blah.
That's about 40-year-old science.
And what we've found out in the last 40 years
is that that decision to take a gene
sequence and turn it into a protein or replicate it is the most controlled decision in biology,
such that it takes 200 basically agreements at the molecular level to go ahead and make that
virus into a protein and repeat them and reproduce it and then decide what you're going to do with
it. And ultimately what you're going to do with the gene is either integrate it into your own genome or use it to change the
expression of genes within your body. And so the virus is not a living thing. It's not a bacteria.
It doesn't have any life within it. It can't reproduce itself. It can't create energy.
It's just a packet of information. And yet we've come to believe that viruses are
attacking the human body. The human body has to decide to express that new genetic code.
And when you start making new proteins in your body that have never been made in there before,
there's going to be a certain subset of those that are going to create an immune reaction.
And so it can create the experience of a fever with your immune system having to generate
heat and temperature as it starts to adopt this new information and new proteins into the body.
But that new gene isn't bad for you. It's just new genetic information that your body has decided it
wants to make. It has to be that volition. The volition of creating a virus into a new protein
structure within your body is very volitional and it's coming from within every cell to make that decision. Do I want this gene or not? Do I want
the new protein that this gene will make or not? And so when we have a common cold or a pneumonia
caused by a virus, it's not the virus causing the cold. It's our immune system's reaction to new
information. We now understand that the genome is a conglomeration of viral inputs.
The human genome is quite small compared to other life forms around us.
A fruit fly has 13,000 genes.
And a flea, a tiny little animal that can jump like 40 times its height, pretty cool,
has 30,000 genes.
And the human has 20,000 genes. So we sit between
a fruit fly and a flea, but frankly, a little bit closer to the fruit fly of genetic complexity.
We're very simple genetically, 20,000 genes. And we now know that 55% of those genes and probably
a lot more than that, but we've now identified 55% of those genes as being direct inserts of
RNA or DNA viruses into the genome of life that
allowed for the first mammals to occur. To move from reptiles and birds, which, you know, deliver
an egg, and then the egg is this protected space that life can come out of. And so moving from egg
birth to live birth at the moment that mammals were created, that was the result of a whole bunch of viral updates
to the avian, you know, kind of bird-like genome.
And they were critical updates that allowed us to build a placenta
and things like this.
And so we needed all this new genetic information
to be able to do live birth.
What's gone wrong for us to view it so differently?
The original wound of humanity, as I've kind of been digging down on that for a long time, is why are we so human in our behavior?
Why are we so against everything?
Why do we have all this judgment towards everything?
Why do we call everything bad or good that isn't?
And by and large, we call everything bad that isn't us, right?
And we do this down to a really annoying level of like,
you're sitting on a subway and you're a bunch of strangers
and you immediately decide they're all must be idiots
and you're the only intelligent being in this place
because they're obviously not on your bandwidth
and they're not moving like you're moving
and they're reading that stupid book.
That person's wasting their time.
That's a dumb book.
You know, like the stupid things
that you will think about other people around you.
So why is that?
What is it about us that makes us so judgmental
and so derogatory towards life around us,
whether it be a virus or another human?
Why the effort to call it good and bad? Why the effort to? And I think it has to do with this original belief that we got separated from nature. And it's in all of our mythic stories
from almost every religion, there was a moment when we suddenly were kicked out of the garden,
or we were divorced from, some God came along,
got angry and pitched us out of heaven,
whatever it is.
And so we have this deep insecurity in us
that we weren't good enough for nature.
And then we got othered.
And in the othering,
we developed the need for an ego
because it's terrifying to be separate from
and suddenly alone.
And so we developed an energy
field that we might call an ego that we all share. And so I don't think I have my ego and you have
your ego. That's just a general energy system that we can all tap into and use as a shield
to protect us against the fear that we're not enough. And that's what I learned a lot in my
time in the ICU is that the most common thing that was coming back to me when people would die and then come right back is they would come back in this near bliss state.
And they'd have this almost far off look in their eyes and they would look at me, but it felt like they were looking straight through me or seeing something that wasn't my body.
And they would look straight through me.
It wasn't my body.
And they would look straight through me.
And it is eerily identical to when an infant looks at you coming out of the womb.
A newborn infant will look at you in such a startling way because you can feel them seeing something that's not your body. Well, isn't it that I heard that they look slightly above your head?
They can look slightly above your head.
In the case of my son, he looked straight into me.
And I had that cosmic experience of being fully seen. And they can look above you or around you and you
will still feel more seen than anything else. And you will feel like you're seeing something that
you've never seen before as well. And so that exchange also can happen in this near-death
comeback when somebody's suddenly coming back into the body with this other perceptive quality or perceptive capacity remembered.
And now they're looking at you as if an infant was looking at you and they're coming from source and seeing you differently.
And the thing that they said most often to me is, that was the most beautiful thing I've ever experienced.
I suddenly felt fully accepted.
the most beautiful thing I've ever experienced, I suddenly felt fully accepted.
And people from all walks of life saying that same thing at all ages, 18-year-olds dying,
88-year-olds dying in the ICU on the same day, I heard the same thing as I suddenly felt completely accepted, which means the original wound of being human that we all share is some sort of universal
experience is I'm not enough.
I'm not accepted. And you think that comes, that's a very deep one because you, perhaps I'm paraphrasing,
but you kind of describe the relationship we have with nature as having become a sort
of abusive one that we take advantage of it.
We're sort of selfish with it.
Where do you think that stems from?
Well, this kind of gets back to like every elementary school, you know, experience. The bully on the playground is the most insecure person there, right? And so in their effort to
show that they're tough or show that they belong, they abuse everybody around them.
That's what we are on this
planet right now. We are the most abusive species here because we're so insecure that we don't
belong here, that we're not enough, that we're not loved, that we don't belong to nature. And so we
have this deep fear within us. And so we act like the bully here. And so we have to pound our chest
and kill everything that's bigger than us and make sure that we're the toughest and we're the smartest and believe that we're at some sort of pinnacle of intelligence, life,
spiritual import. So we create these vast religious belief systems that says we're the
most important thing in the cosmos and we are loved more by God than anything else in the cosmos.
And actually I'm a colonialist. And so I'm going to go travel somewhere distant and I'm going to
go find some primitive people and I'm going to tell them my God is better than their God, and I'm more loved than them.
So I'm going to rape, pillage, and take everything away because your God's not as good as my God.
Like, we do this stuff over and over and over again through human history because we are so insecure.
And so in our insecurity, we grab onto this defense mechanism and this justification system of judgments and value systems of good, bad, dumb, smart, blah, blah, blah.
And at the same time, the result of being separate from everything is this deep fear of scarcity.
And when we're coming from a scarcity mentality, we, in the egoic state, develop the belief of ownership so that we can feel secure and so the concept of owning life is ludicrous and and we do this in every single iteration of our lives
and in that scarcity and the fear of not enough we become very extractive and destructive and so
our species is behaving as if we are separate from everything and therefore need to own it and
everything we can get our hands on and therefore take it away from everybody else so nobody else can have our
stuff. And this is now the human condition at large. And we've played this out for tens of
thousands of years. And now here we are at the pinnacle moment of our own demise for all of the
grabbing that we've done for all the extraction and destruction and killing that we've done around
us in fear of
not being connected to everything. And so now we're at this pinnacle moment of either we change
or we die. And it's a really lovely time to be alive because the sheer potential that now exists
and the idea that we could lose judgment and start to be present and realize everything that's alive is on deep purpose for it is here. Whether it be a leaf
or a river or an ocean, polar bear, whatever the heck you're in love with right now, that thing is
so real. Therefore, there is no good and bad in this system. There's only the expression of life.
And if we put ourselves in the resonance frequency of life is the purpose and
life drives for biodiversity at every single moment it breathes. And it does biodiversity
through adaptation. And the more biodiversity that's there, the faster it can adapt and the
more resilience it has and the more it can overcome. And now if we as humans start to realize,
oh my gosh, this is the life that's coming through us. It is biodiversity that's speaking through me in my intelligence or whatever it might hold.
That is what I now move with in this cosmic moment of being alive right now is I am an ecosystem and I am part of the ecosystem.
And I could align my efforts such that more life occurs around me.
And so in the hug that I can give somebody that I just met or in the efforts towards planting a basil plant in my backyard
or whatever the heck I'm putting my hands to at that moment,
if it's nurturing more life into this universe right now,
then I've aligned myself with the energy of all of life,
maybe throughout the whole cosmos,
but certainly life here on this planet Earth right now.
And so I come into resonance and I get more powerful.
I get more energy given to me by this nature.
And so there's this beautiful feedback loop so that when I die, I will be beaming light out of every cell in my body as I take those couple of last breaths.
Because I will be so physically aligned with all the spiritual and energetic energy that would be in a soul that's expressing itself in this body right now.
soul that's expressing itself in this body right now. I think you're quite a unique individual,
just generally, but in that you view this pinnacle that we're at as a positive and an exciting moment.
It feels to me that everything we're discussing, the world that we exist in right now with tech in the space that it's at, with AI developing at this rapid speed, that that is a
manifestation of this disconnection we have with nature and how we're trying to replicate nature
and in our sort of own way. But that seems to be a real threat to the human species. And a lot of people are very scared about where things are going to
go. So how can the average person try and kind of make a difference or to change or to adopt some of
your mentality when we're being shoved or forced into this world that's so disconnected from our natural state in many ways.
Our relationship to technology or our definitions or concepts of technology is probably another place that we have a huge opportunity to evolve. It's a bit of a dualism in my mind right now.
There's two paths we can go kind of on the macro level of being humans. We can decide that
humanity is against nature and we need
technology to save us from nature. Therefore, we're going to need new drugs, new vaccines,
new robots, new AI to extend our capacity as humans so that we can survive in the cosmos.
We need spaceships so that we can go to Mars so that when we kill Earth, there's another planet for us to go to. We're going to try to figure out how to, you know, do, you know, telecommunications
so that we can see if there's life out there in the universe,
so that we can communicate with something out there.
And, you know, we do these really extreme things out of fear of death
rather than just becoming alive right now and becoming less damaging. And so there's
that technological application of, or the application of technology out of fear, guilt,
or shame of being human. And we see this of like, oh my gosh, we're destroying the planet with
CO2 emissions. So we should create a technology that sucks CO2 out of the atmosphere so that
it's not causing global warming. Except that when we stopped producing CO2, the CO2 out of the atmosphere so that it's not causing global warming.
Except that when we stopped producing CO2,
the CO2 kept going up exactly the same rate on planet Earth.
So when we stopped all the air travel,
we stopped all the things locked down the entire planet,
CO2 kept going up exactly the same rate.
We'd stopped fossil fuel burning at a level that we had never stopped fossil fuel burning at,
and yet there was not a ditzel of evidence that we had changed the course of CO2 accumulation in the atmosphere.
And so we are on course, regardless of human behavior, for this big turnover of life to happen.
And it turns out that CO2 is the very blood force of this planet.
It is the way in which we bring energy onto this planet so that life can spring forth. And we've demonized, just like the viruses, we demonize CO2. Not realizing that
the CO2 accumulating in the atmosphere right now is the result not of too much CO2,
but of a failure to breathe in. The earth can't take an inspiration right now because her lungs
are the soils of the planet and we have killed those with chemical agriculture. And so we have created a planet with emphysema, end-stage emphysema. It cannot take a
breath in. No matter how much CO2 is in the atmosphere, it can't breathe it in. But the
moment humans stop their chemical agriculture, the planet is going to recover within two or three
years to take the deepest breath it's taken ever, because there's
actually more CO2 available in the atmosphere right now than any time in planetary history,
perhaps, because humans have innovated technology to pull the oil out of the center of the earth
and burn that into CO2 in the atmosphere. And so there's now more CO2 above earth than maybe ever
before. And so it's very exciting moment that the next breath that this planet takes after our extinction effort stops, whether we go extinct or we simply just stop being destructive on her lungs, she will recover that lung function almost immediately.
And she will take a deep breath in and it will become the greenest planet we've ever seen.
In a moment, it will happen so fast that we can't even believe in.
And so all this desperate news of like oceans rising and planet warming and all that, all of that will become an old story when she takes her first big breath in.
And so all we have to do is put all of our ingenuity into restoring the function of her lungs. And most of what that
involves is stop doing stuff and allow nature to do its thing. And so my nonprofit, Project Biome,
has got an idea of let's align ourselves with the natural systems that will make her take her next
breath. And they're already preparing. And it's the keystone species that are mounting the army
that will help her take her next breath. And one of those keystone species is the elephant.
In Botswana and northern South Africa over the last decade, 250,000 extra elephants have proliferated.
Quarter million elephants.
Elephants never over-proliferate their food system.
They don't have a predator.
So they always match their food system with the number of babies they have, et cetera.
Those calves of those elephants now proliferating at this extreme rate seem to be preparing for something.
And they've demolished the entire forest of Botswana because there's so many elephants crammed into a small space because they can't move because of all the fences that have been put up in the name of conservation in Africa.
And so we can't let those animals move right now.
But if we were as humans to say, you know what, those elephants are on purpose and they're't let those animals move right now. But if we were as humans
to say, you know what, those elephants are on purpose and they're coming here to do something
right now. We need to take the fences down and let them walk their ley lines up into Africa again.
I believe those elephants are ready to regenerate the entire soil water system of that planet.
And when Africa goes green again, when the Sahara turns back into this massive grassland that it was just 1,500 years ago.
Romans took over a massive grassland, not the Sahara Desert.
And so the northern African, Alexandria was the biggest city in the Roman Empire.
It was right in the middle of the Sahara Desert.
That was the biggest agricultural center that fed Europe for centuries.
And it wasn't a desert.
Well, that grassland, that big giant savanna that covers vast millions and millions of hectares is about to regrow if the elephants can march.
And so Project Biome has this vision that if we allow the brakes off that we've put on her species. They know how to take us back into
this generative moment as a planet so that she could take the biggest, deepest breath she's ever
taken. And that North Africa and the rest of the deserts of Saudi Arabia, Siberia, it's one third
of the planet that goes into desert when the Sahara exists. When it goes back into grasslands,
Saudi Arabia, Siberia, up into Northern China, all of that goes green. And when that goes green,
the whole planetary respiratory cycle kicks in and we get new life because there's so many new Saudi Arabia, Siberia, up into northern China, all of that goes green. And when that goes green,
the whole planetary respiratory cycle kicks in and we get new life because there's so many new viruses on the planet that code for new genetic possibilities. We're going to see the explosion
of biodiversity on levels we cannot imagine. And that's what's happened after every single
great extinction that's ever been measured, is life leaps forward. It's not knocked down and
like somehow crippled. It's not knocked down and like
somehow crippled. It is actually empowered to do something much greater, much more beautiful,
much more diverse, and therefore much more intelligent and beautiful. And that's what's
about to happen on the planet. And maybe we can stay. Yeah, I was going to say, it sounds like
that's going to happen with or without us. So we are at this point, this point of beauty.
Without, obviously we've touched on so many amazing things today, but we are getting into something that's obviously very
close to your heart, which is regenerative farming. Would you be able to, for the audience
that doesn't really know about what this stuff means, kind of how it applies day to day, where
we've gone really, really wrong and how we need to get things back to the way it
was? Yeah. So the last hundred years has seen farmers and physicians trained in the same science,
believing that there's some drug or some chemical that's going to make our lives better and easier
and healthier, more productive. And of course, every pharmaceutical drug you put a human being
on, they actually become less well, not better. By the time you're on four to six
medications, there's a drug-drug interaction that's making your biology work less well.
And it's not unusual for our elders now to be on 13, 20 drugs in the Western medical society.
And so they have so many drug-drug interactions going once they pass four or five drugs
that they're doing more harm than good. And so that's a known phenomenon.
That's publications in science have been said on that, and yet we keep doing it to people.
In the same way, a farm under chemical pressure can only diminish its life force under every
extra chemical that's added. And a typical milieu of chemicals of herbicides and pesticides on a
single farm now are way outside of six. It can be dozens of different chemicals used over the course of a single growing system
that's basically got the whole farmland on an ICU-like environment of treatment.
And people eating that food are eating death.
And so they manifest literally a dis-ease at the moment that they consume this food,
whether you're a cow eating the feed from the corn lot or you're a human eating the beef from that cow, like the downstream consequence
of growing nearly dead food or food that's so depleted of its life force that it's weakened
and therefore needs all the support of herbicides, pesticides, antibiotics, everything else,
that life force is so low. And so that's where our current food system has become over the last
hundred years. It's the same thing that will end you up in the ICU and have you on life support
is because we began that in the fields in the 1950s. And so we have this whole planet now on
life support and our capacity as a chemical industry is very bad at sustaining life. We can slightly manipulate the endpoints or the symptoms of death as it emerges,
but we can't stave off death. The chemicals are a divorce from nature. And so if it doesn't occur
in nature, if billions of species over the last 4 billion years hasn't expressed a molecule,
it's probably because it shouldn't. And so the
iterative capacity of nature to do the right thing for the encouragement of life to occur needs to
become our foundation for science and therefore the chemical industry. And so we should not do
anything to biology that biology hasn't developed for us. And that's the transition of regenerative
medicine, regenerative farming, regenerative farming, regenerative
economics, regenerative political systems. Everything can be regenerative. Healthcare
systems as a whole. Those can all turn into a regenerative state if we trust the nature within
us and the nature around us to guide us into a vitality that is natural within us. It comes from
within us, not something that we're chasing outside of ourselves,
not some technology that doesn't yet exist.
Nature wasn't waiting for humans to come along
to improve her.
And yet we have this belief that we're doing that.
And yet now we realize every technology we tend to create
divorces us further from our nature
and increases the disease of being alive.
And so we increase our pain, we increase our depression, our rates of every disease just
keeps going up and up and up. The more technologically advanced the society, the more
diseases it has. And so that's the current application of technology. But when you back
up and say, what is technology? Technology is an abstraction or a creation force that's or a physical structure coming out of the
creation imagination of nature itself and we despite our belief that we're separate from nature
are not separate from nature and this gets very intriguing to me is the oil and gas companies
really evil or are we a unique abstraction of nature said and we're going to need to
create something
that can get all this carbon dioxide above the earth. We need a species that can dig deep in the
earth, pump all this oil out of there and get it into a combusted state so that the earth can take
a deeper breath because the next expression of life is going to be so extremely beautiful. I mean,
the last time we had an extinction, we went from dinosaurs to freaking dolphins, animals, you know, mammals, humans, the whole thing.
Like how, that's a pretty large leap in life force.
We went from palms and ferns as the sole plants on earth to wildflowers, the dog, dog rose, dog woods.
None of that existed 55 million years ago because there hadn't been enough stress and opportunity for new expression through the virome before that extinction. So now we have even more pent-up
opportunities here. And so for all of our destruction, nature has used us to create the
biggest potential she's ever had on this planet. And so I don't know if we should even have judgment
of like the humans are bad and we act like a cancer and we have all these negative connotations to who we are. We may be the very thing called in to take life force into a completely new journey
on this planet. And we could change everything to stay in play with that potential to stay and
see what life wants to do after the knee has taken off the proverbial neck of this planet.
I like that theory. And my next and I guess
final question was going to be around, you know, I think a lot of conversations
that are urging people to change their behavior isn't being very effective because people,
we live in a very convenient world where we want everything accessible to us. And I guess being human in many ways is being
quite selfish and we're more concerned with what's immediately happening around us than what's going
to be happening in a hundred years, even though we can sort of conceptualize it, it doesn't seem
to change people's behavior. But some of what I listened to from podcasts that you've been on is talking about shifting the focus
to the biological sense that we can then become the best possible humans we could be and that we
can evolve in this way that's far beyond our comprehension that's not relying on pharmaceuticals
or chemical stuff so does that make any? Would you be able to kind of
explain a little bit about how that could look? Yeah. So the technologies we create,
since we are part of nature and we are creating, can either be used for the abstract application
of fear, guilt, and shame, or it can be used for reconnection and to the expression of beauty.
And if we look through human history, I would say that it's pretty obvious what we've brought
into reality that hasn't done harm, and it's our art. Your voice as a singer, songwriter, vocalist
has never done any harm. It is a perfect truth. And so when you are creating in that space,
you are giving something into the vibration of this universe that didn't exist moments before,
and you are making it exist. You are in your God force. You are in your birth force. As a woman,
you sing and you bring something new into this universe. And I think that's when we will reach
our full potency, when we realize we are all capable of expressing the full force of the feminine archetype within us.
I can birth something new every single day.
Every single millionth of a second, I'm rebirthing my body from vacuum space because of the vibration of the quantum field.
I'm disappearing and reappearing every millionth of a second.
I keep showing up in my life force as a creative entity, and I can bring forth a song on the guitar I could go and make a
piece of art right now I can go build yet another company I can go start another non-profit I can
go into a new intimate experience with somebody I can go you know create another being you know
it's like there's so much feminine force within us. And to say feminine is to be that creative energy.
And that's what we can start to contribute back to this universe now.
If we decide to make that change from fear, ownership, scarcity, to gifting and creativity as our mode of communication with the universe,
the information stream that's going to open up to us so instantaneously is going to be so bonkers powerful. And we will be communicating, I believe,
not just with other humans, but we're going to be communicating with life throughout the cosmos
in just the next few years. It's happening right now. The doors are coming off all this
release of information around extraterrestrial and contact all this from the government right now.
It's because it's happening at such a rate they can no longer hide it. It's constantly happening
that humans are connecting to the intelligence of the entire universe second by second more
potently because we are becoming more and more present because we are dying as a species.
And so every breath becomes more precious and we are taking slower, deeper breaths.
I didn't, I think I lived 30 years of my life
without ever hearing the word mindfulness.
I think I heard that thing 13 times
just on the train and subway systems of London today.
When did mindfulness become part of our lexicon?
When did mindfulness become some part of our...
I was asked this morning,
what is the process or practice that you do when you're traveling so much to stay healthy?
If I had heard that sentence like 10 years ago, I'd be like, practice?
Like, what the hell are you talking about?
Like, I don't even know.
I mean, I practice medicine, but, you know, we have this new lexicon.
And it's because we are becoming more present because we have to, because we're becoming more desperate, because we are so divorced from our life force vibration.
And so we are spending a lot of time tuning in right now.
And for all that tuning in, what we're going to create next is going to be very powerful.
And so AI as an example of this, let's pick something that gets talked about a lot the last few years of 5G.
So 5G has been said like this is a scourge.
So there's a large part of the population that believes this is like the greatest breakthrough because now I can search my Instagram even faster and I can download web pages even quicker and have access everywhere.
And so thank goodness for the 5G network and thank goodness for Elon Musk and Starlink now because we now have 30,000 satellites rushing around the world right now, you know, giving everybody 5G that didn't have it moments ago.
And so then there's this huge part of humanity that's very concerned that that's going to be the death of all of us because the amount of 5G radiation that humans are taking into our biology right now, not to mention other life forms, could be destroying the fabric of life on the planet.
And so again, good, bad, who knows? It's the application of the technology and the denseness of thinking that nothing else matters than us and the convenience that we're pursuing
that makes 5G dangerous. But 5G is a description of a microwave technology that allows information
to travel. And the reason why a large segment
of humanity is very concerned about 5G instead of 4G, because 5G is now in a small enough wavelength
that it's at the same resonance frequencies that much of the communication happens in a human cell.
So we're now interfering with the very language of human life at the cellular level. Well,
that's a problem if it's done without cognition
or done without intent or awareness.
So if we're unawares and we're just beaming this stuff out,
yeah, we're probably rapidly increasing the amount
of cancer, heart attacks, blood clots,
everything else on the planet for all the 5G.
Oh, actually we have evidence of that.
And in the last year we've had more heart attacks
than ever before in history, cancers, blah, blah, blah.
And so the doors are coming off of human biology.
Is it just because of 5G?
Is it because of the vaccines?
There's lots of different theories out there of what human intervention are we doing to disrupt biology to this degree?
It's probably all of it because we're doing it mindlessly.
We're doing it just for convenience. We're doing it out of fear of something attacking us.
We're doing it out of fear of something attacking us.
But those same technologies, when you become cognizant and mindful and aware, suddenly become the most potent healers on the planet.
5G network imbued with the right resonance frequencies that can now communicate in human biology.
We've known since the 1960s which frequencies destroy cancer cells. And so tomorrow we could turn on the Starlink grid that now blankets the entire Earth in 5G frequencies with anti-cancer messages.
And we could destroy the whole cancer epidemic in a moment.
Why don't we?
Because we're unaware of the possibility of beauty within the technology that we hold. It's only being utilized for military and convenience methodologies
because those are the two things that create empire,
that create security, that create wealth.
Military's clout and convenience
are the whole mechanisms of Western civilization
or colonialism as a whole.
So it's really about the intention behind it.
It's the intent behind the technology
that makes it destructive, extractive, or creative and beautiful.
We're moments away from changing our mindset and our mindfulness for the technologies that we apply.
And I believe we're being gifted technologies that can make us very potent creators on this planet.
CRISPR is an interesting one here.
We're creating vaccines against the virome as if it's a bad thing. But that CRISPR technology
that was just given to humanity just a few years ago,
that technology could be the tool
that we utilize to accelerate
biodiversification of wildflowers
and the world around us and its beauty.
And so reapplying these technologies
away from the fear paradigm of we need to kill
and be in the antibiotic, antiviral mindset to, oh my gosh, we need to be pro-viral.
We need to create as much genetic potential for the new humanity as possible because lying in us, I believe, is genetic code that is currently not being expressed because we live in this fractured state from our reality.
our reality. We live behind a veil of emotions and trauma that we keep expressing. And therefore, the original genome of our species is not being expressed correctly. We have a damaged genetics.
And as we come into resonance and we realize that we can start to re-express it, it may not be a
double helix DNA that's within us. That may be the damaged structure of the human expression right
now. Our electromagnetic field
that we might call a soul is likely able to hold a much more complex crystalline structure than
the simple double helix. And we could end up with, you know, a triple braided quadra helix so that
you got 12 strands of nucleotides inside of that same structure. And then what body will we build?
What beauty will we express? How
much light can I hold in that DNA strand such that I would become a better antenna for the
beauty of the universe, the expression of the cosmos, the expression of my full potential?
And so that's, I think, where we're at right now is can we really catastrophically
apply our creative force through the technologies that are being given to us right now?
Can we become a more complete version of ourselves?
Well, I think that's a beautiful place to end. Zach, it's been such a pleasure talking to you.
I could listen to you for hours. Thank you so much for joining me today. And I hope you enjoyed
this conversation. It's always a joy to be present with another human being. Thank you for being
present with me. Thank you all of you that listened into this conversation to be part of this reality.
The space-time continuum doesn't matter when you hear this. You are part of our now right now. So
welcome to right now. Glad you're alive. Thank you.
Just a reminder that Farmer's Footprint are very kindly giving you the chance to win free access
to the saturn returns course as well as a one-on-one call with me and to enter this it's
25 pounds for each entry and you can use the link in the show notes and all of that money goes as a
donation to farmer's footprint so wishing you luck if you want to enter.
And thank you so much for listening as always.
And remember, you are not alone.
Goodbye.