Join us tonight at 7PM U.S. Eastern for the YouTube premiere of Alec's solocast episode 141: Reframing the Infectious Disease Paradigm.
In this episode, Alec explores the misconceptions surrounding infectious diseases and reframes how we understand sickness. He examines the role of belief in health, gaps in virus research, and alternative reasons for individual and group illness. Discover insights into biofield interactions, the intelligence of water as it relates to our body, and how shifting your perspective can unlock new paths to wellness.
Click here to catch the Youtube premiere.
In this episode, Alec explores the misconceptions surrounding infectious diseases and reframes how we understand sickness. He examines the role of belief in health, gaps in virus research, and alternative reasons for individual and group illness. Discover insights into biofield interactions, the intelligence of water as it relates to our body, and how shifting your perspective can unlock new paths to wellness.
Click here to catch the Youtube premiere.
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I do not say this lightly: the foundations for virology, and thus the entire field of virology, is fraudulent and pseudoscientific.
Pseudoscience is anything claiming to be scientific that doesn’t follow the scientific method. In every single "viral isolation" paper — which is the foundational evidence for the field of virology (of which all other pieces of virology and also the field of vaccinology are built upon), a variation of this procedure is followed:
snot/blood/other fluids from a sick person assumed to contain virus particles (but never verified to contain virus particles) is added to viral transport medium (VTM). At a minimum VTM contains fetal bovine serum (FBS), amphotericin B (a nephrotoxic antimycotic) and gentamicin (a nephrotoxic antibiotic). Nephrotoxic means “toxic to kidneys”, by the way. That’ll come in next.
After this, they take that mixture (a sample of snot/blood/other fluids and VTM) and add it to a foreign cell line that has been kept alive via unnatural means in a lab, typically VERO E6, VERO CCL81 (kidney cells from an adult green monkey) or human embryonic kidney (HEK) cells.
Then, after that mixture is added to the cells (or sometimes alongside adding the mixture or just before adding the mixture) the nutrient serum for the cells, FBS, is reduced from 10% to 2% (and sometimes to 1% or 0%), effectively starving the cells of their food. They also add gentamicin (sometimes geneticin) and amphotericin B to the culture. Again, these substances are known to be nephrotoxic (toxic to kidneys), and they're being added to kidney cells, where it's assumed they have no negative effects on the cells and are simply there to keep the environment free of fungal and bacterial growth.
The cells then break down, experiencing what is called the cytopathic effect (CPE), which is cell injury or death. The sample is then prepared for electron microscopy, (which is another MAJOR problem in and of itself: see https://viroliegy.com/category/electron-microscope-images/, https://pro-decizii-informate.ro/.../Prof-Harold-Hillman..., and https://rumble.com/v674tqy-e141-reframing-the-infectious...
), where many of the resultant particles are claimed be viruses.
This process is pseudoscientific (and absurd) for the following reasons:
The scientific method requires an observed natural phenomenon. Full stop. That menas you observe something happening in nature. The moment you take something out of its natural context, it's no longer an observed natural phenomenon (this is especially the case when excising tissue from a complex physical, chemical, emotional, electric, etc. entity, throwing a bunch of shit on it in a lab and assuming it tells you something about natural world is absurd).
However, in the case of so-called "infectious diseases", you might say that you observe two or more people getting sick in the same space with similar symptoms. In my mind, that is a justified observed natural phenomenon. After that, you form a hypothesis. For example, “I think Y phenomenon (dependent variable) is caused by X particle (independent variable)."
In order to proceed to test that hypothesis, you need to have X, the presumed cause, the thing you think causes Y, in order to vary and manipulate it to see if it produces the observed effect in question. That is arguably the most important step. In order to follow the scientific method, you need your independent variable, X. Virology has NEVER shown that "X" exists.
Pseudoscience is anything claiming to be scientific that doesn’t follow the scientific method. In every single "viral isolation" paper — which is the foundational evidence for the field of virology (of which all other pieces of virology and also the field of vaccinology are built upon), a variation of this procedure is followed:
snot/blood/other fluids from a sick person assumed to contain virus particles (but never verified to contain virus particles) is added to viral transport medium (VTM). At a minimum VTM contains fetal bovine serum (FBS), amphotericin B (a nephrotoxic antimycotic) and gentamicin (a nephrotoxic antibiotic). Nephrotoxic means “toxic to kidneys”, by the way. That’ll come in next.
After this, they take that mixture (a sample of snot/blood/other fluids and VTM) and add it to a foreign cell line that has been kept alive via unnatural means in a lab, typically VERO E6, VERO CCL81 (kidney cells from an adult green monkey) or human embryonic kidney (HEK) cells.
Then, after that mixture is added to the cells (or sometimes alongside adding the mixture or just before adding the mixture) the nutrient serum for the cells, FBS, is reduced from 10% to 2% (and sometimes to 1% or 0%), effectively starving the cells of their food. They also add gentamicin (sometimes geneticin) and amphotericin B to the culture. Again, these substances are known to be nephrotoxic (toxic to kidneys), and they're being added to kidney cells, where it's assumed they have no negative effects on the cells and are simply there to keep the environment free of fungal and bacterial growth.
The cells then break down, experiencing what is called the cytopathic effect (CPE), which is cell injury or death. The sample is then prepared for electron microscopy, (which is another MAJOR problem in and of itself: see https://viroliegy.com/category/electron-microscope-images/, https://pro-decizii-informate.ro/.../Prof-Harold-Hillman..., and https://rumble.com/v674tqy-e141-reframing-the-infectious...
), where many of the resultant particles are claimed be viruses.
This process is pseudoscientific (and absurd) for the following reasons:
The scientific method requires an observed natural phenomenon. Full stop. That menas you observe something happening in nature. The moment you take something out of its natural context, it's no longer an observed natural phenomenon (this is especially the case when excising tissue from a complex physical, chemical, emotional, electric, etc. entity, throwing a bunch of shit on it in a lab and assuming it tells you something about natural world is absurd).
However, in the case of so-called "infectious diseases", you might say that you observe two or more people getting sick in the same space with similar symptoms. In my mind, that is a justified observed natural phenomenon. After that, you form a hypothesis. For example, “I think Y phenomenon (dependent variable) is caused by X particle (independent variable)."
In order to proceed to test that hypothesis, you need to have X, the presumed cause, the thing you think causes Y, in order to vary and manipulate it to see if it produces the observed effect in question. That is arguably the most important step. In order to follow the scientific method, you need your independent variable, X. Virology has NEVER shown that "X" exists.
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Their version of “X” is based in the absurd, assumption-riddled, unscientific process I wrote out above. They ASSUME the particles are in the fluids of a sick person, but never show they are. In fact, virologists willingly admit that, in order to isolate/purify/characterize/ sequence "viruses", they must follow the steps mentioned above. They provide excuses like “there’s not enough virus present in the fluids” (which is hilarious considering they also say there are upwards of 20-200 million virus particles in one sneeze). They ASSUME the particles (which are ASSUMED to be present in the fluids in the first place) cause the cells to experience CPE (never mind the cells were starved and poisoned). And lastly, they ASSUME the resultant particles shown in electron micrograph images (after the cells experience CPE) are viruses.
Again, virology has no independent variable, and therefore, is by definition pseudoscientific. Additionally, they don’t conduct proper negative controls/control experiments. Because they don’t have an independent variable, and are therefore NOT testing their hypothesis, we can’t call what they’re doing a scientific experiment at all, so any semblance of a negative control/control experiment isn’t possible from the jump.
However, if we make MAJOR concessions on their behalf and consider fluids from a sick person to be the independent variable, they still don’t conduct proper negative controls.
I was previously involved with a project where several independent labs conducted this exact same process, except they didn't include any fluid sample from a sick person — meaning no possible source of a "virus" — and achieved the exact same CPE, objectively, in 90/90 cell cultures.
They then had another lab produce transmission electron micrograph images of the samples (like those “pictures of viruses” you asserted), in which they found particles that were morphologically indistinguishable from what virologist refer to as “viruses.” And, they followed the exact same ATCC protocols followed by virologists — meaning they used the same concentration of antibiotics in the same timeframe, the same concentration of nutrient serum in the same timeframe, used the same materials and methods, etc. — thus falsifying the idea that the CPE seen in culture is a result of viruses, and falsifying the idea that the resultant particles seen in electron micrograph images are viral.
You can learn more about that project here: https://controlstudies.substack.com
With all of that being said, we (those who expose virology) aren’t even required to do ANY of that work in the first place, because the burden of proof lies on the individual/organization making the positive claim, i.e., “X is real and causes Y.” That is a maxim of law. We have no requirement to (nor can we) prove something doesn’t exist. We can only falsify the so-called evidence put forth, showing that it absolutely does not prove what they claim it does. The individual/organization claiming X does exist and cause Y must provide the proof, not the other way around.
So, any talk of what viruses do/don’t do is a reification fallacy and begging the question. Referring to expert opinion as evidence for viruses is an appeal to authority. Saying the overwhelming majority of experts believe is both appealing to authority and a bandwagon fallacy. Pointing to effects in culture or symptoms in humans as “evidence” of viruses is both begging the question and affirming the consequent. In order to make any claims about what X does/doesn’t do, you must first clearly demonstrate that X exists. It’s no different than saying “my pet unicorn with lasers for eyes caused my rug in front of my fireplace to catch on fire.” In order to say that the unicorn with lasers for eyes caused anything, you need to first demonstrate the unicorn with lasers for eyes exists.
Again, virology has no independent variable, and therefore, is by definition pseudoscientific. Additionally, they don’t conduct proper negative controls/control experiments. Because they don’t have an independent variable, and are therefore NOT testing their hypothesis, we can’t call what they’re doing a scientific experiment at all, so any semblance of a negative control/control experiment isn’t possible from the jump.
However, if we make MAJOR concessions on their behalf and consider fluids from a sick person to be the independent variable, they still don’t conduct proper negative controls.
I was previously involved with a project where several independent labs conducted this exact same process, except they didn't include any fluid sample from a sick person — meaning no possible source of a "virus" — and achieved the exact same CPE, objectively, in 90/90 cell cultures.
They then had another lab produce transmission electron micrograph images of the samples (like those “pictures of viruses” you asserted), in which they found particles that were morphologically indistinguishable from what virologist refer to as “viruses.” And, they followed the exact same ATCC protocols followed by virologists — meaning they used the same concentration of antibiotics in the same timeframe, the same concentration of nutrient serum in the same timeframe, used the same materials and methods, etc. — thus falsifying the idea that the CPE seen in culture is a result of viruses, and falsifying the idea that the resultant particles seen in electron micrograph images are viral.
You can learn more about that project here: https://controlstudies.substack.com
With all of that being said, we (those who expose virology) aren’t even required to do ANY of that work in the first place, because the burden of proof lies on the individual/organization making the positive claim, i.e., “X is real and causes Y.” That is a maxim of law. We have no requirement to (nor can we) prove something doesn’t exist. We can only falsify the so-called evidence put forth, showing that it absolutely does not prove what they claim it does. The individual/organization claiming X does exist and cause Y must provide the proof, not the other way around.
So, any talk of what viruses do/don’t do is a reification fallacy and begging the question. Referring to expert opinion as evidence for viruses is an appeal to authority. Saying the overwhelming majority of experts believe is both appealing to authority and a bandwagon fallacy. Pointing to effects in culture or symptoms in humans as “evidence” of viruses is both begging the question and affirming the consequent. In order to make any claims about what X does/doesn’t do, you must first clearly demonstrate that X exists. It’s no different than saying “my pet unicorn with lasers for eyes caused my rug in front of my fireplace to catch on fire.” In order to say that the unicorn with lasers for eyes caused anything, you need to first demonstrate the unicorn with lasers for eyes exists.
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And lastly, we don’t have to know what is the cause of [insert an effect] to know what clearly isn’t the cause of [insert effect]. And, again, by falsifying one paradigm, we are not required to find a better replacement. Think of it like this: if someone claims Joe killed John in Wisconsin in February 2020, but Joe clearly demonstrates that he was in Bali all of February 2020 (with security footage, pictures, text messages, receipts, etc.) — thus falsifying the idea that he was the cause of John’s death, is Joe still on the hook until they can find who did commit the murder?
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I’d like to reintroduce myself for the new people here!:
My name is Daniel Alexander Zeck, but I’ve always gone by “Alec.”
I’m a 32-year-old father to two little ones and husband to my high school sweetheart, Kylee, who’s pregnant with our third.
I grew up as a basketball-obsessed son of a college basketball coach turned family car business manager and a mostly stay-at-home mom. Most people in America would consider my childhood environment broken, chaotic, and incredibly traumatic. My mom and dad were repeating toxic generational patterns—doing the best they could with the tools they had—but their relationship to themselves, to each other, and to us was incredibly destructive. As a result, my siblings and I suffered a lot of abuse and neglect.
My dad was very tough on me. I was often called every name in the book and made to feel worthless if I didn’t perform well in basketball or school. At the worst, I was punched, pushed, or hit—patterns my dad learned from his dad, who learned from his dad, and so on. My dad had it worse than I did, for sure. That said, I’d like to stress that my dad and I now have the best relationship we’ve ever had. I’m blessed to know the power of forgiveness and compassion and to witness him work on himself and show up as a dad and a grandpa for me every day.
My mom, on the other hand, was on psych drugs for most of my childhood. At her worst, I saw her experience uncontrollable shaking, scream that her skin was on fire, go days without eating or sleeping, hallucinate, claim to see demons, and even attempt suicide. Sadly, I don’t have a relationship with her today because she doesn’t agree with me having a relationship with my dad.
My whole childhood revolved around basketball. I lived, breathed, and ate the sport, dreaming of playing D1 basketball. But because my performance was so tied to my self-worth—and my fear of failure was so great—I struggled to perform when it counted. The only D1 school that gave me a look was the United States Military Academy at West Point. I attended their recruit basketball camp before my senior year of high school and was sold, not on the Army, but on the prestige of a degree from West Point. I wasn’t offered a spot on the team, but an assistant coach told me that if I got in on my own, I could walk on.
Meeting Kylee, my wife of nearly nine years, is one of the greatest blessings to come out of my early years. We’ve been together since 2008, though I didn’t always treat her well growing up or throughout much of my time at West Point. I was a broken kid who felt incredibly worthless and sought validation in the world where it couldn’t be found. Through hard work, Kylee and I have built an incredible relationship. We’re now raising our kids in a completely different way, breaking the generational patterns and toxic cycles we were exposed to as children.
When I entered West Point, I was devastated to learn during Cadet Basic Training that I wouldn’t be walking onto the basketball team. By chance, I discovered a new sport that changed my life: Team Handball—a fast-paced, high-scoring sport that requires speed, agility, technical skill, and serious footwork. I picked it up during my freshman (plebe) year in 2012 and became pretty good at it—for an American, at least! In 2015, I was approached by a national team coach to try out. I made the U.S. National Team roster and joined the U.S. Army’s World Class Athlete Program (WCAP) about 18 months after graduating from West Point. WCAP allows athletes to train full-time while representing the U.S. in Olympic sports.
After graduating in 2016, I watched two loved ones—my mom, who struggled with psychiatric issues, and my wife, who battled so-called “autoimmune” disorders—begin to heal after adopting natural approaches labeled as “pseudoscience” by conventional medicine. My mom had nearly lost her life, and Kylee and I once thought she might die young. Watching their transformations shattered my trust in the allopathic paradigm.
Though I used to be a supporter of allopathic medicine, I began to question everything.
My name is Daniel Alexander Zeck, but I’ve always gone by “Alec.”
I’m a 32-year-old father to two little ones and husband to my high school sweetheart, Kylee, who’s pregnant with our third.
I grew up as a basketball-obsessed son of a college basketball coach turned family car business manager and a mostly stay-at-home mom. Most people in America would consider my childhood environment broken, chaotic, and incredibly traumatic. My mom and dad were repeating toxic generational patterns—doing the best they could with the tools they had—but their relationship to themselves, to each other, and to us was incredibly destructive. As a result, my siblings and I suffered a lot of abuse and neglect.
My dad was very tough on me. I was often called every name in the book and made to feel worthless if I didn’t perform well in basketball or school. At the worst, I was punched, pushed, or hit—patterns my dad learned from his dad, who learned from his dad, and so on. My dad had it worse than I did, for sure. That said, I’d like to stress that my dad and I now have the best relationship we’ve ever had. I’m blessed to know the power of forgiveness and compassion and to witness him work on himself and show up as a dad and a grandpa for me every day.
My mom, on the other hand, was on psych drugs for most of my childhood. At her worst, I saw her experience uncontrollable shaking, scream that her skin was on fire, go days without eating or sleeping, hallucinate, claim to see demons, and even attempt suicide. Sadly, I don’t have a relationship with her today because she doesn’t agree with me having a relationship with my dad.
My whole childhood revolved around basketball. I lived, breathed, and ate the sport, dreaming of playing D1 basketball. But because my performance was so tied to my self-worth—and my fear of failure was so great—I struggled to perform when it counted. The only D1 school that gave me a look was the United States Military Academy at West Point. I attended their recruit basketball camp before my senior year of high school and was sold, not on the Army, but on the prestige of a degree from West Point. I wasn’t offered a spot on the team, but an assistant coach told me that if I got in on my own, I could walk on.
Meeting Kylee, my wife of nearly nine years, is one of the greatest blessings to come out of my early years. We’ve been together since 2008, though I didn’t always treat her well growing up or throughout much of my time at West Point. I was a broken kid who felt incredibly worthless and sought validation in the world where it couldn’t be found. Through hard work, Kylee and I have built an incredible relationship. We’re now raising our kids in a completely different way, breaking the generational patterns and toxic cycles we were exposed to as children.
When I entered West Point, I was devastated to learn during Cadet Basic Training that I wouldn’t be walking onto the basketball team. By chance, I discovered a new sport that changed my life: Team Handball—a fast-paced, high-scoring sport that requires speed, agility, technical skill, and serious footwork. I picked it up during my freshman (plebe) year in 2012 and became pretty good at it—for an American, at least! In 2015, I was approached by a national team coach to try out. I made the U.S. National Team roster and joined the U.S. Army’s World Class Athlete Program (WCAP) about 18 months after graduating from West Point. WCAP allows athletes to train full-time while representing the U.S. in Olympic sports.
After graduating in 2016, I watched two loved ones—my mom, who struggled with psychiatric issues, and my wife, who battled so-called “autoimmune” disorders—begin to heal after adopting natural approaches labeled as “pseudoscience” by conventional medicine. My mom had nearly lost her life, and Kylee and I once thought she might die young. Watching their transformations shattered my trust in the allopathic paradigm.
Though I used to be a supporter of allopathic medicine, I began to question everything.
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I went from someone who didn’t think twice about vaccines, pharmaceuticals, or processed food to spending four years obsessively researching topics like vaccines, psych meds, nutrition, government corruption, and the war on terror. Once I saw the truth, there was no going back.
From 2018 to 2019, I trained full-time as an athlete, separate from typical Army life. I trained at the (now decommissioned) Olympic Training Center in Auburn, AL, and even spent a season training with a professional team in Dormagen, Germany. My time in WCAP gave me space to reflect, read, meditate, and question everything. It awakened me to the realization that much of society is structured to keep us working as cogs in a machine, preventing us from realizing our potential. More importantly, it gave me the space to dissolve many of the conditioned beliefs about myself, my worthiness, and the like that were imposed upon me as a child.
We didn’t qualify for the 2020 Olympics, so I returned to a normal Army job in late 2019. I knew I needed to leave the Army because I was no longer aligned with it, but I wasn’t yet sure what to do next.
When the charade of 2020 began, I immediately recognized the coming medical and government tyranny. Despite being an Army officer with one year left on my contract, I couldn’t stay silent.
During my final year in the Army, I began boldly and unapologetically sharing my perspective—speaking out against government and medical tyranny, and speaking up for natural health and our innate freedom. It was incredibly risky given the implications, but, as I learned at West Point, it’s important to choose “the harder right over the easier wrong.” And I haven’t looked back since.
I’ve lost many friends by boldly using my voice, but I’ve made some of the best friends I’ve ever had in the process. I’ve also had the honor of befriending people I previously looked up to along my health and freedom journey.
I am incredibly blessed to have grown a pretty big audience across social media and podcast platforms, sharing my journey of exploration with the world. I am honored and humbled to have conversations with inspiring people who are doing amazing work, all while supporting my family in the process. The Way Forward with Alec Zeck consistently ranks at the top of Apple’s Alternative Health charts and is among the top 0.5% of all podcasts, in all categories, worldwide.
Thank you to everyone who continues to tune in and support me and my work. And thank you for hearing my story. Most importantly, thank you for being a part of The Way Forward for mankind.
On our website, thewayfwrd.com, we’ll soon launch some amazing tools to help you connect with like-minded communities and resources in your area. Stay tuned for more.
With love and gratitude,
D. Alec Zeck
From 2018 to 2019, I trained full-time as an athlete, separate from typical Army life. I trained at the (now decommissioned) Olympic Training Center in Auburn, AL, and even spent a season training with a professional team in Dormagen, Germany. My time in WCAP gave me space to reflect, read, meditate, and question everything. It awakened me to the realization that much of society is structured to keep us working as cogs in a machine, preventing us from realizing our potential. More importantly, it gave me the space to dissolve many of the conditioned beliefs about myself, my worthiness, and the like that were imposed upon me as a child.
We didn’t qualify for the 2020 Olympics, so I returned to a normal Army job in late 2019. I knew I needed to leave the Army because I was no longer aligned with it, but I wasn’t yet sure what to do next.
When the charade of 2020 began, I immediately recognized the coming medical and government tyranny. Despite being an Army officer with one year left on my contract, I couldn’t stay silent.
During my final year in the Army, I began boldly and unapologetically sharing my perspective—speaking out against government and medical tyranny, and speaking up for natural health and our innate freedom. It was incredibly risky given the implications, but, as I learned at West Point, it’s important to choose “the harder right over the easier wrong.” And I haven’t looked back since.
I’ve lost many friends by boldly using my voice, but I’ve made some of the best friends I’ve ever had in the process. I’ve also had the honor of befriending people I previously looked up to along my health and freedom journey.
I am incredibly blessed to have grown a pretty big audience across social media and podcast platforms, sharing my journey of exploration with the world. I am honored and humbled to have conversations with inspiring people who are doing amazing work, all while supporting my family in the process. The Way Forward with Alec Zeck consistently ranks at the top of Apple’s Alternative Health charts and is among the top 0.5% of all podcasts, in all categories, worldwide.
Thank you to everyone who continues to tune in and support me and my work. And thank you for hearing my story. Most importantly, thank you for being a part of The Way Forward for mankind.
On our website, thewayfwrd.com, we’ll soon launch some amazing tools to help you connect with like-minded communities and resources in your area. Stay tuned for more.
With love and gratitude,
D. Alec Zeck
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Episode 140: The Art of Co-Creation and Universal Law featuring Tara Pilling is now available for viewing/listening on all of our streaming platforms.
Tara Pilling is an international mindset consultant, holistic practitioner, and best-selling co-author. Inspired by a family tragedy at 21, she dedicated her life to understanding universal laws and helping others align their minds to create meaningful change. With mentorship from personal development leaders like Tony Robbins and Bob Proctor, Tara helps individuals and organizations unlock their true potential.
Some topics we covered in this episode:
Tara’s Journey to Co-Creation: How she grew up, her personal transformation, and her discovery of the power of the mind and universal laws.
Healing Trauma Through Gratitude: Techniques Tara uses to heal trauma, reframe the victim mentality, and view experiences as blessings or lessons.
Understanding Universal Laws: What the primary Universal Laws are, how they influence our reality, and how to work with them effectively.
The Truth About the Law of Attraction: Clearing up misinterpretations by exploring how our internal world reflects outwardly and the importance of internal leadership.
Harnessing Collective Thought Energy: How aligning with the creator and collective energy can help us unlock limitless potential and create the reality we want.
Practical Tools for Transformation: A walkthrough of a few of Tara’s practices including: The 7 Levels of Why: A method for discovering deep-rooted motivations and The 6 Steps of Freedom: A process to uncover and address the deeper causes of upsets and conflicts.
Click here to stream this episode.
Tara Pilling is an international mindset consultant, holistic practitioner, and best-selling co-author. Inspired by a family tragedy at 21, she dedicated her life to understanding universal laws and helping others align their minds to create meaningful change. With mentorship from personal development leaders like Tony Robbins and Bob Proctor, Tara helps individuals and organizations unlock their true potential.
Some topics we covered in this episode:
Tara’s Journey to Co-Creation: How she grew up, her personal transformation, and her discovery of the power of the mind and universal laws.
Healing Trauma Through Gratitude: Techniques Tara uses to heal trauma, reframe the victim mentality, and view experiences as blessings or lessons.
Understanding Universal Laws: What the primary Universal Laws are, how they influence our reality, and how to work with them effectively.
The Truth About the Law of Attraction: Clearing up misinterpretations by exploring how our internal world reflects outwardly and the importance of internal leadership.
Harnessing Collective Thought Energy: How aligning with the creator and collective energy can help us unlock limitless potential and create the reality we want.
Practical Tools for Transformation: A walkthrough of a few of Tara’s practices including: The 7 Levels of Why: A method for discovering deep-rooted motivations and The 6 Steps of Freedom: A process to uncover and address the deeper causes of upsets and conflicts.
Click here to stream this episode.
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Forwarded from Dr. Edith Ubuntu Chan
YouTube
Worldwide Mass Meditation with Alec Z & Dr. Edith. Recorded LIVE Jan 9th 2025.
Showering the Los Angeles area with coherence, love, strength and resilience. We are pouring our heart-power to support all who are affected by the fires. We are invoking the highest good for all, peace, safety and wellbeing. ✨🌧🧘🥋🕊✨ https://www.dredithubuntu.com/
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Interviewing Dr. Andy Kaufman in person today! What questions would you like me to ask him?
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Seeding Abundance Call is happening tonight at 8 PM ET
Seeding Abundance hosts biweekly gatherings on Zoom; virtual rooms for remembrance of who we are, where we are, and why we came to be.
Our purpose is to plant seeds of remembrance so that each authentic version of Self may flower.
Our gatherings are free-flowing with an emphasis on positive, solution-oriented conversations.
Seeding Abundance hosts biweekly gatherings on Zoom; virtual rooms for remembrance of who we are, where we are, and why we came to be.
Our purpose is to plant seeds of remembrance so that each authentic version of Self may flower.
Our gatherings are free-flowing with an emphasis on positive, solution-oriented conversations.
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Join us tonight at 7PM U.S. Eastern for the YouTube premiere of episode 142: Comedy, Cleansing & Fasting with Liquid Gold featuring Mike Cardamone.
In this episode, Mike Cardamone shares how he uses comedy to convey important messages and explores his wellness practices. He discusses his journey with Shivambu, its benefits, and his experiences with extended fasting and its effects on creativity and health. Learn about the relationship between consumption, creation, and how shifting habits can enhance both wellness and productivity.
Mike is a writer, creative director, and comedy content creator at dontslapsnooze.net. He collaborates with others on meaningful projects and holds degrees in english, advertising, and media production. Mike continues to explore unconventional approaches to creativity and wellness.
Click here to catch the Youtube premiere.
In this episode, Mike Cardamone shares how he uses comedy to convey important messages and explores his wellness practices. He discusses his journey with Shivambu, its benefits, and his experiences with extended fasting and its effects on creativity and health. Learn about the relationship between consumption, creation, and how shifting habits can enhance both wellness and productivity.
Mike is a writer, creative director, and comedy content creator at dontslapsnooze.net. He collaborates with others on meaningful projects and holds degrees in english, advertising, and media production. Mike continues to explore unconventional approaches to creativity and wellness.
Click here to catch the Youtube premiere.
YouTube
Comedy, Cleansing & Fasting with Liquid Gold featuring Mike Cardamone
In this episode, Mike Cardamone shares how he uses comedy to convey important messages and explores his wellness practices. He discusses his journey with Shivambu, its benefits, and his experiences with extended fasting and its effects on creativity and health.…
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Alec's solocast, episode 141: Reframing the Infectious Disease Paradigm is now available for viewing/listening on all of our streaming platforms.
In this episode, Alec explores the misconceptions surrounding infectious diseases and reframes how we understand sickness. He examines the role of belief in health, gaps in virus research, and alternative reasons for individual and group illness. Discover insights into biofield interactions, the intelligence of water as it relates to our body, and how shifting your perspective can unlock new paths to wellness.
Alec’s Journey to Reframing Infectious Diseases: From believing COVID-19 originated in a lab to questioning the entire infectious disease paradigm, Alec shares how his thoughts evolved.
The Role of Belief in Health: How our thoughts, feelings and beliefs influence the body and mind and why shifting them can unlock new perspectives on sickness and wellness.
Misconceptions Around Viruses: Breaking down misinformation and lies about virus isolation and infectious disease research.
Scientific Evidence and Logical Fallacies: Analyzing claims about viruses through the scientific method, exposing gaps in research, and understanding logical fallacies like affirming the consequent, appeal to authority, and more.
Rethinking Illness: Exploring why people get sick individually and as a group, focusing on physical and metaphysical malnutrition, toxins, and structural imbalances.
The Intelligence of Water: Insights into Veda Austin’s experiments on water’s communicative properties and how human biofields interact to exhibit symptoms or potentially healing.
Healing Through Proximity: The implications of biofield interactions and the potential for collective healing through shared energetic spaces.
For more information visit theendofcovid.com
Click here to stream this episode.
In this episode, Alec explores the misconceptions surrounding infectious diseases and reframes how we understand sickness. He examines the role of belief in health, gaps in virus research, and alternative reasons for individual and group illness. Discover insights into biofield interactions, the intelligence of water as it relates to our body, and how shifting your perspective can unlock new paths to wellness.
Alec’s Journey to Reframing Infectious Diseases: From believing COVID-19 originated in a lab to questioning the entire infectious disease paradigm, Alec shares how his thoughts evolved.
The Role of Belief in Health: How our thoughts, feelings and beliefs influence the body and mind and why shifting them can unlock new perspectives on sickness and wellness.
Misconceptions Around Viruses: Breaking down misinformation and lies about virus isolation and infectious disease research.
Scientific Evidence and Logical Fallacies: Analyzing claims about viruses through the scientific method, exposing gaps in research, and understanding logical fallacies like affirming the consequent, appeal to authority, and more.
Rethinking Illness: Exploring why people get sick individually and as a group, focusing on physical and metaphysical malnutrition, toxins, and structural imbalances.
The Intelligence of Water: Insights into Veda Austin’s experiments on water’s communicative properties and how human biofields interact to exhibit symptoms or potentially healing.
Healing Through Proximity: The implications of biofield interactions and the potential for collective healing through shared energetic spaces.
For more information visit theendofcovid.com
Click here to stream this episode.
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We are excited to announce the following additions to our stellar Confluence 2025 lineup!:
- Lincoln Jesser, acclaimed healing house music DJ/Producer
- Dr. Diane Hennacy Powell, ESP researcher featured on the popular podcast series Telepathy Tapes
- Dr. Gerald Pollack, world-renowned 4th phase/structured water researcher
Confluence is a transformational event where a heart-based, like-minded community comes together for health, freedom, and coherence. Held on a regenerative farm in Bandera, TX, just outside of San Antonio, this unique gathering offers an opportunity to connect deeply with nature and one another.
ConfluenceEvent.com
Use TWF10 for 10% off your ticket!
- Lincoln Jesser, acclaimed healing house music DJ/Producer
- Dr. Diane Hennacy Powell, ESP researcher featured on the popular podcast series Telepathy Tapes
- Dr. Gerald Pollack, world-renowned 4th phase/structured water researcher
Confluence is a transformational event where a heart-based, like-minded community comes together for health, freedom, and coherence. Held on a regenerative farm in Bandera, TX, just outside of San Antonio, this unique gathering offers an opportunity to connect deeply with nature and one another.
ConfluenceEvent.com
Use TWF10 for 10% off your ticket!
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The event features workshops on a variety of topics, from human design to fermenting food, along with lectures and live music across three stages running simultaneously. Attendees are encouraged to CYOA (choose your own adventure) throughout the event, ensuring a personalized experience.
All food served in the full-scale restaurant on the property is grown or raised on the farm or sourced from local farms, providing a delicious farm-to-table experience that nourishes both body and spirit.
For accommodations, we offer a range of options to suit every preference: camping under the stars, luxurious glamping experiences, cozy tiny home rentals, RV camping sites, and nearby hotels for those who prefer traditional lodging.
We hope you’ll bring your family! Our unschooling village, run by experienced guides, provides engaging activities for children aged 2-12, making it easy for everyone to enjoy this enriching experience.
Join me at Confluence for an unforgettable journey! Get your tickets now and be part of a heart-based community celebrating health, freedom, and coherence!
ConfluenceEvent.com
Use TWF10 for 10% off your ticket!
All food served in the full-scale restaurant on the property is grown or raised on the farm or sourced from local farms, providing a delicious farm-to-table experience that nourishes both body and spirit.
For accommodations, we offer a range of options to suit every preference: camping under the stars, luxurious glamping experiences, cozy tiny home rentals, RV camping sites, and nearby hotels for those who prefer traditional lodging.
We hope you’ll bring your family! Our unschooling village, run by experienced guides, provides engaging activities for children aged 2-12, making it easy for everyone to enjoy this enriching experience.
Join me at Confluence for an unforgettable journey! Get your tickets now and be part of a heart-based community celebrating health, freedom, and coherence!
ConfluenceEvent.com
Use TWF10 for 10% off your ticket!
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