Zach Bush
๐ค SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
And so I'm seeing everything as I come out of this death cycle, the phoenix rising is this much higher, higher complexity of interaction that will allow systems to interact with billions and trillions of dollars to start to participate in this upward ascension of the re-remembering of humans within the context of our nature, within every industry, within a government, within a political construct.
And so natural law is starting to be expressed in this ecosystem. And so there's a lot of places for you guys to engage now with the imagination of everybody who's participated in my ecosystem over these last 15 years. And so lean in, be curious, and maybe see in there something of your own beauty and release what you're holding on to so that it can fly. We can go in and fly together.
And so natural law is starting to be expressed in this ecosystem. And so there's a lot of places for you guys to engage now with the imagination of everybody who's participated in my ecosystem over these last 15 years. And so lean in, be curious, and maybe see in there something of your own beauty and release what you're holding on to so that it can fly. We can go in and fly together.
And so natural law is starting to be expressed in this ecosystem. And so there's a lot of places for you guys to engage now with the imagination of everybody who's participated in my ecosystem over these last 15 years. And so lean in, be curious, and maybe see in there something of your own beauty and release what you're holding on to so that it can fly. We can go in and fly together.
Emotional trauma seems to be the most profound and disruptive toxicity that we can enter into, and it's the foundation of every organ disease that we know. If you store an emotion in the system, you disrupt the relationship between the energetic and biologic systems. The chemical trauma of an herbicide, pesticide, or an antibiotic.
Emotional trauma seems to be the most profound and disruptive toxicity that we can enter into, and it's the foundation of every organ disease that we know. If you store an emotion in the system, you disrupt the relationship between the energetic and biologic systems. The chemical trauma of an herbicide, pesticide, or an antibiotic.
Emotional trauma seems to be the most profound and disruptive toxicity that we can enter into, and it's the foundation of every organ disease that we know. If you store an emotion in the system, you disrupt the relationship between the energetic and biologic systems. The chemical trauma of an herbicide, pesticide, or an antibiotic.
We can overcome that instantaneously if we get over this psychological bust in our identity that we were abandoned by nature. Take a vial of your blood, send it across town, put it under a microscope, You take an aspirin and all of the platelets in that test tube will instantly respond to the aspirin. And so it doesn't matter where that cell is. It's responding to your collective experience.
We can overcome that instantaneously if we get over this psychological bust in our identity that we were abandoned by nature. Take a vial of your blood, send it across town, put it under a microscope, You take an aspirin and all of the platelets in that test tube will instantly respond to the aspirin. And so it doesn't matter where that cell is. It's responding to your collective experience.
We can overcome that instantaneously if we get over this psychological bust in our identity that we were abandoned by nature. Take a vial of your blood, send it across town, put it under a microscope, You take an aspirin and all of the platelets in that test tube will instantly respond to the aspirin. And so it doesn't matter where that cell is. It's responding to your collective experience.
Your body is a non-local phenomenon of biology connected and entangled with a soul. Addiction is a symptom of an abandonment disorder. We are most addicted to emotional input. And that's how we build our stories. It's how we build our relationships.
Your body is a non-local phenomenon of biology connected and entangled with a soul. Addiction is a symptom of an abandonment disorder. We are most addicted to emotional input. And that's how we build our stories. It's how we build our relationships.
Your body is a non-local phenomenon of biology connected and entangled with a soul. Addiction is a symptom of an abandonment disorder. We are most addicted to emotional input. And that's how we build our stories. It's how we build our relationships.
daily social interactions it's how we build our entire sense of self-worth is out of how many emotions did i experience today and when we start to get numbed out we get depressed numbness is the most terrifying thing to the biology because it means we're no longer alive nature has never allowed a wound that she didn't already have a solution for
daily social interactions it's how we build our entire sense of self-worth is out of how many emotions did i experience today and when we start to get numbed out we get depressed numbness is the most terrifying thing to the biology because it means we're no longer alive nature has never allowed a wound that she didn't already have a solution for
daily social interactions it's how we build our entire sense of self-worth is out of how many emotions did i experience today and when we start to get numbed out we get depressed numbness is the most terrifying thing to the biology because it means we're no longer alive nature has never allowed a wound that she didn't already have a solution for
Wow, so many. I have so many of those. Yeah, when I was an associate hospice director, I was admitting 80 patients a week to die, and I did that for four years. So at some point, there's so many thousands of stories or whatever that kind of amalgamate into an experience. I would say the ones that stuck with me the hardest were the children.
Wow, so many. I have so many of those. Yeah, when I was an associate hospice director, I was admitting 80 patients a week to die, and I did that for four years. So at some point, there's so many thousands of stories or whatever that kind of amalgamate into an experience. I would say the ones that stuck with me the hardest were the children.
Wow, so many. I have so many of those. Yeah, when I was an associate hospice director, I was admitting 80 patients a week to die, and I did that for four years. So at some point, there's so many thousands of stories or whatever that kind of amalgamate into an experience. I would say the ones that stuck with me the hardest were the children.
You know, when you see kids on hospice and watch them transition, it's so starkly different than how adults tend to transition or our elderly experience. There was an 11-year-old girl that passed away under my care. That has really stuck with me.