May 25, 2022

Tuning into Other Consciousness - A Conversation with Winston Yeung

Tuning into Other Consciousness - A Conversation with Winston Yeung

In today’s episode, I welcome back a previous guest, Winston Yeung to talk about his experiences in a sensory deprivation tank and how it led him to connect with the consciousness of other beings, including that of a dog and someone drifting in space. Tune in to hear his theories about this experience and the lessons it taught him. 

About Our Guest Winston Yeung

Winston Yeung founded the VoiceStory Foundation, a non-profit organization that is creating social connections, facilitates personal healing, and promotes community building. This is done through the speaking platform – VoiceStory Live, educational workshops, mastermind, mentorship, and coaching to develop an individual’s ability to embrace and share their unique stories.


How to connect with Winston Yeung:

email: winston@voicestory.ca 

website: www.voicestory.ca

book a call to connect: https://calendly.com/winstonyeung/15

See video recordings of the past speakers at VoiceStory, visit and Subscribe to https://www.youtube.com/voicestory

Join the VoiceStory community and be part of the conversation at https://www.facebook.com/groups/voicestory

Transcript
Anita Adams:

Welcome to the joyful journey podcast. If

Anita Adams:

you're uncertain about what you really want or unsure how to be

Anita Adams:

a force for good, you know this world craves, then this is the

Anita Adams:

show for you. I'm Anita Adams, your host and guide to finding

Anita Adams:

clarity and creating a life you love. Let's tap into our inner

Anita Adams:

wisdom, access our highest self and unleash joy. As we raise our

Anita Adams:

vibration, we heightened the collective consciousness and

Anita Adams:

that my friends, is the joyful journey. Let's dive in. Hey,

Anita Adams:

joyful journey errs I need to Adams here your host of the

Anita Adams:

joyful journey podcast and today I'm excited to welcome back

Anita Adams:

previous guests to the show Winston Young. Winston is the

Anita Adams:

founder of voice story that was designed to tackle the issue of

Anita Adams:

social isolation that is prevalent in society today.

Anita Adams:

Winston is passionate about connecting broken adults with

Anita Adams:

their inner child, taking a deep dive into your own spiritual

Anita Adams:

beingness is a part of who Winston is. And today, he's

Anita Adams:

going to share with us his experience of tapping into a

Anita Adams:

higher consciousness by using a sensory deprivation tank.

Anita Adams:

Welcome back, Winston. And thanks for being open to sharing

Anita Adams:

your your stories and your experiences with us today.

Winston Yeung:

Thanks for having me back.

Anita Adams:

Yeah, I'm always excited to talk to you, Winston,

Anita Adams:

you always inspire me and you have such interesting, unique

Anita Adams:

story. So I'm really excited about about getting into it. But

Anita Adams:

to start just in case, there's anybody listening who doesn't

Anita Adams:

really know what a sensory deprivation tank is and how one

Anita Adams:

uses it. Can you just explain a little bit more about what that

Anita Adams:

is? Sure. There's

Winston Yeung:

two types of sensory deprivation tanks one,

Winston Yeung:

the more classic version, it's called a pod. It's a it's it's

Winston Yeung:

like it's like a big orb. And inside is a layer of water about

Winston Yeung:

eight to 10 inches high. saturated with about four to 500

Winston Yeung:

pounds of Epsom salts, and it's heated to skin temperatures. So

Winston Yeung:

when you're, you're brilliant in it. And that removes the

Winston Yeung:

sensation of gravity. And then when you close the door to the

Winston Yeung:

pod, it blocks out any sound and light. So you are free of any

Winston Yeung:

outside stimulus. You're deprived of sensations. The

Winston Yeung:

newer version is called a like sensory deprivation tank cabins,

Winston Yeung:

which is about the size of your bathroom. And then the floor is

Winston Yeung:

a layer of water. Same thing, eight to 10 inches tall, you're

Winston Yeung:

in there. But because there's a tall ceiling, it also removes

Winston Yeung:

the sensation of humidity because in a pod, it's very,

Winston Yeung:

it's warm, like and some people prefer that for me. Because I'm

Winston Yeung:

in the tank for three hours at a time. I don't want to have the

Winston Yeung:

humidity distract me. So I preferred be able to have the

Winston Yeung:

bigger space. You're in there. I call it turning Airplane Mode on

Winston Yeung:

for your mind or for your body because you're in there and

Winston Yeung:

that's it. There's there's no signals,

Anita Adams:

right? No, no like no sound. I guess you're

Anita Adams:

probably naked so you don't feel the distraction of any clothes

Anita Adams:

irritating you.

Winston Yeung:

I go in I go in naked. Some people can wear swim

Winston Yeung:

trunks or swimsuit, it it doesn't really affect the

Winston Yeung:

experience at all. It's just your own comfort level. But I

Winston Yeung:

when I first started, I was told that it's like walking back into

Winston Yeung:

the womb. And it really is it's it's warm, and it's it's

Winston Yeung:

enclosed. And for some people if you have claustrophobia might

Winston Yeung:

feel very disorienting. And if you've never done it before, you

Winston Yeung:

become very aware of how much chatter there is going on inside

Winston Yeung:

your head. And how hard it is to relax because we're just

Winston Yeung:

stimulated all the time. So turn all that off. And you're alone

Winston Yeung:

with your thoughts. It can be an interesting place.

Anita Adams:

Yeah, yeah, interesting. I read that some of

Anita Adams:

the SPAS or places that you can go for this that there'll be 10

Anita Adams:

minutes of music like when you first step in for and then that

Anita Adams:

shuts off and then at the end towards the end five minutes and

Anita Adams:

music again to bring you back back to your present. I wonder

Anita Adams:

if that says has that what you've experienced, they the

Anita Adams:

places that you've gone to they use music just kind of ease you

Anita Adams:

into it.

Winston Yeung:

Yes, when you first start off the give you the

Winston Yeung:

option. I typically go cold pill jumping. Caught was to jump

Winston Yeung:

right in right away, right? No, I went in with no music. I had

Winston Yeung:

no idea what was going on. So I, and I was curious about what's

Winston Yeung:

going on inside my head. It took about three or four times. And

Winston Yeung:

then when it really clicked, I remember I had my arms above me,

Winston Yeung:

like stretched out. And I was trying to find a way so I could

Winston Yeung:

feel the tension in my shoulders. As I'm moving my

Winston Yeung:

hands around. The next thing I hear the wakeup music turned on

Winston Yeung:

I go. Okay, that's, that's really weird. That's not

Winston Yeung:

possible. There's no way it could have been trying to find a

Winston Yeung:

comfortable position for 90 minutes. Then Then I realized I

Winston Yeung:

blinked out, like, wow, I turned off. And then the music brought

Winston Yeung:

me back. And the deep thought I had is okay, if so I turned off,

Winston Yeung:

did everything outside their pauses to like, did that. Since

Winston Yeung:

the minutes is over? I wasn't around. The consciousness wasn't

Winston Yeung:

active. Was the world still running? Or not on pause to?

Winston Yeung:

That's a whole other conversation. I started chasing

Winston Yeung:

after that. That feeling it was it's like turning yourself off.

Anita Adams:

Well, wait a minute, but so chasing after

Anita Adams:

what feeling because you it was nothingness. Like

Winston Yeung:

that. After the that feeling of being turned,

Winston Yeung:

like turning the switch off? Right. Like, in your mind now.

Winston Yeung:

And if that's the analogy people would understand is turning your

Winston Yeung:

phone off. Yeah, and then turning it back on. So you kind

Winston Yeung:

of like reboot yourself. In that sense. That feeling when I came

Winston Yeung:

back, I was so relaxed and vigor, like my whole body was

Winston Yeung:

kind of like reset. And I was chasing after that feeling. No,

Winston Yeung:

spoiler alert for a bunch of people. I realized that chasing

Winston Yeung:

after that feeling just prevented me from getting that

Winston Yeung:

feeling.

Anita Adams:

Isn't that interesting? So you had this, it

Anita Adams:

happened the first time because you had almost like no

Anita Adams:

expectations. You just were there and you were experiencing.

Anita Adams:

So and Have you have you been able to get that again? Or

Anita Adams:

because you've let go? Or you're? You're so much in your

Anita Adams:

head about trying to create that. That's not happening.

Winston Yeung:

I've gotten back there once. Okay. And so it was

Winston Yeung:

like once in how long? I've been floating for 14 years.

Unknown:

14 years. Yeah. Okay.

Winston Yeung:

So I've got I've attained, turn off, we'll call

Winston Yeung:

it turn turn off mode, twice, only in 14 years. And the first

Winston Yeung:

time was completely unintentional. I had no idea and

Winston Yeung:

it just happened. And then the other time, it was similar where

Winston Yeung:

I just gave in. And it happened most of the other work that I as

Winston Yeung:

I'm doing work in there. I'm conscious, I'm actively

Winston Yeung:

conscious or, or, like, the awareness is left on kind of

Winston Yeung:

like yeah, like if I'm not completely drifting off. Like

Winston Yeung:

I'm still scanning. So you can't turn off if Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Winston Yeung:

Yeah, that's, that's a conscious choice that I'm making.

Anita Adams:

Yeah, I did a little bit of research about the

Anita Adams:

the sensory deprivation tanks before this interview. So I just

Anita Adams:

wanted to understand it a little bit better. I understand that it

Anita Adams:

was created in the 1950s was created by a physicist, no. So

Anita Adams:

what was he he was a neuroscientist and a physician.

Anita Adams:

And he was wanting to experiment on or just study the

Anita Adams:

consciousness by cutting off all external stimuli. And then in

Anita Adams:

the 60s, he got a little controversial with it and he

Anita Adams:

started to introduce LSD with his subjects to to to sedate

Anita Adams:

them and to create a trance like state. Is it too personal to ask

Anita Adams:

if if you use any kind of substance to help bring on an

Anita Adams:

experience for yourself or have you have you tried both going in

Anita Adams:

without any kind of enhancements or and have you done it with any

Anita Adams:

kind of I'll do rug alteration.

Winston Yeung:

I have done it, we call it going clean. Oh, you

Winston Yeung:

clean? Yeah, well I like actually clean truly means that

Winston Yeung:

like No, no alcohol, no caffeine, no sugar, like you're

Winston Yeung:

kind of you eat in the morning. And then if you're doing like a

Winston Yeung:

late afternoon when you're you don't, you actually don't ingest

Winston Yeung:

anything other than water for five hours. So you go in as

Winston Yeung:

clean as you can. And then I tried it with like, THC and CBD

Winston Yeung:

gummies. And I find that I actually recommend that for

Winston Yeung:

people that can't relax, because it just helps you relax, and

Winston Yeung:

then you're you're in there. And that's for more of body resets,

Winston Yeung:

and you go in there and you relax, and then you let the

Winston Yeung:

tension leave your body. And then I have also done work

Winston Yeung:

trying to tap trying to do deep work within myself and I have

Winston Yeung:

introduced psilocybin, okay, which is the chemical that's

Winston Yeung:

found in magic mushrooms. But then what I don't actually take

Winston Yeung:

the mushroom, I have found a company that extracts it and

Winston Yeung:

puts it, so it's just pure, and it's in chocolate form. So I've

Winston Yeung:

combined that. And I am going to put out a severe warning that if

Winston Yeung:

it is not recommended at all, if you haven't done the work

Winston Yeung:

outside of the tech to deal with your stuff. Okay, we're going

Winston Yeung:

in, because the way that I describe it is the mushroom will

Winston Yeung:

open doors that you have closed.

Anita Adams:

The thing it might not be ready to open the doors,

Anita Adams:

if you haven't,

Winston Yeung:

which door it's going to open. And then when

Winston Yeung:

you're in there, because you are devoid of any grounding. Like if

Winston Yeung:

you do it outside or you look at your cat, you look outside the

Winston Yeung:

window, you kind of grounded in the space in there. It's just

Winston Yeung:

darkness. So and you're and there's no gravity, there's no

Winston Yeung:

nothing. So if you have a freakout moment, right? And you

Winston Yeung:

open your eyes, you see nothing. So whatever you are seeing, you

Winston Yeung:

are completely immersed in it. And I have had, like when I

Winston Yeung:

first started doing it, some extremely, extremely intense

Winston Yeung:

experiences. And if it wasn't for the work I've done

Winston Yeung:

previously, I probably would have ended in a mental word.

Winston Yeung:

It's

Anita Adams:

really triggered some stuff. It's it's virtual.

Winston Yeung:

It's like VR in imagine doing VR, but you

Winston Yeung:

actually tap your nervous system into it. So it's Oh, wow. It's

Winston Yeung:

absolutely real. Right? When you as I said, you don't get to pick

Winston Yeung:

and

Anita Adams:

just to be clear, you you wouldn't necessarily

Anita Adams:

have that kind of experience. If you you went in completely

Anita Adams:

clean.

Winston Yeung:

Oh, you go and clean it. You don't have access

Winston Yeung:

to that stuff. Okay. Yeah. Like you, like you can do you can

Winston Yeung:

access levels of it. Similar to meditation, you open certain

Winston Yeung:

access certain spaces, but there is in my experience for the past

Winston Yeung:

decade, there are some spaces you cannot access. And no matter

Winston Yeung:

how hard you want to get there, you just can't access it. And I

Winston Yeung:

have I personally have found that. It's like the locksmith

Winston Yeung:

can alter door for you. But you'd be prepared to face

Winston Yeung:

whatever good or bad comes out of that. That door and want to

Winston Yeung:

put that caveat out.

Anita Adams:

I appreciate that. Thank you. I'm so curious. I

Anita Adams:

would love to. I would love to try a sensory deprivation tank.

Anita Adams:

I've never tried mushrooms. I think I'll start with just doing

Anita Adams:

a sensory deprivation tank.

Winston Yeung:

I recommend the tank for everyone because we are

Winston Yeung:

so distracted and stimulated by the noise in the world. Yes,

Winston Yeung:

that when you give your body soul and mind an opportunity to

Winston Yeung:

just relax from it. Like some, like people that go to a

Winston Yeung:

retreat. They're taking themselves out of the city. They

Winston Yeung:

go into a quiet space in nature, they're drinking tea, they're

Winston Yeung:

feeding the cells, healthy foods, and you're giving your

Winston Yeung:

body a opportunity to reset a little bit. The sensory

Winston Yeung:

deprivation tank is exactly that. It's a tool that allows

Winston Yeung:

you to reset and then as you get used to it. more used to it. You

Winston Yeung:

build your experience. I call it drifting And you're able to go

Winston Yeung:

in and then drift off faster and faster and faster. So how you

Winston Yeung:

explained 15 minutes of music I could drift off in about a

Winston Yeung:

minute. You go there, relaxing beer,

Anita Adams:

right? Kind of training yourself in a way to be

Anita Adams:

able to take that dive in deep pretty quick. So you said you've

Anita Adams:

been doing it for 14 years?

Winston Yeung:

I started 14 years ago. Okay.

Anita Adams:

You mentioned in a previous conversation we had

Anita Adams:

over the phone that you had recently had a profound if had a

Anita Adams:

couple, I think profound experiences, do you want to tell

Anita Adams:

us a little bit more about that? I remember one involve the dog.

Winston Yeung:

So it started when I was doing a lot of trauma

Winston Yeung:

work with clients. And then by doing so I also understand if

Winston Yeung:

I'm doing the work with the client, I'm also doing work with

Winston Yeung:

myself simultaneously, at a different level than they are.

Winston Yeung:

So the my curiosity was, what happens if I start using

Winston Yeung:

psilocybin in the tank? And what would happen? So I started with

Winston Yeung:

a very, very small, low dose. And when I went in there, I've

Winston Yeung:

had the life had experiences using the mushroom to take me to

Winston Yeung:

state like, traumatic spaces, so I could heal it. And I thought,

Winston Yeung:

holy cow, this is nuts, like mind bendingly crazy, how

Winston Yeung:

painful that was, well, using a quarter to a sixth of the same

Winston Yeung:

dosage in the tank when we're talking like a gram, which is

Winston Yeung:

not much. Because it is, you're so hyper focused in there,

Winston Yeung:

there's no distraction, there's no music, no nothing. I drifted

Winston Yeung:

off to the same trauma space. And it was extremely intense.

Winston Yeung:

And then when it came out, the first time I'm going, what I'm

Winston Yeung:

looking at, like, what just happened in there. But it made

Winston Yeung:

me curious as to how far to the edge of this space, I can go.

Winston Yeung:

And I kept going back and going back and going back, and then

Winston Yeung:

I'm navigating this spectrum of dark, the dark end of the

Winston Yeung:

spectrum was like pain and suffering and just a lot of

Winston Yeung:

ugliness over there. And then I shared my experiences with my

Winston Yeung:

coach. Am I coach my guide Andra? And she said, you

Winston Yeung:

continue to go back there, because that's what you're

Winston Yeung:

familiar with. That's where where you're vibing. And if

Winston Yeung:

that's where you're vibing, that's where you're going to get

Winston Yeung:

pulled over to. So why don't you try? Navigate navigating that

Winston Yeung:

space. But never never thought of that. So yeah, if you if

Winston Yeung:

your, your default is the vibe in the dark, dark space, you're

Winston Yeung:

just going to go there all the time. So, so if you're just like

Winston Yeung:

snowboarding's, like if I, if I only know how to turn to my

Winston Yeung:

left, then I'm always going to turn to my left. So what happens

Winston Yeung:

if I bank over to the right and then start going back and forth

Winston Yeung:

over the spectrum? What happens? So I started doing that,

Anita Adams:

being a little bit more in control of the

Anita Adams:

experience? Is that what you're you were guided to do to

Winston Yeung:

I don't like the word control, like choose to use

Winston Yeung:

word navigate, okay? Like I have some, some influence, okay. And

Winston Yeung:

then, so let's do like surfing or snowboarding or skiing here

Winston Yeung:

the water. Then I started moving over, I started feeling the more

Winston Yeung:

positive end of the spectrum. And then one day, I drifted over

Winston Yeung:

to the positive side and the story is I connected to the

Winston Yeung:

consciousness of a dog.

Anita Adams:

And now to the consciousness of the dog.

Winston Yeung:

Yeah, so it is in my belief that we that, like a

Winston Yeung:

radio, there's just infinite number of consciousnesses out

Winston Yeung:

there and there, it's just just wait, there's wavelengths there.

Winston Yeung:

It's just energy. And like a radio, we are attuned to a

Winston Yeung:

certain we are tuned to a certain one and that's who we

Winston Yeung:

are. So you have your own energetic signature that makes

Winston Yeung:

you an ADA and I have one that makes me Winston. So my thought

Winston Yeung:

is, what happens if we have the ability to kind of like, tune up

Winston Yeung:

and down a little bit, just a little bit. You have on radio

Winston Yeung:

dial, the old school radio and you move it up and down. What,

Winston Yeung:

what else is out there? And that's where I've been playing

Winston Yeung:

like an AI, not choosing the dog. Like I just kind of tuned

Winston Yeung:

up and all of a sudden, I tuned into this frequency and I

Winston Yeung:

thought, okay, that's just, I'm making this up. But the

Winston Yeung:

experience was so profound, because it wasn't that I

Winston Yeung:

imagined that I was a dog. My facial features like I could

Winston Yeung:

feel my eyes, my cheeks were sore, because I was smiling late

Winston Yeung:

on my mouth, hold back, I can't even mimic it. Like it pulled

Winston Yeung:

back. My tone was hanging out. I had a thought of, you know, I

Winston Yeung:

had a thought or the neighbor then like, felt like but wiggle.

Winston Yeung:

My hands were like this it like all the mannerisms. And I go,

Winston Yeung:

this is surreal.

Anita Adams:

was Winston part of that consciousness? Where you

Anita Adams:

also Winston and tuning into the consciousness of a dog?

Winston Yeung:

Yes. So it's kind of like there's me. And then

Winston Yeung:

there's this one that kind of like the messenger that Yeah. So

Winston Yeung:

that was the very first experience and that was at a

Winston Yeung:

certain dosage. And then I went back in a month later, and I

Winston Yeung:

increased the dosage. And then And then

Anita Adams:

let me ask you, did you go in with a specific

Anita Adams:

intention? That next time? No,

Winston Yeung:

well, I just wanted, the intention was I

Winston Yeung:

wanted to feel the other end of the spectrum. That's not pain

Winston Yeung:

and suffering and trauma. Okay. Well, I realized, I drifted over

Winston Yeung:

to the beloved space of love and the dog represent represented

Winston Yeung:

unconditional love. Yeah, absolutely. And my coach said to

Winston Yeung:

me, it's manifesting as the dog, because that's what you're

Winston Yeung:

familiar with, because that's what my dog Kismet represents.

Winston Yeung:

So you're, it's something that you can relate to. But she also

Winston Yeung:

said to me, but don't be fixated on that. Like if the universe

Winston Yeung:

gives you a snake or a bird or whatever it is what it is. So,

Winston Yeung:

so just focus on what the, the space that you want to navigate

Winston Yeung:

in. So I, I went back in a month later, and I became the dog

Winston Yeung:

again. And this time, there was less of me. And more of the dog.

Anita Adams:

Interesting. Do you know if it's the same

Winston Yeung:

dog? It was the same dog? I could, I could pick

Winston Yeung:

out it was familiar. Was it your dog? Wasn't my dog? There were

Winston Yeung:

some, some conscious of some dog. The second time I knew it

Winston Yeung:

was the smaller dog. Okay. Very happy like it. I think it was.

Winston Yeung:

Well, I was in that space for probably half an hour or two to

Winston Yeung:

an hour. And I kind of played with it. And then I share that

Winston Yeung:

experience with a friend My friend Ronnie roll was

Winston Yeung:

interfaith minister. And she invited me suppose next time you

Winston Yeung:

go in, asked noggins Oh, sorry, this time. She said next time

Winston Yeung:

you go in, has what it's like to dream like a dog.

Anita Adams:

Are you asking is that just putting that idea out

Anita Adams:

to your attention?

Winston Yeung:

The intention is the intention is to dream like a

Winston Yeung:

dog. I'm like, okay, so I went back in. That's right. And the

Winston Yeung:

second time, I became more familiar with it. And then I

Winston Yeung:

actually did kind of fall asleep. I can't say that I dream

Winston Yeung:

like a dog. But I've never felt so. At peace, if that makes

Winston Yeung:

sense. It's like I slept and I've never slept so calmly and

Winston Yeung:

wonderfully. I shared that experience with her. And then

Winston Yeung:

the third song she said next time you go in ask, What message

Winston Yeung:

are you supposed to be learning from the dog? What message is

Winston Yeung:

the dog bringing me? That was the intention? And this is where

Winston Yeung:

I'm gonna say it's profound. Because, again, I'm not choosing

Winston Yeung:

to be going in I'm not choosing to be a dog what I'm just asking

Winston Yeung:

what the message is. I became a dog again. And this time it was

Winston Yeung:

95% that consciousness 5% Me and it was a level of love that I

Winston Yeung:

never felt before like I was being unfolding that remind me I

Winston Yeung:

could feel the tactile sensation of me being held at five was, if

Winston Yeung:

I was a puppy, you know, if you have a puppy and then you're

Winston Yeung:

holding it, cradling it in your arms, I could feel the pressure

Winston Yeung:

on my back, I could feel like, as if my hand was like, rubbing

Winston Yeung:

the back of my head, even though I'm in the tank. And then again,

Winston Yeung:

I fell asleep. But now I'm being held. And then I thought of I

Winston Yeung:

had a thought of this being that's holding me and I could

Winston Yeung:

feel this, it was most intense pulse of love. Energy is warm.

Winston Yeung:

Ball just exploded my heart. I really never felt anything like

Winston Yeung:

that before. And so I thought I would think about it that again,

Winston Yeung:

it happened again. And it was I describe it a level of love,

Winston Yeung:

belonging, acceptance, acknowledgement, all those all

Winston Yeung:

those things I've been seeking to fill this table my entire

Winston Yeung:

life to feel this from someone external. And all that just came

Winston Yeung:

from within, and then I fell asleep. And it was the most

Winston Yeung:

unbelievable experience. And then when I shared that with my

Winston Yeung:

friend, Ronnie, she said, I told her Yeah, it's like, it's as if

Winston Yeung:

it was a small dog. She said, Well, how do you? How do you

Winston Yeung:

know that? You're not the dog. Okay, well, that's the more than

Winston Yeung:

I must have shrunk down. And she goes, Well, let's just say the

Winston Yeung:

Divine is really big. Guys, and the Divine is really big. And

Winston Yeung:

then we started going down that tracks so she goes, if so if you

Winston Yeung:

are the dog, and you are being cradled by the device, by God,

Winston Yeung:

as she put it, how did that feel? And I know it was, I

Winston Yeung:

didn't have words to describe it, like the love the amount of

Winston Yeung:

the amount of like, I thought I felt love before this was so so

Winston Yeung:

beyond that, she goes, Yeah, that's we are part of the

Winston Yeung:

Divine, she said, and that's what it's like when we go back.

Winston Yeung:

That's that unconditional love and acceptance. And you got to

Winston Yeung:

experience

Anita Adams:

it. When we go back. What do you think she

Anita Adams:

means by that when we go back?

Winston Yeung:

She, she shared with me that we all come from

Winston Yeung:

the Divine. And we are. And I get to when she said those

Winston Yeung:

visions and those experiences of being abandoned and separated.

Winston Yeung:

When we come to this life, that's literally what happens we

Winston Yeung:

are like, torn away from source put in his body to have this

Winston Yeung:

experience. So when we return all those feelings of

Winston Yeung:

abandonment and rejection is then dismissal which we made up

Winston Yeung:

or let go when you go back and I go, Okay, I'm not saying I

Winston Yeung:

believe it. But it makes sense. And I'm very open to the

Winston Yeung:

interpretations. It was. This particular one was, to me it was

Winston Yeung:

life changing, because a few things that want to share the

Winston Yeung:

experience with people there, they're giving me pieces of the

Winston Yeung:

puzzle or the riddle to make me understand it. One was, you can

Winston Yeung:

only understand that feeling. If only if it already exists within

Winston Yeung:

you. Otherwise, you wouldn't know what that felt feels like.

Winston Yeung:

So therefore, the only way you understand that feeling

Winston Yeung:

uncomfortable being held and love and all that wonder that

Winston Yeung:

wonderful moment is if you've already happened before, right?

Winston Yeung:

Otherwise, you wouldn't be able to articulate and recognize it

Winston Yeung:

would recognize it. Yeah. And to me, that was profound. And we

Winston Yeung:

can go to have another conversation about it another

Winston Yeung:

time. But then I realized when I did a lot of reflection at this

Winston Yeung:

top five months later, as I'm pondering this was I was

Winston Yeung:

speaking at an event about childhood. And then I realized

Winston Yeung:

that now I understand where that came from. It's when I was being

Winston Yeung:

held for my grandparents and the parents. So when I was when

Winston Yeung:

you're born, you're held like that, like I also as a baby,

Winston Yeung:

where'd it all and you're just being, then everyone just

Winston Yeung:

radiating love on you, no one meet. And then I go, okay, that

Winston Yeung:

that would make sense of where I've worked right? I've felt

Winston Yeung:

that before.

Anita Adams:

What I was hearing with Ronnie was at Ronnie

Anita Adams:

Ronnie. Yeah. My interpretation of what I was hearing is that we

Anita Adams:

were, we would, we've experienced that in soul form

Anita Adams:

from the Divine, and that we are remembering that experience in

Anita Adams:

connection to the divine.

Winston Yeung:

Yes, which is another way she put it is

Winston Yeung:

imagine if we're a drop of water, that drop of water is

Winston Yeung:

what's inside of us. And that water kind of pulls the drop of

Winston Yeung:

water out, and he put it inside his body and the body does what

Winston Yeung:

it wants. Eventually, the body is formed will disintegrate, and

Winston Yeung:

that drop of water will turn back to the pool that it came

Winston Yeung:

from. and be one with with everything.

Anita Adams:

Yeah, beautiful. There's a I'm struggling to

Anita Adams:

remember is a beautiful Rumi quote. That's something along

Anita Adams:

that that you are not you're you are not just the drop of water,

Anita Adams:

you are the entire ocean of that. That drop of water, he

Anita Adams:

obviously isn't much better. I'll dig out that quote. But

Anita Adams:

it's a it's a beautiful one.

Winston Yeung:

But what drew me to want to share this with your

Winston Yeung:

listeners wasn't. It wasn't this particular part of the

Winston Yeung:

experience. It was what happened two months ago when I went in.

Winston Yeung:

And again, I went in with intention. And this time I

Winston Yeung:

asked, I want to experience more connection, even to become the

Winston Yeung:

dog again, because I had I after the third experience, I've had

Winston Yeung:

different ones. So I kind of missed the dogs. So I went in

Winston Yeung:

and I kind of lifted it out. And I felt the dog presence and then

Winston Yeung:

it faded away. And then I felt something else it faded away.

Winston Yeung:

And then I fell asleep in the tank. And then when I woke up,

Winston Yeung:

it was what I connected with. Now bear with me as I described

Winston Yeung:

this, when I open my eyes in the darkness. I'm seeing I'm seeing

Winston Yeung:

inside that tank. So I'm whatever I'm seeing is through

Winston Yeung:

is whatever that consciousness is you like it was this thought

Winston Yeung:

that okay, everyone that I've every one that I met all the

Winston Yeung:

experiences that I've had, good bad, the ugly, all of it

Winston Yeung:

actually never happened. In fact, it's all of a grand

Winston Yeung:

delusion. And I'm waking up from this dream. But there's no one

Winston Yeung:

else here. It's just me, like you're the only living thing in

Winston Yeung:

the space. And no matter how much the distraction The reality

Winston Yeung:

is, you're completely alone. And me trying to even process that

Winston Yeung:

at that moment, I could feel my mind just be like torn apart

Winston Yeung:

like I will This is mental. And then I was provided to other

Winston Yeung:

versions of I call it disconnection. The second one

Winston Yeung:

was being floating through space and their little spaceship, they

Winston Yeung:

can regenerate. They have the they have the technology to

Winston Yeung:

regenerate themselves. So I think technically live forever.

Winston Yeung:

They don't they can choose not to but they are lost in the void

Winston Yeung:

of space seeking. Seeking anything that's alive. There get

Winston Yeung:

fooled through the void Lost in Space completely alone.

Anita Adams:

So hold on to that was you imagining yourself being

Anita Adams:

lost in space?

Winston Yeung:

No, I was locked into I was locked into some

Winston Yeung:

another three different consciousnesses three different

Winston Yeung:

experiences.

Anita Adams:

Okay, not at the same time different different

Anita Adams:

times that you've gone into the tank this these are different

Anita Adams:

things that you've experienced

Winston Yeung:

one after the other two months ago, okay. Same

Winston Yeung:

session

Anita Adams:

in the same session. Okay, that's okay.

Anita Adams:

Okay. And was it What's your interpretation of that? Were you

Anita Adams:

being shown different realities?

Winston Yeung:

It's a It's the way I would describe it as your

Winston Yeung:

sister would would use you as as an example. So there's that need

Winston Yeung:

to consciousness and then I was able to tune into it and then

Winston Yeung:

latch on to it. And then now I am experiencing a moment of you.

Winston Yeung:

I'm experiencing your life as if I was used. I'm looking through

Winston Yeung:

your eyeballs I am. My nervous system is attached to your

Winston Yeung:

nervous system. I feel I'm feeling what you're feeling.

Winston Yeung:

Even though I'm so it's just overlapping, right? So all of

Winston Yeung:

this stuff that I'm experiencing, they're not my

Winston Yeung:

memories.

Anita Adams:

Right? Up to you. You are latching on to three

Anita Adams:

different consciousness. Yes. Okay, interesting.

Winston Yeung:

And then what I'm experiencing. And this is

Winston Yeung:

another note to your listeners, be careful what you wish for.

Winston Yeung:

From the universe, especially when it's vague, like, oh, I

Winston Yeung:

want to experience more connection. It was the idea of,

Winston Yeung:

okay, if want experience more connection, how about I give me

Winston Yeung:

some contrast. You probably won't appreciate what connection

Winston Yeung:

is until I show you what pure disconnection is. Yeah, which is

Winston Yeung:

isolation.

Laban Ditchburn:

Now, as I

Winston Yeung:

what I got out of the tank, I was standing in the

Winston Yeung:

shower, and all I could say, for about 2030 minutes was holy

Winston Yeung:

hands him I was like, holy, wow. was by far the most intense

Winston Yeung:

experience I've ever had. But the idea of being utterly alone.

Winston Yeung:

Like, even here,

Anita Adams:

sorry to interrupt you. Um, so is that that's what

Anita Adams:

that feeling in space was that you're utterly alone in space?

Anita Adams:

Am I following that thread? Okay.

Winston Yeung:

Yeah, got it. So the three was one was, you're

Winston Yeung:

waking up, you're awake? Yeah, people are watching the matrix,

Winston Yeung:

you know, you wake up in your pod. You know, in the movie,

Winston Yeung:

there's billions of other people in pods. But imagine waking up

Winston Yeung:

in your pod, you look around, and there's actually nothing

Winston Yeung:

there. And it's just technology that's distracting you from the

Winston Yeung:

reality that you're alone. Episode Two, with wood was, was

Winston Yeung:

this being floating around Lost in Space, just in the void,

Winston Yeung:

completely lost. I don't know how long they were out there.

Winston Yeung:

And the third version was your fear the only living thing on

Winston Yeung:

this wooden being on this planet. Oh, and you and you're

Winston Yeung:

looking, looking out into space wishing that you can go home.

Winston Yeung:

But there's no way off. And this desire and this longing to go

Winston Yeung:

home, that was something that I felt before this longing to go

Winston Yeung:

home that I don't, I'm not from here, I want to go home. And

Winston Yeung:

Ronnie explains that longing is to get going you want to go back

Winston Yeung:

to source? Yeah. And on all three of these experiences was

Winston Yeung:

to dish just show me the other other extreme right? You get

Winston Yeung:

that? And my point earlier was even if we feel that we're

Winston Yeung:

believe that we're alone here in the back of our minds, we

Winston Yeung:

understand that there's a billion people on this planet

Winston Yeung:

what happens if they're if you're completely isolated? And

Winston Yeung:

that was something an experience that I never could comprehend

Winston Yeung:

until I was given it and it was psychologically painful

Anita Adams:

so so what do you take away from all of that

Laban Ditchburn:

ah, first thing I took away was an men then I'm

Laban Ditchburn:

going to give myself a little bit of credit for for

Laban Ditchburn:

understanding this

Winston Yeung:

this either happened or is happening right

Winston Yeung:

now. We don't know what we don't know there's there's some being

Winston Yeung:

floating completely lost in space alone out there somewhere.

Winston Yeung:

It's happening right now. Hmm, that's dark thought. It is. But

Winston Yeung:

it's not an impossibility, but the compassion that I hold for

Winston Yeung:

that being be like, I'm going mad. It's like Yeah, it sucks to

Winston Yeung:

be you. But I, I understand. And then the other takeaway was

Winston Yeung:

looking at the experience It's for and I was thankful for it as

Winston Yeung:

traumatic as psychologically traumatic as it was for me. It

Winston Yeung:

really shifted my perception of connection and how universal of

Winston Yeung:

a need it is. And we that's what makes us what we are. We are

Winston Yeung:

we're just we're born to be for connection. And when we're

Winston Yeung:

disconnected

Winston Yeung:

I can't find the words for it. Yeah. Yeah, that the soul the

Winston Yeung:

soul is in pain if you can't connect with them to another to

Winston Yeung:

another soul.

Anita Adams:

And there's right now in the world, there's,

Anita Adams:

there's lots of disconnection, it's not at the level you

Anita Adams:

experienced. So maybe that's there's a little a little hope

Anita Adams:

there in the sense that when you really when you really no

Anita Adams:

disconnection, which sounds like you experienced that in a very,

Anita Adams:

very profound way. Does it give you hope to create more

Anita Adams:

connection and and the realization that it's in your

Anita Adams:

power to create more connection here today? Now in this space we

Anita Adams:

are in?

Winston Yeung:

Yes, yes. When I shared my thoughts with Ronnie,

Winston Yeung:

she believes you have an idea of what someone has to experience

Winston Yeung:

an order to commit suicide. I didn't understand she goes well,

Winston Yeung:

in order to actually go through with the act. She says you have

Winston Yeung:

to get that disconnect from everything that you know,

Winston Yeung:

everything that everyone that you know, like, spiritually,

Winston Yeung:

emotionally detach from all of that to be so utterly alone in

Winston Yeung:

order to, to feel that the only way to be free of this is to be

Winston Yeung:

completely disconnected. And when I had the process that was

Winston Yeung:

words, it made me she asked me and I'll share with your

Winston Yeung:

listeners. Have you ever had thoughts of suicide? I have she

Winston Yeung:

asked why didn't you go through it? But I couldn't find the

Winston Yeung:

words to explain. That's when she shared you it's because you

Winston Yeung:

weren't able to disconnect from everything that you are. But now

Winston Yeung:

you understand the level of madness the level of pain of not

Winston Yeung:

being connected anything and then when I replayed my

Winston Yeung:

experience that I go Yeah, I I can see I can understand when

Winston Yeung:

you're that level of isolation how painful it is and in a

Winston Yeung:

really lit me up to continue doing the work for me to help

Winston Yeung:

people

Anita Adams:

Yeah, that's standing up for me too. I feel

Anita Adams:

like it's a you were given this experience. So, you can go

Anita Adams:

deeper with your work in helping helping others you know, like

Anita Adams:

with your your voice store story initiative. As we said at the

Anita Adams:

beginning, it was designed to tackle the the issues of social

Anita Adams:

isolation that is prevalent in in society today. And now you

Anita Adams:

you understand that isolation at a much deeper level thanks to

Anita Adams:

the the the tank experience isolation tank or sensory

Anita Adams:

deprivation tank. You can work with people at a at a deeper

Anita Adams:

understanding.

Winston Yeung:

Yes, so I will never say that I truly

Winston Yeung:

understand what they're going through. But I am familiar with

Winston Yeung:

the space that they are in and When I work with people, and I

Winston Yeung:

can say that energetically they understand that it is true,

Winston Yeung:

because as I say, Yeah, I understand the space that you're

Winston Yeung:

in. They could feel it. Because she's been there. No, I'm not. I

Winston Yeung:

will never say I understand your pain. You don't? Yeah. But I

Winston Yeung:

understand the space and then they go, okay. And then when

Winston Yeung:

that trust is there, I go here, hold my hand. We, we can go

Winston Yeung:

anywhere where you want, you're not alone anymore. Oh, I'll be

Winston Yeung:

here to help guide you. And then once a step is taken in any

Winston Yeung:

direction, we can move on from the space. And that's part of

Winston Yeung:

it. Universe, were giving you that experience. Yeah. But it

Winston Yeung:

was. And I was called to share this. I don't, I can. Don't

Winston Yeung:

remember why. But it was just people that you're listening and

Winston Yeung:

you're working with might find value benefit insight from it.

Winston Yeung:

And then today, talk dog mean the same? Yeah, it's like it.

Winston Yeung:

When people say, Well, here's connection, you never wanted a

Winston Yeung:

dog. I was. I was in a lot of pain a few years ago, and then

Winston Yeung:

dog manifests itself in my life. And she chose. I flat out admit,

Winston Yeung:

I didn't pick the dog. I see that. So people understand. She

Winston Yeung:

picked me and there's a photo was a photograph I have that

Winston Yeung:

I'll share with you that my sister captured and all the

Winston Yeung:

other dogs are like looking around and then Kismet just

Winston Yeung:

looking at me. She chose me.

Anita Adams:

That's neat. I've heard that before from other

Anita Adams:

people that have gotten pets chosen by their their animal.

Winston Yeung:

And from that there was through the dog

Winston Yeung:

experience, like I shared with Ronnie and she goes you probably

Winston Yeung:

have a totally different relationship with your dog bale.

Winston Yeung:

I'm like, yeah. We have that dopey look on her face. I

Winston Yeung:

actually have a really good idea of what she's thinking or when

Winston Yeung:

she feels like going nuts. I

Anita Adams:

go. My butt like that, too. Yeah, I know

Winston Yeung:

what that feels like. So when I meet with her

Winston Yeung:

didn't gauge that we have is totally different level. I know

Winston Yeung:

I kind of know what it's like to be bouncing around just totally

Winston Yeung:

bonkers and excited. And when she's like running around and

Winston Yeung:

zooming around, it's like, I get I get it. Or when she wants to

Winston Yeung:

play ball or whatever. It's like I do I have a much different

Winston Yeung:

relationship with her now that I've had that dog experience

Winston Yeung:

because I've been gifted a dog's perspective on life.

Anita Adams:

That's really neat. I want to have that experience.

Anita Adams:

Winston, I think that sounds just sounds absolutely

Anita Adams:

delightful in the pure innocence of that so interesting. You had

Anita Adams:

quite very, very vastly different experiences in the

Anita Adams:

tank, you know from the that dog pure love. Unconditional Love

Anita Adams:

experience to that full on isolation

Winston Yeung:

would be pure connection to pure

Winston Yeung:

disconnection. Yeah, I learned your listeners won't know this.

Winston Yeung:

But I in my life, I have learned through contrast, the lessons

Winston Yeung:

that are provided to me, you know, you have your lessons The

Winston Yeung:

universe provides you I have my mind. I've always been in

Winston Yeung:

contrast, in extremes, and then I find my way to the middle,

Winston Yeung:

where you can't

Anita Adams:

really appreciate the light until you experience

Anita Adams:

the dark to write.

Winston Yeung:

Yes, and this time, I've always experienced

Winston Yeung:

the dark. And then the light. This was the other way around

Winston Yeung:

where I was given the dog experience first and then the

Winston Yeung:

other side. And I thought that was I prefer that.

Anita Adams:

Yeah, for sure. And that and I would say that was

Anita Adams:

divinely intentional.

Winston Yeung:

Yeah. Yeah, there is a I truly believe that. What

Winston Yeung:

I've experienced is anyone can also attain there's nothing

Winston Yeung:

special about about me I was just open and curious to see

Winston Yeung:

What could happen?

Anita Adams:

I think we just want to presence opening,

Anita Adams:

curious, I think that those are really key words. And those are

Anita Adams:

words we should embrace through everything in life, you know,

Anita Adams:

being curious, is, is so important with, you know, our,

Anita Adams:

our pain, why was like going deep and asking why is, am I

Anita Adams:

experiencing this? And being curious about all the good

Anita Adams:

things that are happening in our life to like, just get really

Anita Adams:

curious with, with your experiences and trying to

Anita Adams:

understand who you are and who you're choosing to be?

Winston Yeung:

I would reframe that just a little bit. Okay.

Winston Yeung:

And when I hear understand, it always brings up visions of

Winston Yeung:

thinking, headspace. So curiosity. For me, I teach

Winston Yeung:

curiosity comes from heart space. So to experience life,

Winston Yeung:

through the lens of curiosity, and even even though it sucks

Winston Yeung:

and people like why did this happen to me? Instead of

Winston Yeung:

processing that through your mind? To say, why or why did

Winston Yeung:

this happen? Then you process through your heart, and then

Winston Yeung:

instead of being judgmental in yourself, or critical say, what

Winston Yeung:

happened? Knocking on my dog you don't get without, you can't get

Winston Yeung:

mad the dog, the dog, the dog, dog being a dog, the molecule

Winston Yeung:

right there. But it already happened. And to go look at

Winston Yeung:

these experiences through empathy and compassion, and

Winston Yeung:

through your heart and through curiosity, when you you fire

Winston Yeung:

through those frames, everything looks completely different. as

Winston Yeung:

ugly as it is, you can you go through your heart, you

Winston Yeung:

understand it through your heart, and then fire that

Winston Yeung:

understanding of your mind is like, okay, I get it. But going

Winston Yeung:

the other way around. There's the I find the the dissemination

Winston Yeung:

is different when you go from brain to heart versus from

Winston Yeung:

heartbreak.

Anita Adams:

Absolutely. I agree with you, Winston, that's yeah,

Anita Adams:

so

Winston Yeung:

going through experiences and, you know, when

Winston Yeung:

you when you've learned and changing the awareness to just

Winston Yeung:

be just to be aware of little tiny nudges where you're walking

Winston Yeung:

down to smell. When it comes to media, you walk, you walk by and

Winston Yeung:

you smell fresh croissants or fresh bread being paid. And you

Winston Yeung:

crack a smile. Take a breath and say, You know what? I'm gonna

Winston Yeung:

go, I'm gonna go get one versus just brushing it off. Like, is

Winston Yeung:

it? Is it going to ruin your day for not getting one? But would

Winston Yeung:

it enhance your day? And your experience? If you did get one

Winston Yeung:

you don't have to eat doesn't have one. But if you got one

Winston Yeung:

here, I can see my senior or anyone just sitting there

Winston Yeung:

smiling. You're You're brave. But those little nudges, the

Winston Yeung:

little faint whispers Yeah. And you follow that? And then as you

Winston Yeung:

do as I did the work, those nudges became they actually

Winston Yeung:

become loud and clear.

Anita Adams:

Yeah. When you start listening to them, they

Anita Adams:

get louder. Yeah. And they almost become

Winston Yeung:

suggestions before that even happens, where

Winston Yeung:

you get to the point. So you know, you should really go.

Winston Yeung:

Well, for me, the words are saying we should we should go do

Winston Yeung:

this. I'm like, Yeah, we should go do that. Yeah, that was

Winston Yeung:

freakin amazing. So instead of being it's been, it's if you

Winston Yeung:

have the visual one. So the croissant one is you walk by the

Winston Yeung:

bakery. And then you have the smell. So imagine being able to

Winston Yeung:

do enough work that you rewind it to a point where you make the

Winston Yeung:

decision to go get it, then you smell it, then you get it. So

Winston Yeung:

it's like you're, you're now as you would put it in control that

Winston Yeung:

you chose to do this versus just

Anita Adams:

reacting to it. Yeah. Making choices. Are you

Anita Adams:

going to continue with your exploration in the sensory

Anita Adams:

deprivation tanks?

Winston Yeung:

Yeah. Can't help it. Yeah, you're addicted. I'm

Winston Yeung:

addicted to understanding. Okay, this is my experience I have I

Winston Yeung:

have ventured off to certain limits. I want to find out

Winston Yeung:

what's beyond that limit. Like, yeah, this is what I see is the

Winston Yeung:

limit though. There's, there's more more out there. What else?

Winston Yeung:

What else is out there on the spectrum of emotion that we that

Winston Yeung:

we have? Is there something on the farther and even farther end

Winston Yeung:

of of the positive spectrum that I don't even I haven't unlocked

Winston Yeung:

yet. Is there something and I'm also open to even feeling

Winston Yeung:

something on the extreme negative end? Because my

Winston Yeung:

understanding is if I unlock one end, the other end automatically

Winston Yeung:

gets unlocked. Yeah. And it's, I've experienced some pretty

Winston Yeung:

cool things.

Anita Adams:

Yeah. And once you start that journey, you can't

Anita Adams:

really stop, can you because you realize, Wow, there's so much

Anita Adams:

more to learn and experience and my, my understanding of the

Anita Adams:

world has been here and you know, this little bubble and now

Anita Adams:

my understanding is bigger. And if you continue to explore how

Anita Adams:

big can it continue to expand? And I think it's, it can expand

Anita Adams:

infinitely. I share

Winston Yeung:

that I share my dog experiences some people need

Winston Yeung:

Are you sure you didn't hallucinate that? I'm sure.

Winston Yeung:

Maybe oh, maybe. But it goes if I did. Weird, it all that detail

Winston Yeung:

come from? Hmm. Because it's not like I could, okay, there's, I

Winston Yeung:

could, I can imagine dreaming as a dog about the neighbor. Okay,

Winston Yeung:

I can imagine that. But the emotional sensations of all that

Winston Yeung:

I go, I can't make up. I can't make that up. It's, and these

Winston Yeung:

aren't my, I'm not gonna say these aren't my memories. There.

Winston Yeung:

But there's, they're out there. And I asked writing, it's like,

Winston Yeung:

yeah, I can't figure out if these these experiences are

Winston Yeung:

coming down into me, or coming up from me, like past life type

Winston Yeung:

thing. She goes, Why can't they be both happening at the same

Winston Yeung:

time?

Anita Adams:

Have that answer? It's not one or the other. It's

Anita Adams:

not one or the other. It's and

Winston Yeung:

purchases made around this. So you're just

Winston Yeung:

floating. You're just you're just, you're just gliding up and

Winston Yeung:

down. Right? Deal?

Anita Adams:

Yeah. Interesting. Have you have you spoken to many

Anita Adams:

other people who've done have had experiences in the tank? And

Anita Adams:

have they been vastly different? Are there some common threads?

Winston Yeung:

Many people that I understand most people aren't

Winston Yeung:

doing it for what I'm doing. They're doing it for for

Winston Yeung:

relaxation, and to call for calming purposes. I'm doing it

Winston Yeung:

for the dive. Real real deep into consciousness. Yeah. The

Winston Yeung:

people that do go often for you have to do like bodywork. Yep,

Winston Yeung:

the there's huge benefits and it changes your it calms you down,

Winston Yeung:

it changes your brainwave activity makes you more

Winston Yeung:

creative. It does unlock other parts of you, because now you're

Winston Yeung:

not distracted by stuff. And you know how meditation calms you

Winston Yeung:

down? Well, this, this would be meditation, if you meditate.

Winston Yeung:

Yeah, it's a it's a whole new level.

Anita Adams:

Yeah, yeah, some of the research I did I guess in

Anita Adams:

the 70s they started to really take this seriously and study

Anita Adams:

the benefits and the benefits of these tanks are numerous, you

Anita Adams:

know, from improved cardio, cardiovascular, circulatory

Anita Adams:

issues, and you're better sleep and better. muscle movement

Anita Adams:

athletes are using this for improved performance. It's just

Anita Adams:

like they have the list of reasons to get into a tank are

Anita Adams:

quite endless. So it's kind of cool. And when I'm with you, I

Anita Adams:

would want to experience it from a spiritual perspective and see

Anita Adams:

how deep I can go at the conscious level and and tap into

Anita Adams:

something you know a little.

Winston Yeung:

So it's not like I haven't experienced

Winston Yeung:

profoundness going and clean. That's how I started. When and

Winston Yeung:

at first it was to go, just relax. And I've had I've had

Winston Yeung:

muscle groups because I'm so relaxed muscle groups fire and

Winston Yeung:

then when you come back out, like all that tension that was

Winston Yeung:

in my neck, or my leg was gone. And then I started doing nice, I

Winston Yeung:

described like almost like meditative work to see how

Winston Yeung:

introspective I can get how deep I can go and start accessing

Winston Yeung:

spaces that I couldn't have otherwise and started doing

Winston Yeung:

healing work that way, which eventually has led me to where

Winston Yeung:

it is now. But once you once I got the taste of it of the power

Winston Yeung:

of what it can do it it's hard to ignore it because it almost

Winston Yeung:

accelerates it. My some people I've introduced it to for trauma

Winston Yeung:

work on these are experienced practitioners and Coaches and

Winston Yeung:

healers themselves, they go bad slake for themselves. I've

Winston Yeung:

accessed and done some healing that I would say, outside of

Winston Yeung:

this will take years. And there it took me like weeks.

Anita Adams:

And she's saying, Wow, really cool. And I read

Anita Adams:

that the prices can range between 50 to $100. For an hour,

Anita Adams:

does that sound about right with your experience? Or is it might

Anita Adams:

have been an old thing

Winston Yeung:

that depends on where you're at? I'll give a

Winston Yeung:

shout out to the float house that is in Vancouver. That's

Winston Yeung:

where I go to. And I have a membership there. And it's $40

Winston Yeung:

for 75 minutes. Oh, okay. Not so I don't I double up on it. So I

Winston Yeung:

do like a two sessions back to back. So I get the time in the

Winston Yeung:

middle. So the hours were he ad dollars for three hours.

Anita Adams:

So Wow. Okay. And is that like, because you have a

Anita Adams:

membership? And it's more affordable? If you have a

Anita Adams:

membership? Or is that? Yeah,

Winston Yeung:

it's offered, it's not, you can go in and sign

Winston Yeung:

up for for membership, then Same. Same rates,

Anita Adams:

I think I'm gonna have to give this a try. It's

Anita Adams:

I'm really intrigued, I'm really, really intrigued and,

Anita Adams:

and I'll go clean.

Winston Yeung:

Everyone, everyone started, go in. And

Winston Yeung:

then when you understand how to relax, the steps would be go in.

Winston Yeung:

And first you have to understand how to relax as I know how to

Winston Yeung:

relax as that sounds. And then when you're there, the next

Winston Yeung:

stage is learning how to start slowing down your thoughts. And

Winston Yeung:

then the next stage after that is learning how just I called

Winston Yeung:

drifting, where I don't I don't know. But you I hear this light

Winston Yeung:

rain all the time. So when I'm in there, I just focus on the

Winston Yeung:

ringing and I just let all thoughts drift away. And I drift

Winston Yeung:

that you just it's like going, it's like going to sleep but

Winston Yeung:

you're not asleep. You can call it lucid dreaming, you call it

Winston Yeung:

whatever you want. But yeah, I drift off. And then the music

Winston Yeung:

comes back and a break and it brings me back. So those are the

Winston Yeung:

those are the levels. And when you can get to the point of

Winston Yeung:

consistently drifting. That's when you pretty cool things can

Winston Yeung:

be experienced. Very neat.

Anita Adams:

And my sense is that that may not happen for the

Anita Adams:

first couple times, especially if you're having a hard time

Anita Adams:

relaxing.

Winston Yeung:

Yeah. So it's not going to happen. It's not like

Winston Yeung:

you're gonna go in, you hear what I said, you're gonna go in

Winston Yeung:

there even feel magic. It's gonna be very disorienting,

Winston Yeung:

because you're going from a world of noise into a world

Winston Yeung:

where there's

Anita Adams:

no noise. Yeah.

Winston Yeung:

And some people don't like it. I've had friends,

Winston Yeung:

that experience that they go into the last 20 minutes. They

Winston Yeung:

couldn't, couldn't deal with it. It's a practice like anything

Winston Yeung:

else.

Anita Adams:

Yeah, really interesting. I want to wrap the

Anita Adams:

show up. I kind of made this is a leading question. We talked

Anita Adams:

about connection, the importance of connection. And so this show

Anita Adams:

the joyful journey. podcast is all about learning how to access

Anita Adams:

your your highest self, and the ultimate goal is to heighten the

Anita Adams:

collective consciousness to move us to a kinder, more

Anita Adams:

compassionate world. Is there one thing you think we can do as

Anita Adams:

individuals to harmonize humanity?

Winston Yeung:

Yes, yes. What came to mind right away is I'm

Winston Yeung:

going to express it backwards. Next time, you are in discussion

Winston Yeung:

or debate with someone and you don't agree with what he or she

Winston Yeung:

said, Instead of judging them for it. Look at the situation

Winston Yeung:

and say, I would really like I don't understand. I would really

Winston Yeung:

like to hear from you and understand where you're coming

Winston Yeung:

from so I can understand your position. Because and then take

Winston Yeung:

your take, like if I'm asking I take my position, put it aside

Winston Yeung:

because okay, if I say it's right and you say it's wrong,

Winston Yeung:

then I go, Oh, no, you're wrong. You have that discussion. That's

Winston Yeung:

disconnection because you're not fighting each other versus

Winston Yeung:

saying, I, I might not understand where you're coming

Winston Yeung:

from. Because I don't have your life experience. Something might

Winston Yeung:

have caused you to believe me or to hold this position. I'm

Winston Yeung:

curious and I would love for you to engage in conversation so I

Winston Yeung:

can understand. And once I have that understanding, it's like

Winston Yeung:

Oh, that makes total sense. And I'll use I love tea coffee

Winston Yeung:

drinkers suck and coffee is great. Tea sucks. Well, that's

Winston Yeung:

because the first time I'd had coffee, it was completely black

Winston Yeung:

and over brewed that's why I don't like it and you try tea

Winston Yeung:

and it was bitter and didn't taste like anything. Now it

Winston Yeung:

makes sense versus just saying I am right or wrong. It's to open

Winston Yeung:

open the channel to have the conversation for better

Winston Yeung:

understanding. The the, the end result of that is if you look at

Winston Yeung:

every interaction through the lens of compassion, empathy,

Winston Yeung:

curiosity, and wanting to understand the other person then

Winston Yeung:

any any of that negativity just gets shelved, right. It's really

Winston Yeung:

hard to get mad at and upset at someone if you're trying to

Winston Yeung:

understand and be curious about them. Those two things don't

Winston Yeung:

work. So the more if more people could experience the world like

Winston Yeung:

a dog does. The world would be a better place because the dog

Winston Yeung:

always wants to make friends smells, smells of flowers

Winston Yeung:

everywhere they go. Everything's everything was a good time.

Winston Yeung:

World was great. And yeah, they just love everything. It's like

Winston Yeung:

if every everyone can expect can live their life. We a dog does.

Winston Yeung:

A much better place. Oh, I

Anita Adams:

love it connecting to your inner dog. That's

Anita Adams:

awesome. Thank you so much Winston for spending some time

Anita Adams:

with me investing time with me today. I really enjoy. I always

Anita Adams:

enjoy our conversations. You've had some interesting,

Anita Adams:

fascinating experiences. And I love your your sense of wonder

Anita Adams:

and curiosity and openness to experience what the universe

Anita Adams:

presents to you. And I'm grateful that you're open to

Anita Adams:

sharing that with me and to our listeners on the joyful journey

Anita Adams:

podcast. So again, thank you. Thank you. Thank you so much.

Anita Adams:

And Joe for journeyers I hope you enjoyed our show today.

Anita Adams:

We'll leave Winston's contact details in the show notes. And

Anita Adams:

yeah, I know Winston welcomes conversations and engagement.

Anita Adams:

Please reach out to him if you if you want to connect. And with

Anita Adams:

that, have an awesome day. We'll catch you next time. Thank you

Anita Adams:

for joining us today on the joyful journey podcast. If

Anita Adams:

anything resonated with you, please visit our website at

Anita Adams:

joyful inspired living.com Sign up to receive a free download of

Anita Adams:

our three guiding principles to inner wisdom and become a member

Anita Adams:

of the joyful inspired living community. For a deeper

Anita Adams:

spiritual dive, check out our retreats we offer both in person

Anita Adams:

retreats on beautiful Bowen Island in British Columbia, as

Anita Adams:

well as online retreats that you can do from the comfort of your

Anita Adams:

own home. And finally, if you liked our show, please leave a

Anita Adams:

review so more people can find it and learn how to access their

Anita Adams:

highest self and together will raise the collective