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An Unimaginable Life

An Unimaginable Life

Written by: Christy Levy Spiritual Medium with Gary Temple Bodley
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About this listen

Christy is a one of the world’s most powerful mediums. In this podcast, Christy and channeler Gary Temple Bodley bring in those who have crossed over to share their nonphysical perspectives to tell us what’s really going on in our reality. The conversations are both fascinating and enlightening.Copyright 2023 All rights reserved. Social Sciences Spirituality World
Episodes
  • Dead Talk: How Abundance and Freedom are Vibrationally Attained
    Jan 20 2026

    To learn about The Freedom Project - Click here

    Two thinkers “arrive” right away: Ludwig Wittgenstein (Austria, philosopher of language) and Epictetus (Greek Stoic, formerly enslaved). Their combined theme becomes the episode’s core message: abundance and freedom don’t respond to self-improvement—they respond to present-moment participation, and the language we use either keeps us in “now” or pushes us into fear-based “later.”

    Wittgenstein’s thread focuses on how our sentences shape our reality. He points out that many spiritual and abundance struggles are reinforced by everyday grammar: “I’m not ready,” “I’m not healed,” “I must become something else.” These are described as grammatical habits that turn life into a test to pass. Abundance (money, time, health, love) doesn’t show up when we “deserve it” or “fix ourselves”—it shows up when we stop managing it with fear and engage with what’s here.

    Epictetus brings a steady, immovable energy and reframes freedom as the absence of inner argument with life. He shares the Stoic insight that suffering isn’t primarily caused by circumstances, but by the internal insistence: “This shouldn’t be happening.” Freedom, he says, is not growth but subtraction—not becoming more powerful, but noticing where we’ve been giving power away (waiting for conditions to improve, needing certainty, money, approval) and simply stopping.

    The conversation then turns practical around money. The guides suggest money feels uniquely “heavy” because we use it to answer a future-based question: “Will I be okay later?” Unlike health, relationships, or time (experienced in the present), money is often used as emotional insurance—asked to provide safety, which “isn’t its job.” The episode offers a language-based reframe: shift from future-security sentences to present-usefulness. A key line: stop asking money to protect you from time.

    They also address the belief in “sources of money” (job, investments, rentals) as a limiter: the true source is you, via inspiration and participation. Scarcity is framed less as “not enough money” and more as fear of letting it move—guarding rather than participating.

    Finally, they connect abundance and freedom as essentially parallel states: both are results of alignment and present-moment engagement. Freedom is “living as cause, not effect,” and abundance is “having what you need when you need it to do what needs doing”—both emerge when we stop requiring conditions to be different before we allow peace.

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    52 mins
  • Dead Talk: Ram Dass and Joseph Campbell
    Jan 12 2026

    To learn about The Freedom Project - Click here

    In this Dead Talk session, two familiar teachers step in right away—Joseph Campbell and Ram Dass—and the atmosphere is set with an image of a “classroom after it’s over,” signaling the core theme: no pressure, no performance, nothing to prove.

    Campbell reframes the Hero’s Journey in a way that lands like a revelation: the journey was never meant to be a permanent identity or a life-long mandate. It’s a map for early identity formation, but many people turn the map into a moral obligation—equating struggle with legitimacy and suffering with worth. From his current perspective, the journey doesn’t end in triumph…it ends in irrelevance—not failure, but the relaxing of the need to matter. The “return” isn’t to be admired; it’s to be absorbed back into life, ordinary and intimate, without a narrative.

    Ram Dass deepens that message with warmth and humility, sharing that he spent much of his life trying to be a “spiritual hero,” until life dismantled the role through his stroke—forcing surrender in public. The gift, he says, is that when you can no longer perform wisdom, you either become it or drop the act entirely. That collapse revealed something truer: love remained even when he wasn’t useful, articulate, or “teaching.” The session’s central question emerges: “What are you no longer willing to carry?”

    The conversation then pivots into a powerful explanation of the Freedom Project as a field, not a program—something co-created by everyone touched by it. A program is information moving one direction; a field is mutual attunement, where insights land faster, resistance softens without confrontation, and people feel seen without being analyzed. The field holds ambiguity without panic, supports nervous system settling through contextual safety, and helps participants become coherent with the version of themselves they’re tuning toward—without forcing linear steps.

    Campbell also revisits “Follow Your Bliss,” clarifying that bliss was never meant as indulgence or pleasure—it’s the subtle feeling of life moving through you: curiosity, fascination, a signal of direction. The reason people resist bliss isn’t laziness—it threatens identity, disrupts duty-as-virtue conditioning, and removes the “moral high ground” of sacrifice. Bliss doesn’t justify itself, and that’s why it’s so liberating.

    Finally, Ram Dass speaks candidly about LSD and psychedelics: they don’t create alignment, install wisdom, or heal trauma by themselves. They can offer a glimpse—showing what’s possible when self-reference drops—but they don’t teach the nervous system how to live there. Psychedelics are a door-opener, not a home.

    The session closes with the same overarching invitation: as the hero dissolves, life becomes simpler, more present, and more intimate—service without superiority, love without a role, and freedom without the need to matter.

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    55 mins
  • Dead Talk: How Money and Abundance Works With Milton Friedman and Thich Nhat Hahn
    Jan 1 2026

    To learn about The Freedom Project - Click here

    In this Dead Talk episode, two seemingly opposite voices—Milton Friedman and Thích Nhất Hạnh—come together to dismantle one of the deepest and most persistent distortions around abundance. Their shared message is clear: abundance is not something that arrives after enlightenment, worthiness, or alignment—it is the state of alignment itself. Much of our suffering around money, they explain, comes not from lack, but from misunderstanding cause and effect. When abundance is treated as a reward or result, the present moment becomes a means to an end.

    Together, they reframe abundance as a condition we stop interfering with rather than something we earn, manage, or deserve. Friedman brings precision and clarity, showing how treating abundance as a moral outcome distorts economic, relational, and spiritual systems. Thích Nhất Hạnh brings warmth and spaciousness, reminding us that freedom and mindfulness are daily practices—especially in the places we avoid most. They introduce the idea of a “precise life,” where challenges, delays, and tensions are not signs of misalignment but exact experiences required to develop specific capacities: tolerance for uncertainty, sensitivity to inner signals, discernment between force and flow, and the ability to stay present while resources move.

    The episode culminates in a powerful embodied experiment that reveals where scarcity truly lives—not in circumstances, but in the nervous system’s reflex to brace and prepare for loss. Listeners are invited to let something small circulate without reassurance and notice what happens when they stop interrupting support. The central realization lands quietly but unmistakably: abundance does not arrive to make us feel safe; safety comes from trusting our ability to respond. In this way, the conversation becomes less about money and more about dissolving the illusion of separation—allowing life to support us without resistance, just in time, exactly as it always has.

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    55 mins
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