Radio 3Fourteen - February 26, 2020


Motherhen - Homesteading & Raising Kids In An Anti-White Era


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 12 minutes

Words per Minute

165.217

Word Count

11,954

Sentence Count

227

Misogynist Sentences

37

Hate Speech Sentences

31


Summary

In this episode, I chat with a homesteading mom of 5 about her life as a single mom of five. We talk about what it was like growing up in the 60s and 70s when she was a single mother of 5, how she became a mother and how she was able to raise 5 children, and what it's like raising 5 kids in the 80s and 90s.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 welcome new and familiar listeners i am your hostess lana joining me is mother hen a based
00:00:15.540 homesteading mother of five we'll talk about homesteading children and politics in the year
00:00:20.520 2020 so stick around welcome mother hen so glad to have you with us well thank you for having me
00:00:27.200 lana it's finally nice to talk to you looking lovely i love this braid and this outfit that you
00:00:32.000 have very classic i try and of course we can't see you but we can hear you i've i've come to find out
00:00:40.540 about you actually via your husband uh and d live of course and you guys you and your husband have
00:00:46.380 been active in our our live stream chats which is pretty fun but you're a should i say a based
00:00:51.900 homesteading mom of five which is all very awesome what other descriptive terms should we add about
00:00:57.940 to you oh geez i like the term jan of all trades nice um i love to motivate people you know that's
00:01:07.380 that's what i'm here for so i'm a huge advocate i'm i am a mother hen of uh anybody i meet so
00:01:14.440 you go and just sit on them right away put your feathers up you are mine no you know a really good
00:01:23.340 mother um tends to watch their children and take care of them and protect them until they're ready to
00:01:31.240 be on their own and it's definitely something that a lot of people need in their lives especially if you
00:01:37.180 look at um what degeneracy we have in this world with single mothers or mothers that just
00:01:44.020 don't fulfill their own role um it's something that needs to be done for a lot of people now
00:01:50.480 were you pretty tight with your mom oh yeah okay very so that passed down now let's get into a little
00:01:56.520 bit of your background you know you were single and then leading up to you know meeting your marriage
00:02:01.840 your husband and then starting a family were you always wanting to homestead and have a large family
00:02:07.640 uh maybe when i was really young and then unfortunately i fell subject to a little bit of
00:02:15.700 um feminism we all knew unfortunately well yeah i mean i was peer pressured into thinking that men suck
00:02:24.720 and and you know um you're never going to do anything with your life you might as well just go
00:02:30.900 and get a career and go to college and all that and um i did start working and then i met my husband
00:02:39.960 and i couldn't think of anything else to do other than to be his wife and bear his children
00:02:46.420 um it took me by complete surprise but i'm so grateful it happened though because it really he saved
00:02:55.300 my life now are you a completely different woman would you say after marriage and kids versus before
00:03:01.780 absolutely yeah yeah i think i think it impacts most women they always say women tend to become more
00:03:08.240 conservative or traditional after they have kids and i think that that's true you know you have
00:03:12.580 you don't want all these degenerate things around your kid anymore you don't want to go out and party
00:03:17.480 there's certain things they're like yeah it's not so bad you're liberal about when you're single but
00:03:21.260 then when you have kids to protect everything really changes yeah yeah i mean i wasn't really
00:03:25.900 degenerate i was raised in a very traditional home and i understood the value of being wholesome and
00:03:32.820 good um it was more so just a you know that's not what your primary focus should be um along with my
00:03:41.140 peers that that's what the the thought process was if you will and so um i'm glad about
00:03:51.200 that aspect of never actually reaching degeneracy um something to be proud of nowadays you know for
00:03:59.640 for women to be a slut is like oh i'm so proud that i'm a slut that's outrageous i think in our
00:04:05.960 generation it was still it wasn't cool to be a slut even back then no it wasn't and it was not cool to
00:04:12.600 be a teenage mom either yeah now at what point did you both decide let's homestead
00:04:20.240 that's been in the making so my husband is from the country i'm from the city um but my grandparents
00:04:31.040 my father was raised on a farm and my grandparents all lived on farms they all homesteaded
00:04:38.560 and um it always fascinated me i always spent all of my summers there at you know switching off years
00:04:46.500 going to my grandparents multiple times through the year and helping them and i always loved that
00:04:52.220 part of my life more so than the city life and so when i met my husband um you know him being from
00:05:01.900 the country he kind of wanted a taste of the city so we had wanted a trade-off um but as we started
00:05:07.980 to have kids and um of course naturally was already into natural birth and wanting to to make my own
00:05:17.660 baby food you know really being an advocate for healthy living uh with my children i started
00:05:24.940 gravitating more and more towards the absolute need to have my own garden because that's the only way i
00:05:31.020 can truly understand exactly what i'm putting in my children's mouths um so that driver kind of led us
00:05:40.140 toward it um along with a whole bunch of others but for me specifically that that was my main driver
00:05:47.240 and we just started you know you're as a married couple you need something to look forward to
00:05:53.320 like a five-year plan and so that's that's pretty much what we started doing what is our ultimate dream
00:06:00.700 of a homestead and how do we get there and how long is it going to take us to get there
00:06:05.820 and how long did it take you to get there i don't know how deep in you are now but yeah i mean
00:06:11.840 well we've had our ups and downs yeah along the journey so it isn't so but the thing with us
00:06:17.800 getting into homesteading there's so much to learn into in order to be successful and when we started
00:06:23.960 this there really wasn't much on the internet really this it's only been a big wave of videos and and
00:06:32.040 articles just within the last couple of years so um for us we're still on that journey to be honest
00:06:39.880 um right now currently we're just about to purchase our next land to do our giant homestead we're
00:06:47.720 months away um so we're ready um but we've had chickens we own rabbits right now we've had
00:06:55.680 several gardens we've we've tried and tested everything and all of our logic that we wanted
00:07:01.560 in our five-year plan of full homesteading we've tested just about all of them so we're finally ready
00:07:09.160 to buy the perfect land that will facilitate our homestead well that's exciting because that's that's
00:07:15.040 the future right that's going to be forever and hopefully something that you can pass down
00:07:18.540 to your children as well you know something that we don't have much anymore because a lot of people
00:07:23.180 do live in the cities and then you know they they get older they sell their place they downsize they go to
00:07:29.580 condos they spend the rest of the money traveling or something they don't actually have something
00:07:34.260 tangible to pass down to their kids or i think about in terms of an emergency scenario in the future
00:07:40.060 of america and you want to be able to have your children to be able to have some land that
00:07:44.540 hopefully is all paid off that they can live on and thrive on and survive on right absolutely i mean
00:07:51.340 i ask people all the all the time you know when you get old and you have money to hand down to your
00:07:58.820 children well what if the federal reserve has a complete collapse what then do you have
00:08:03.980 to pass down to your legacy yeah i know that's that's depressing thinking about that and then
00:08:11.700 the other thing is you want to help your kids get ahead too you know we get accused of white privilege
00:08:16.540 but i don't know so many white people that actually have an inheritance that they receive anymore or
00:08:22.540 property or or things it seems like that's kind of going out the window which is really depressing but
00:08:27.360 i think land is one of the best things that a lot of us should be buying lots of land right now
00:08:32.200 thinking in terms of overpopulation and in the horrible things that might be coming you know we
00:08:37.740 do have to become uh self-sufficient and we'll get into that a little more but i just want to say it's
00:08:42.380 funny how we see a lot of reality shows now about homesteaders especially in alaska and stuff it's it's
00:08:48.240 something people think is new and edgy and it's almost like a spectacle you know even though humans
00:08:54.160 have been doing it for a long time right europeans have been agrarian for ages right
00:09:00.060 that's how they survived yeah i know and now it's like oh look at these homesteaders but
00:09:06.160 i mean there's some people that don't know what that means or they think oh you're living like an
00:09:10.020 amish person or something so explain what homesteading means to you guys oh dear well um homesteading to
00:09:18.880 me is being able to produce all the caloric intake that we're going to need um that means
00:09:28.300 anything we need to ingest we're going to grow it and make it ourselves um but it should be
00:09:36.220 not just for ourselves it should be for our animals it's a it's circular right it's it's a
00:09:43.260 beautiful circle of life um to where you are making a footprint um and setting up not just
00:09:54.300 yourselves but your legacy your future legacy selena when you said hand it down to your children
00:09:59.240 that's absolutely correct not um teaching your children how to be self-sufficient how to do
00:10:05.160 everything um improving the overall health um of your family and but really setting up the land
00:10:15.100 to where it can be used for multiple generations and so you really have to think how you're going
00:10:22.900 to plot out your land how your where your buildings are going to be future families where their houses
00:10:29.860 are going to sit um really preserving the land the the trees even for future lumber usage
00:10:39.760 it goes into grave detail literally my husband has an entire show to talk about this
00:10:45.980 um and he is not done even scratching the surface on just the basics yeah there's a lot of information
00:10:54.460 and so good because there's so many people in our scene a lot of nationalists we we see what's coming
00:10:59.100 you know and there's a lot of people that feel we need to become self-reliant i mean what with the
00:11:04.280 days of banning and censorship how far is this going to go i mean are they eventually going to try
00:11:09.120 and ban you from getting water electricity i mean communists have been known to do this before right
00:11:15.100 so i mean becoming self-reliant may become a very crucial in the future what do you think
00:11:19.940 i advocate for that every time i talk to somebody uh i i mentioned that almost in every single episode
00:11:27.820 that i do um um you cannot be dependent on any organization any government agency um if they
00:11:39.640 hold control over your survival right water food air um then they can control you and they have absolute
00:11:51.240 control over you and they they can threaten your life if if uh you're not doing what they like
00:11:58.240 and so home having a homestead is freedom um you no longer have to be dependent on somebody to feed
00:12:07.000 you or to provide food in the grocery store you know there's there's actually there was like um
00:12:12.000 there was some kind of a major weather event in alaska and the food trucks couldn't get to the grocery
00:12:19.440 stores and um this was like maybe a couple of years ago and um just about everybody was starving
00:12:27.620 they were scrounging for food and the only people that were surviving were the homesteaders
00:12:34.640 in alaska yep that's right exactly you can't you can't depend on it and especially as our countries
00:12:42.920 can well i know america is going to tumble more into third world status you never know what's coming
00:12:48.060 down the road so it's always better to be self-sufficient not to rely on anyone else of
00:12:53.720 course and as you said the important factor nutrition people are getting sicker you know
00:12:58.220 living in these cities eating this toxic food being in these toxic environments all the time
00:13:02.860 i find that homesteaders and people that have been on the land for a long time growing their own food
00:13:08.060 and stuff they're the most natural um you know grounded people you'll you'll meet uh what has been
00:13:14.400 your experience have you been meeting other homesteaders well yeah they're all very healthy
00:13:20.980 and so are we um you know it's there's definitely something to it when we started going down this
00:13:27.280 journey we would get you know colds we would get the flu we would get all this all the gunk and all
00:13:34.280 the sickness and you know digestive issues if you will and when we started eating organic healthy
00:13:42.480 homegrown we all the entire family saw a vast improvement in our health i feel like i don't
00:13:51.580 know what i feel i just feel more alive i don't have uh stomach pains i don't have all these ailments
00:13:58.600 that everybody else i know does anymore i think too if you can do it right well because we know
00:14:06.140 organic food is so expensive go to whole foods see how expensive it is i mean you easily go spend a
00:14:11.300 couple hundred bucks i know there's farmers markets and stuff like that but you can also save the money
00:14:16.520 but i think of when i think of homesteading if you can do it right and become self-sufficient and
00:14:21.340 be able to make some kind of money to be able to pay for little expenses it seems like a less even
00:14:26.380 though it's harder you're out there toiling the fields it seems lower stress level and i think
00:14:32.500 that you feel better because you're outside more i mean god knows i get you know around computers too
00:14:37.640 much like oh it's like virtual reality after a while you know what do you think is it is it lower stress
00:14:43.020 yeah absolutely it's something worthwhile to do right so you know if you're having fun working it's not
00:14:50.940 stressful um a lot of people work the nine to five jobs and so that's stressful in itself right
00:14:57.300 and but but what do they get out of that job they get a paycheck and they have to pay taxes on it they
00:15:04.360 have to um go and buy their groceries and and everything else and and they have to take the time out to do
00:15:11.660 all of that shopping right and all that is just your time that you're having to spend away from your
00:15:19.740 family away from what you should be doing and then on top of that you're not making enough money to
00:15:27.100 survive per se and so you're stressed about that and it just creates a whole stressful environment so
00:15:34.440 when you start taking control of your own life and taking control of where you're spending your time
00:15:42.620 and your money and your efforts um more to doing it yourself growing it yourself you you get so much
00:15:51.720 benefit to actually see i i i grew this from a seed and now tonight i'm i'm cutting it up and putting it
00:16:01.720 in a dish or i made this entire meal from my land yeah it's pretty cool huh special it's like magic in a
00:16:10.040 way it's like whoa this this amazing thing just grows out of the dirt now i'm eating it and it's
00:16:16.280 really good it's better than anything in the store i mean i remember our first meal that we ever made
00:16:21.960 all from our own land um we had believe it or not um a lavender infused honey glazed rabbit that we
00:16:34.020 barbecued sounds good yes we go fancy but we also had um potatoes and herbed potatoes and carrots
00:16:45.140 um all from our garden nice all from our own land now what about animals are you are you going to have
00:16:54.420 livestock or do you have livestock well all we have currently are just rabbits okay um but yeah in
00:17:01.020 the end we will have and this is the big debate so maybe y'all can help us with this one which would
00:17:07.180 you prefer cow milk or goat milk cow milk or sheep cow or sheep i know yeah so but um and these are the
00:17:17.560 the intricacies that that we're talking about currently is the effort associated with harvesting
00:17:23.720 that cow milk versus goat milk and what are the other benefits you can make from it because you can make
00:17:29.520 cheese and butter from both of them i just like the taste better but yeah cows you have to milk them
00:17:34.200 what like two three times a day or something like that twice a day yeah and depending on the type of
00:17:40.120 cow depends on how many gallons of milk you get every day but nothing is as good as raw milk and the
00:17:46.220 cream on the top and it's ludicrous because in some states it's actually illegal to go and buy it
00:17:51.600 people have to go in like a herd share or buy it for their cat food or something you know it's like
00:17:56.840 come on humans have been drinking raw milk forever like especially europeans not going to die from
00:18:01.440 drinking raw milk it's funny the first time i did have it raw that the thought got in my head like oh
00:18:06.160 am i doing something wrong am i going to get sick you know but it's the one thing that does it doesn't
00:18:10.460 make my stomach hurt other milk can actually make my stomach hurt you know even some certain organic
00:18:15.840 ones yes and i don't know the terms but there are two differences between the store-bought milk versus
00:18:22.240 raw milk right there's like an like l1 something difference in the um milk itself and the one that's
00:18:32.780 sold at the store and i this is a highly controversial topic but the one sold in the store you know is
00:18:39.720 almost carcinogenic um they say they say i don't know who they are you know and and but it lines up to
00:18:48.740 what you and i both agree with it hurts our stomach you know whatever else but raw milk is great it's
00:18:55.020 fine and it but it's more it has different components in it and so i would encourage everybody
00:19:01.600 to look into that at least for yourself don't listen to others on these topics if it's controversial
00:19:07.760 more than likely there's a lie or there's there's truth in there that people are trying to hide
00:19:13.340 that's right that's right i mean i've seen it's hilarious so i've seen well kind of scary i've
00:19:18.940 seen footage of people swat teams coming in and storming on farms who were selling raw milk and
00:19:25.020 stuff it's just it's crazy like why are they so against that why don't they use that force at the
00:19:30.000 border you know instead of farmers it's outrageous i've heard about that as well um i i think though
00:19:36.260 they've gotten a lot more lax on that because there are a lot more co-ops all over the place where
00:19:41.460 you can easily get raw milk um now now now i know you're also part of the paleo diet yes
00:19:48.360 oh yeah here i'm sorry we're showing some footage right here of the swat team storming for
00:19:53.780 where's the raw milk stick your hands up you know it's crazy anyway paleo diets are i think we're on
00:20:00.960 the same page about diet yeah yeah we are um i i don't call it paleo i don't like because we're
00:20:07.660 talking about milk too well i do like my raw milk and cheese and all that some paleo people don't do
00:20:12.960 that but i definitely love my cheese i i hate labels anywhere and so when when a diet has a name
00:20:19.900 i don't like it because it's limited right immediately lost for interpretation but i like to say i eat
00:20:28.040 like my ancestors and do i don't if you want me to i can go into kind of the logic around yeah let's
00:20:36.760 do it because some people still don't know i get a lot of questions about this uh you know your diet
00:20:40.720 and what do you mean uh ancestral diets paleo diet so i think it's helpful information okay um okay so
00:20:48.840 going sciency a little bit you know your gut is the core of your genetic uh makeup your genetic design
00:21:00.160 for survival um you have to eat in order to survive and so if you look at from an evolutionary
00:21:08.960 perspective um that design is not going to change very much it would have to have a massive
00:21:17.860 and long-term consistent environmental change in order for it to consider changing how your gut works
00:21:26.600 and your gut is designed based off of your genetics and your genetics are inherited by your ancestors
00:21:36.340 so i would i would estimate it would take thousands of years of a constant change in order for your your
00:21:44.120 gut to change how it processes things and so you would literally have to do genealogy and get a better
00:21:51.800 understanding of your ancestors who they were where they lived and how they lived they probably foraged
00:21:59.680 hunted locally a only local and seasonal food that they could gather themselves
00:22:06.680 and for that that is what i tried to do as well um and since doing that you know i i started that journey
00:22:17.060 five probably four or five years now um and to be honest and i don't know how this is going to be
00:22:26.300 perceived to people but i lost a substantial amount of weight that i didn't even know i had in all
00:22:33.040 honesty i mean it it's it was insane um and how quickly that that it just shed away and i can't go back
00:22:43.120 to eating other foods because it completely messes up my whole entire just flow my system
00:22:52.160 um so to kind of give you an example um grass-fed meat only mostly red meat a little bit of chicken
00:23:02.960 not much um if i want a good white meat then i'll eat a rabbit or something else um i eat a lot of bison
00:23:11.240 as well um i don't think i'll ever be able to own bison so that will be an issue for me
00:23:18.900 maybe someone else will and you can trade yeah that that's a great idea and what about fish
00:23:24.740 um i actually don't eat fish unless it's fresh captured from the river
00:23:31.320 it depends where you live too exactly and where i live would not be comparable fish
00:23:38.960 so i can't i don't have access to it although fish should be very healthy for me it's probably
00:23:46.720 the one area that i lack and i know fish itself specifically helps with um you know women and
00:23:55.700 men both go through these stages in life where they get thinned out hair or dry hair or you know
00:24:02.440 things like that um fish is really good for that to scalp healthy yes definitely now do you supplement do
00:24:10.480 you is that something you would buy okay yeah definitely because i mean we have to in this day and age
00:24:15.780 also you know i think our ancestors didn't have that luxury but we do have certain luxuries now
00:24:20.060 that we can incorporate into our homesteader right that's so funny you say that because i was literally
00:24:26.680 just thinking that last night you know it you know they're you don't have to absolutely live exactly
00:24:32.560 like your ancestors and that's always the bashing i get well our ancestors didn't have long lives and we
00:24:38.980 have long lives now and you know all sorts of different uh anti this that and the other
00:24:44.980 but i i do agree like we have supplements we have like i i love um superfood juices um and i i love to
00:24:54.480 make them but i also buy them and so um that's something our ancestors yeah they never actually did the
00:25:01.260 superfood juice the cold pressed superfood juice but it's it's amazing it's like super fuel for you
00:25:08.660 yeah it's i think with the whole idea with homesteading is you become as self-sufficient
00:25:12.480 as you can you supplement in other ways it's okay to buy certain things it's not like you can't order
00:25:17.240 something online or something you know i mean like okay to a t only if it grows out of the ground i'm
00:25:23.000 gonna eat it i think some people have that kind of idea it doesn't have to be that harsh you do the
00:25:27.940 best that you can that's going to fit your lifestyle and your family and and your needs
00:25:32.300 yeah everybody is their own right and you know i i don't i'm not a complete amish person i am talking
00:25:40.940 on the internet right now and so but yeah yeah we buy stuff and um you know and we have our or like
00:25:52.500 we eat uh chocolate and that's not something that would be normal but i i like chocolate
00:25:59.020 and you know what you're thin because you're eating all these other good foods i noticed that
00:26:04.960 too just eating organic or uh more i would call it more more paleo i don't eat wheat wheat just
00:26:11.720 messes with me i just cannot eat wheat so therefore i can i basically can eat as much as i want of
00:26:16.900 anything not gain weight if i just stay away from certain carbs that i think are pretty bad for you
00:26:21.980 anyway bready starchy things just don't work for me uh but then you can have some chocolate
00:26:26.200 yeah okay i can have yeah i mean where things used to affect you they don't affect you anymore
00:26:33.220 you know um but you have to i go you have to yourself go through the process of elimination of
00:26:40.200 what is affecting your body in a bad way and there's no one diet no one secret for everybody because we
00:26:47.580 all have different genetic makeup there's going to be a lot of similarity for the people of european
00:26:53.120 descent um but if you're more great britain than germanic or well that's a bad example but other than
00:27:01.440 or like sweden then you're going to have some differences in what you need to be eating um your
00:27:08.060 body is waiting for certain levels of vitamin d certain levels of irons certain levels of protein
00:27:15.280 um because that's what it needs to function at optimal power and so that you've got to self-identify
00:27:26.620 and for all of the foreign objects that you're eating you know there are natural ones that your body
00:27:34.540 doesn't know how to process you know like like whole whole husk corn instead of just corn meal
00:27:41.760 right so there's differences of how our ancestors used to utilize each of these food types like nuts
00:27:50.520 they wouldn't just eat a nut they would grind it up and use it like a flower would be used um or they
00:27:58.500 would eat it when it was newer softer and and when it got older or harder they would grind it up so
00:28:05.300 it's not just about okay well my ancestors ate these things because these were locally available
00:28:11.940 you need to understand how they processed them and eat them exactly the same way or or very close to
00:28:18.300 let's switch topics a little bit and get into kids i want to hear about your decision to have many kids
00:28:25.880 and about what age you started i know we have quite a big baby boom happening in our scene right now which
00:28:30.940 is pretty exciting so let's get into your decision to have many kids when you started and when you
00:28:36.140 made the decision that yes i want five kids well that's a great one um i come from a family of five
00:28:44.300 kids nice so um my husband comes from a very small family and so when we got together you know what is
00:28:53.080 one of the first things you talk about is how many kids do you want he said six and i said two
00:28:59.180 um so we we had three back to back and then we kind of took a break because literally we had three
00:29:10.460 kids within four years and i was very young you know early 20s and then um you know after about six
00:29:20.520 years we said you know what let's let's have more babies and so we had two more back to back
00:29:28.320 and we're we're not done um you know we're still young we can still have more kids so
00:29:35.060 it's just about balancing it out for our lifestyle it's funny because i know another homesteader couple
00:29:41.400 and they had uh yeah they had a few really quick they paused and then she just she's 42 and she just
00:29:49.020 had a another baby so you know it's almost like bam then they'll have some new ones again because
00:29:54.640 they're getting you know empty nest syndrome or whatever the other kids are grown up you know so
00:29:58.760 yeah yep that's cool yeah in the old days they used to just have them till they couldn't anymore right
00:30:03.880 yeah exactly i mean my mom went you know she she did that um she spaced them out though
00:30:11.480 uh anywhere between three to five years per baby but i think her last kid she was about 46
00:30:18.740 wow yeah i see my grandmas were 43 when they had their last kid too so yeah i think in europe too
00:30:25.900 tends to be in america there was oh high risk over 35 is some high risk pregnancy it's just like calm
00:30:32.220 down like there's a huge baby boom of women in their late 30s who are you know they're not dying the
00:30:37.580 kids aren't retarded or deformed you know so it's like in a europe that they're not uh they're not that
00:30:43.380 way they're they're more relaxed about that if women are you know 40 and having kids or something
00:30:47.880 well i would also say in america um the statistics that they're using are across multiple races
00:30:55.140 so um it may be unhealthy for you know somebody that is not white to have children past mid 30s but
00:31:08.160 that doesn't mean that it's a high risk for um our race yeah it's true there is the racial component
00:31:15.740 i was just talking about this the other day with someone uh i believe it's uh black babies yeah they
00:31:21.240 don't just state as long as white babies very interesting huh is it has to do with the size or
00:31:27.780 i'm not sure interesting though yeah different hips for different ladies i guess i don't and the you
00:31:35.580 know and and it there's a whole science to it i mean your body your body knows like you are going
00:31:43.160 to grow a baby that is um complementary to you know or it's full circle your body is going to grow
00:31:53.100 to be able to deliver a baby and you're and then your body knows what size that baby needs to be in
00:31:58.760 order to come out and things like that it's only whenever you have very big differences between
00:32:04.900 those genetic standards um where you're going to have mishaps and so the baby may be on a different
00:32:13.300 genetic path than you in your body um say for instance you take a woman that's that comes from
00:32:21.500 genetic background that where they're used to having small babies um if if she marries a man and has
00:32:28.740 children with them and the men come from a long line of giant babies you know yeah then you have
00:32:35.300 these problems now do you guys keep it simple in terms of toys tell us about that because people
00:32:43.380 have different ideas on that i mean five kids you have a lot of stuff or do you keep it simple i mean
00:32:49.760 especially if you have property they can run around and play with their imagination for instance but
00:32:54.020 yeah that's number one rule your main toy is the outside um that's how i was raised um and but with
00:33:03.220 toys i you know a lot we have some generic toys some basic toys but the majority of it is open your mind
00:33:12.260 and be imaginative what can you build what can you do if you want if you want to play with something
00:33:18.340 build it um and um and that's for the older kids for the younger kids we you know try to encourage them
00:33:27.780 to color a lot um and we're also very busy teaching them to clean but they do have some down time and
00:33:35.860 they have their toys i you know it doesn't we have basic toys we don't have like the talkative and music
00:33:44.580 toys that you have today those are annoying anyway aren't they oh they're very annoying i hate them
00:33:50.820 um and every time we get them for a birthday or christmas it's like you realize where this is going
00:33:58.100 goodwill yep um we had them with with our first child and every single one of them turned possessed
00:34:07.220 um it you know the batteries would get low and they would start going off in the middle of the night
00:34:12.420 and waking the the child up and like okay that's it no more of those let's keep it simple and you know
00:34:20.420 we found that if we keep the toys simple then the children's minds were more open to being imaginative
00:34:30.820 yeah definitely now are they exposed to do they get to watch videos on youtube do you paint play any
00:34:37.460 classic cartoons or things because there's a lot of new stuff that's just horrid obviously
00:34:42.260 in programming all kinds of you know multiculturalism and you need diversity and all this crap you know
00:34:47.060 so tell us about what you expose your children to oh that's a hard don't expose them yeah well yeah no
00:34:55.860 we all know what we don't but um we we definitely don't allow them to get on youtube we will watch youtube
00:35:05.220 videos with them um i know for our oldest daughter we let her sit on the computer and watch youtube but
00:35:14.180 it's part of her homeschooling to where she is learning about all these trades and she really
00:35:21.460 wants to grow up and be a master gardener when she grows up and so what better opportunity than for
00:35:27.860 her to actually sit and get all of these lessons from other home homesteaders out there these master
00:35:33.860 gardeners and and actually provide proper lessons um which are facilitated through youtube but the um
00:35:42.580 and i've i've done my own research on youtube with the children and in influences and there's a lot of
00:35:50.420 you know there are some definite things out there that we really have got to be careful of um hidden
00:35:56.420 it's like a hidden world in youtube that really want to infiltrate our children and from from a surface
00:36:03.780 if you just look at it it seems harmless to the parents but if you really start looking into it it
00:36:10.500 really is trying to recondition them um really get them to embrace degeneracy um gets them to it tells
00:36:22.260 them hey why don't you download this app and why don't you do this you know there's advertisements
00:36:28.260 and and everything else and if you go and look at those apps you'll see that there's server chats in
00:36:34.180 there with other quote 12 year olds or other quote children it's just a pedophilia you know area
00:36:44.100 and it's and it's a lot of liberal programming too what i've noticed too with a lot of the newer stuff
00:36:48.820 even in books and cartoons and stuff they don't just say mommy and daddy anymore or he or she or
00:36:54.260 man and woman brother and sister because of all this gender madness and trans hysteria and then
00:37:00.420 you turn on something and it has to be one kid of each you know it's like it can't just be a
00:37:05.140 bunch of white kids or if they are it's attacked for something you know yeah i just i i notice it's
00:37:10.100 that's all the newer stuff is like that there are a few things out there that i think are
00:37:13.940 pretty innocent you can you can find some of that stuff still i think peppa pig's all right
00:37:19.620 i love peppa pig yeah peppa pig's innocent you know i haven't seen any like um covert messaging
00:37:25.620 and that yes well there is there is the different animal types that are also in there that they
00:37:31.380 interact with all that's true you know that's true but when it's like cute animals i guess it's a
00:37:36.260 you can hide that a little bit you just pretend it's just this is a pretend cartoon world zoo you know
00:37:41.940 well these are all of snow white's friends hanging out together that's all it is in nature you know
00:37:47.300 it's okay with animals but people no i'm joking but but the thing is you know yeah we do let our
00:37:54.100 kids watch tv i have no qualms with that and i i actually we set our children up right we don't
00:38:01.060 hide things from them we don't hide the truth from them we educate them that's just it yeah and so when
00:38:08.020 we allow them to watch television it's kind of like it's it's kind of funny because if you look
00:38:14.180 at you and henrik watching these videos and calling things out and saying oh that's racist or this or
00:38:20.340 that they do the same thing when they're watching tv that's great yeah so that you're teaching them
00:38:26.580 critical thinking skills to understand the messages the lies the subversion i mean that's the best way you
00:38:32.660 can parent instead of just saying nope you can't watch this because i said so and then they're going
00:38:36.740 to just go straight to it and want to watch it instead of hearing from you you know having you
00:38:41.540 teach them about these things absolutely 100 you know they always say if a parent hides things from
00:38:49.460 their children the moment they learn that they can rebel they're going to do exactly everything you
00:38:55.780 said that they couldn't do that's right yep exactly so you can't take that kind of religious stance
00:39:03.220 that's not going to work anymore the best way is to know that our kids are going to grow up in this
00:39:08.020 world it's they're going to come across and encounter these things so it's best to equip them
00:39:14.180 and you know arm them with the truth so they know how to deal with these situations and understand
00:39:18.500 what's really going on as opposed to just flying blind like so many of us do because our parents
00:39:23.300 also didn't see and they didn't know you know that we have to wake up to these things later on but
00:39:28.100 at least now we can pass these things on to our children it's up to us absolutely and that i think
00:39:34.100 you hit it on you hit the nail on the head right there you know if our grandparents your yours and my
00:39:40.500 grandparents didn't withhold so much truth about world war ii and that the great depression um if they
00:39:49.220 had shared more openly what caused it we could have helped prevent it from happening again if you will
00:39:57.540 you know all of the degeneracy everything else i think the boomers if they had actually not been
00:40:04.020 coddled and been shown the truth we would be in a completely different world right now yep now it's up
00:40:10.900 to us to change that and here this is the good thing people like you are having a lot of kids there
00:40:14.900 is a baby boom you know a lot of uh mormons and amish and people that aren't hardcore leftists that
00:40:21.780 aren't leftists or globalists and so it's you know our children that will be the future of the
00:40:26.580 the white population which is a good thing in the future if these left white leftists aren't having
00:40:32.500 any kids what do you think about that oh i've thought a lot about that on so many fronts but you're
00:40:40.100 right um the leftists are not having children at all um they they don't believe in it so it is a
00:40:47.620 temporary problem for us right now except for what they're putting in law which will harm our children
00:40:54.980 later on um and so there there is that that legacy that they're passing on through um control if you
00:41:03.460 will but i think we i think we're pretty we're set up for success in that um in the fact if we do
00:41:10.180 continue to have a lot of children and educate them properly and and communicate everything what to look
00:41:16.980 for when they become adults they can learn from our experiences and um the leftists are not
00:41:26.260 there you know they're either gay or they're completely feminist right and they are adopting
00:41:33.140 children and and trying to train them um they're definitely infiltrating public school so even our
00:41:43.060 children not mine but collectively our children going to school are getting a certain level of subversion
00:41:51.300 through them so you got to think about it leftists are not creating children but they are creating a
00:41:58.180 legacy in a new format through manipulation through thought control um and it it is going it has
00:42:07.380 affected a few generations now and will continue to affect more generations in the future which will
00:42:14.100 have to be reversed and we need to start reversing it now yeah and kids always do want to rebel you
00:42:20.260 know so the more that they push this stuff it's all mainstream crap the kids that want to be edgy and
00:42:25.940 cool and different and think different and rebel are going to come to our side and i think that
00:42:30.580 they all know that that's why they're so desperate shutting down youtube channels and anything cool
00:42:34.740 and fun out there because they know that the kids will be drawn to it i think it's just a matter of time
00:42:39.620 really um but it's true they've infiltrated the schools obviously it's been that way for a long
00:42:46.180 time we know this and there's only a few pockets here and there i think of schools that are more i hate
00:42:50.900 to use the word conservative because they're not really conservative either but uh you know that are more
00:42:54.900 traditional i suppose now are your kids you said are out of public school you homeschool i mean
00:42:59.300 that's another huge trend and for now there isn't a war on homeschool but i'm sure they'll come for
00:43:04.020 that eventually like in certain european countries yeah there already is in certain states we have to
00:43:09.540 be very selective on which states we live in already in america um i know ohio there's a certain lady we
00:43:17.140 don't live in ohio but i read about it um where a certain lady is trying to push a lot of regulations on
00:43:24.100 homeschoolers and enforce um cps interviews and all sorts of things and i know a few states now require
00:43:36.420 the children to be psychologically evaluated by the public school system yearly and and if ever also
00:43:47.140 yearly the parent has to show the teaching plan to the superintendent and he has to approve it and
00:43:54.820 if he doesn't approve it then you're not allowed to homeschool and if your children are seen as quote
00:44:02.500 suffering from a psychological evaluation you will also be reprimanded and your children would be forced
00:44:09.860 to go into public school and that's already in america it's just outrageous i mean but the one
00:44:18.580 good plus is there is a huge homeschooling coalition in america and i think there would be a whole lot of
00:44:24.820 pushback so that is on the plus side right yeah yeah everywhere where those people are the coalition is as
00:44:30.820 well fighting them and it just like what we had with home birth and midwives it's now the homeschool
00:44:40.100 coalition doing the same thing fighting for our freedom fighting for our right to be able to to
00:44:46.980 raise our children the way we want to we didn't ask the government to come in and take control of
00:44:52.980 parenting they just want to take control of the parenting yep exactly i think you mentioned midwifery it's
00:45:00.180 it's true there was a war on that for a while there's a trend where it's coming back now where
00:45:04.980 they were looking at you're having your baby at home or a midwife that's quackery you're what are
00:45:10.100 you some nuts right there they would treat you like that like who are these weird women having babies at
00:45:16.980 home like forever women didn't go to the hospitals to have babies and i think it's about getting that
00:45:22.020 baby into the hospital they can get the blood they can tag them they inspect the parents they do all
00:45:28.500 this stuff and they make you pay thousands and thousands of dollars for all of this right yep
00:45:33.780 yep one of my girlfriends um the doctor did a c-section and snuck in a tummy tuck and then
00:45:41.700 of course she was on medicare or whatever that is and they charged a quarter of a million dollars
00:45:49.860 like how is that even possible i know i hear just these stories all the time where just it's crazy
00:45:54.740 yeah and then the c-sections they make more money doing that right so it's just get them in get them
00:45:59.540 out you know but they're not allowed to do that anymore since the um ama was taken to court basically
00:46:06.180 with the midwives um you know ina may gaskin and a few others had headed that up and um they they now
00:46:15.380 are i think just a couple of years ago they actually have to have a proper cause for doing
00:46:23.220 an induction or doing a c-section you can't just electively choose to do so anymore yeah okay well
00:46:31.460 having a baby in america in the hospital is like whoa look out i know we have high-end state-of-the-art
00:46:36.100 stuff but it's also a huge money maker and they push all these things you don't need how was your
00:46:40.500 birthing experience was it natural did you have any emergency situations um i would say no i mean
00:46:48.260 everything has been great i love giving birth um i'm you know if you talk to other women you don't
00:46:54.660 hear the same thing but some hate it some love it yeah yeah i absolutely love it i think natural birth is
00:47:01.540 phenomenal um in fact you know my largest baby was slightly over 10 pounds and i was laughing when
00:47:10.580 she came out um so to i don't know if it's just me but that's just how i am but uh you know there
00:47:20.260 were a couple of situations where we had like um an umbilical cord wrapped around the neck um another
00:47:26.660 one and she was sunny side up which means she was her her position was correct but she was facing
00:47:33.380 upward instead of downward and so it's just all about educating yourself um on how to properly give
00:47:40.900 birth um what positions to put your body in to help your contractions to push the baby in the right
00:47:47.060 position those types of things and then of course what to do in case of those emergencies if they ever
00:47:52.740 do arise yep exactly women have figured this out for a long time now what do you think in in terms
00:47:58.900 of to me it just always seems like it's it's a woman's domain like women prefer to be with other
00:48:04.020 women in that situation uh now yeah and for many years it was like the men went over there and then
00:48:09.300 the women went over here and took care what do you think about that or did your husband help you
00:48:13.620 deliver ever since you're alone um well actually for three children it was just me and my husband
00:48:20.980 so um i actually quite prefer it in fact um it's not normal for me to talk like this but
00:48:31.380 giving birth is actually very sensual uh it's very sensual to make a baby and so it should still be
00:48:37.700 sensual to have a baby to give birth and so what a better place to be than with the man that is going to
00:48:45.620 provide that security for you going to be there to be to protect you and take care of you
00:48:50.980 um you know i think maybe um for me i did have midwives for two of them kind of a luxury birth for
00:49:01.300 me everything being taken care of and cleaned up for me instead of me doing it right after giving birth
00:49:07.540 but well my husband helped with that but um having the midwives there it just kind of felt weird
00:49:15.380 you know i don't know you i haven't known you my whole life and you're here and witnessing this
00:49:22.820 it felt weird to me and i like to be alone when i do those types of things
00:49:29.540 yep now you when you were talking about a sensual experience uh not all like if you watch any tv shows
00:49:36.020 they won't show you that it's always a woman just screaming and hating her husband and all this
00:49:41.140 stuff and then i've seen the extreme there's some uh i don't know about this there's some
00:49:47.780 women on youtube who posted where they're like having an orgasm while they're having the baby in
00:49:51.460 water i'm like i don't know about that you know there's extremes to everything um you know yep you're
00:50:01.780 right i've seen both of those as well but um now i can't stop laughing um uh yeah where do we go from
00:50:12.660 there i don't know but it it's it each person is different um and you know i would say i can't speak
00:50:22.980 for the water birth experience like you just mentioned but uh at least for the screaming kind
00:50:30.180 which is the more mainstream known um version you know that's all made up come on guys you know you're
00:50:38.660 going think about it from um it's it's not really pain it's pressure a lot of people misinterpret that
00:50:47.220 they fear that pain because they know that it should exist um and when you have fear um your natural
00:50:56.500 fight or flight syndrome kicks in and the fight or flight syndrome what it does is it takes blood away
00:51:04.260 from your major organs and it pushes it to your limbs and your uterus is one of those major organs
00:51:12.100 and so if you fear pain or fear childbirth you're going to cause yourself to have a more difficult
00:51:18.180 birth it can actually stop birth it can it can cause a lot of risks to be entered in and so if you go back
00:51:27.140 and revert back to going to an ob-gyn and getting prepared for a hospital birth the only thing they're
00:51:35.460 focusing on and possibly rightfully so is the risks and only focusing on those well if you have any of
00:51:44.260 these symptoms tell us immediately you know or you know just in case or you might be high risk for this
00:51:50.580 we need to do more tests um with just in case when can we schedule your c-section you know those types
00:51:59.060 that they're they're introducing that fear into a woman and but they're not soothing her they're not
00:52:05.140 telling her she's doing great they're not telling her she's going to have a great natural birth they
00:52:10.260 never have that conversation with them and that enters in that justification for you earlier when you
00:52:16.340 were saying you know hospitals cost so much money well that's just part of the saleship right there
00:52:22.580 it's part of the salesmanship of how can i get you to spend the most money so i can take an amazing
00:52:29.300 vacation later or whatever else the case may be um and i'm sure there's a lot of incentive right so
00:52:36.580 they're justified to spend that quarter of a million dollars and and bill it to the government
00:52:41.620 um and that's their incentive but also the government is also benefiting from this by
00:52:49.940 getting sampling getting data you know getting all of this information about everybody including
00:52:55.700 all of the dna for all of the future generations as they're born yep even their foreskin so yes gosh
00:53:04.900 opt out opt out if you must go to a hospital if you're in that situation that you can opt out of all
00:53:10.340 these things just say no just say no and there is there is a religious exemption for everything by
00:53:17.300 the way guys exactly so if you're ever in that situation just um tell them it's against your
00:53:23.460 religious beliefs and let them debate how it's not exactly now we have this on the screen did you see
00:53:29.940 this postpartum ad that the oscars rejected we played it in a flashback friday or a weekend warrior i
00:53:35.540 can't remember but it's like there's a a nice way they could have done this ad but they did it in
00:53:40.100 this most depressing awful way that really puts women off to having babies did you see this i thought
00:53:46.020 we could play and then just get your comments on this uh go ahead and play it i don't recall this all
00:53:51.300 right
00:54:16.180 nice
00:54:17.300 Oh, my God.
00:54:47.300 I mean, seriously, like the way they zoom in and the baby's screaming, she's all alone, the dark, dingy color, her body.
00:54:56.340 I mean, like, could they have made this look any worse? Really?
00:55:01.060 You should see my face right now.
00:55:05.360 This is ridiculous.
00:55:08.960 It's so...
00:55:10.200 Look at that. Look at that. She's walking around with this huge diaper and it's just hell.
00:55:14.180 I'm like, oh, my God. Like, you know, don't have a baby. You just have to spray this stuff in your vagina.
00:55:19.940 And like, what is she spraying? Like squirting and spraying and like, what is going on there?
00:55:23.620 She's cleaning herself, clearly.
00:55:29.220 I don't get this. But, you know, this is like, hey, hey, women, if you want to have children, this is what you're going to have to suffer with.
00:55:37.260 Yeah.
00:55:37.620 And you hear that crying baby constantly in the background.
00:55:40.620 Right. Exactly.
00:55:41.640 You're not going to get any sleep. This is horrendous.
00:55:44.380 You think it's going to be so easy to have a baby.
00:55:47.420 No, it's going to be too hard for you.
00:55:49.980 You might as well just not do it.
00:55:52.000 Exactly.
00:55:53.120 Yeah. And like I said earlier, too, she's all alone.
00:55:55.680 There's no... I don't know if this was a sperm donor situation or what exactly, the pitch of the cry and everything.
00:56:00.820 And then they were saying, you know, the people at this company, oh, my God, the Oscars banned us.
00:56:05.880 We're being censored and all this stuff.
00:56:10.420 You know, most people don't want to see a lady on a toilet.
00:56:13.760 Yeah. And hearing her pee.
00:56:15.460 And it's like they make it graphic and dirty.
00:56:17.820 It's just like it's depressing, you know.
00:56:20.160 It really is.
00:56:22.060 So it's not like this, ladies.
00:56:24.400 You know, there is a moment of postpartum recovery, but it's not this bad.
00:56:29.500 You know, maybe if you went to the hospital and gave birth or whatever else, then with a lot of intervention, you may have a harder time of recovery.
00:56:40.460 But if you have a natural birth, you do not go through such hard times.
00:56:45.740 Like I was baking a cake minutes before I gave birth, and I was up and walking around minutes after my birth.
00:56:56.880 Yeah.
00:56:56.940 Like it's not like this.
00:56:59.860 I know.
00:57:00.200 When I saw this, I was like this is the majority of women don't have this experience.
00:57:04.320 So I don't understand why they would choose to use the worst case scenario in the ugliest way possible to show women, oh, it doesn't have to be this hard.
00:57:15.860 It isn't this hard for most women.
00:57:17.920 Where's the motivation?
00:57:20.840 Where's the support for moms?
00:57:23.000 Where is it these days?
00:57:25.300 Yeah, but it just seems like, and of course, it's a white woman too, right?
00:57:27.820 It's always this.
00:57:29.600 When you see it on TV, when you see it in most places, I mean, sure, yeah, there's sappy movies about, you know, families and kids and stuff.
00:57:36.860 But specifically around childbirth or the child free life, all that kind of programming.
00:57:43.240 It's always white women involved in those ads or those movies or those photographs, right?
00:57:47.920 Yeah, it is.
00:57:51.040 And, well, that's the majority of who wants babies, in my opinion.
00:57:59.600 You know, I've talked to a lot of women.
00:58:03.400 The only ones that have come to me and shown interest in my children and wanted to ask questions, they were all white.
00:58:14.780 Yeah, on some level, it speaks to them.
00:58:18.260 I think it's unconscious.
00:58:19.840 It's like, I noticed, especially being out with the blonde kid, you know, blonde, blue-eyed kid, he gets a lot of attention from white people specifically, even some non-whites, but they glare.
00:58:30.480 But a lot of white people, oh, he's just so cute and I just want to touch his hair and stuff like that.
00:58:35.220 And I think it's unconsciously they know, like, we're being swamped demographically or birth rates are low.
00:58:42.060 So, unconsciously, it's like they're yearning for more white babies.
00:58:45.840 They just aren't fully aware, like they haven't put the picture together, you know?
00:58:50.700 Yeah.
00:58:51.280 If they saw a lot of blonde-haired, blue-eyed babies, they probably wouldn't react like that.
00:59:00.100 But because it is more rare, it's rare.
00:59:03.120 And so, they want to cuddle it as soon as they see it.
00:59:08.240 Yeah.
00:59:08.400 I had a complete opposite experience with my red-headed son.
00:59:13.660 We were at a gas station and this Jamaican lady said, you know, something like, don't ever take your boy there.
00:59:21.280 They would cut his head off.
00:59:24.500 I'm like, my husband, like, was total protective dad mode.
00:59:29.080 What did you just say?
00:59:30.320 Yeah, exactly.
00:59:33.820 My goodness.
00:59:34.220 But supposedly, they, in Jamaica, they think that red-headed people are the devil.
00:59:38.580 Yeah, they're cursed or voodoo, some voodoo or some stuff like that.
00:59:42.860 Yeah, you know, speaking of this, too, I think it's interesting.
00:59:46.920 Ayla, my friend, she has six kids as well, Wife for the Purpose.
00:59:50.000 And she's had white people come up and glare at her and be disgusted when she's out with her kids.
00:59:54.660 But they sure don't do this when the Mexicans do it or when the Muslims do it or when the black woman in the neighborhood has five kids from different dads.
01:00:03.300 It just seems like it's just when white women choose to have big, oh, are you religious or what's wrong with you or why are you breeding like rabbits?
01:00:10.860 I just, I see that, you know.
01:00:13.480 You know, thanks for talking.
01:00:16.000 Thanks for bringing that up.
01:00:17.240 Because as you were talking, it kind of made me think, are other white people judging us like we're too low class?
01:00:24.140 Because other lower classes are having a lot of children?
01:00:28.740 Is that it?
01:00:29.560 What is it?
01:00:30.300 Because I don't get it.
01:00:31.300 I don't understand why other white people would feel the need to try to publicly shame or, you know, ridicule us for having multiple children.
01:00:46.620 To me, if I ever see it, I'm typically the person to try to gain control over the situation very quickly and stress how awesome it is to have a big family.
01:01:03.080 You know, my daughter, my oldest daughter is huge in helping the family, taking care of the little ones and everything else.
01:01:11.880 All of my children interact a lot with everybody.
01:01:14.960 They're very intelligent and they don't just sit there and say stupid things.
01:01:21.600 So we try to be advocates out there.
01:01:25.900 We take our children everywhere and we show everybody how easy it is to have a large family and how wonderful it is.
01:01:34.060 And we try to spread that.
01:01:35.720 We want as much young people to see that and be influenced in a positive manner rather than this stupid commercial that was just shared.
01:01:46.020 Well, I'll tell you, all the women I know that have bigger families are the happiest women I know.
01:01:53.020 It's just a fact, you know.
01:01:54.680 And then the ones that are the most depressed are women that don't have kids.
01:01:59.820 I mean, it's just a fact, you know.
01:02:01.300 And I also think, as you were saying, you have the older ones to help out.
01:02:04.060 That's how it always was, you know, a growing lifestyle too.
01:02:06.500 They had lots of kids on the farm and they helped out and stuff.
01:02:09.040 And it's easier with more kids because they do help out and they entertain each other and stuff.
01:02:13.920 Whereas one kid alone can be very demanding and just wants mommy and daddy all the time, right, and doesn't have anyone else to play with.
01:02:21.320 And so people have that one kid and they're like, oh, my God, it's so much work.
01:02:24.380 But then it's actually easier the more kids that you add on because they play with each other and they help out and all that.
01:02:31.640 Well, yeah, parents with single children, if they want them to have other interactions with other children,
01:02:37.280 they actually have to take them out of the house and take them over to a friend's house or whatever else or vice versa.
01:02:42.520 And when you have multiple children, they just entertain themselves.
01:02:46.860 And you.
01:02:47.820 And me.
01:02:49.020 And it's great.
01:02:50.860 It's fun.
01:02:51.860 There's, you know, you can create a project to do with all of the children and get different results from each child.
01:02:59.120 And it's so much fun to try to predict what's about to happen.
01:03:03.640 But every time you interact with your children, you're making memories.
01:03:08.760 And it's just so fulfilling.
01:03:11.320 Kind of like what I was saying at the beginning of this dream about growing a plant from a seed.
01:03:19.460 Those children you grew and you gave birth to and you took the you gave them the best care possible.
01:03:26.500 And as they grow up and become themselves and as long as you always embrace them to be a strong character with a set of standards, a set of morals and to truly know who they are.
01:03:41.800 They will blossom so much and you'll be the proudest mama on the block to see how wholesome and complete your children are and full of life.
01:03:54.320 Yep.
01:03:54.920 It's it's it's the biggest success you'll ever have in your life.
01:03:58.680 That's right.
01:03:59.820 The best thing you can do is the greatest gift you'll ever get for sure.
01:04:03.600 Now, I wanted to ask you to a couple more questions.
01:04:05.620 Extended family.
01:04:06.340 Do you have large extended family?
01:04:07.500 Do they have lots of cousins?
01:04:08.600 Are they nearby?
01:04:09.240 Because that's one thing I hear about a lot of people in our scene.
01:04:11.020 They feel isolated, like they don't have other families to play with.
01:04:14.620 Or maybe their family isn't nearby or they're kind of spread out.
01:04:19.440 So, yeah, we do have a very, very large extended family.
01:04:22.520 In fact, we have to split up Christmas parties to fit everybody in a house.
01:04:28.360 And we have one family member that we have completely disowned.
01:04:32.660 But everybody else is great.
01:04:35.780 Sometimes there's that one, you know, just happens.
01:04:39.220 Yep.
01:04:39.540 So, but I don't know.
01:04:44.560 What what were you asking about that?
01:04:46.540 So everybody does play along very well, though.
01:04:49.160 Yeah.
01:04:49.260 And they're all supportive.
01:04:50.180 So you have a big support system, which which also helps.
01:04:53.540 Well, that's how we were raised, too.
01:04:55.280 I mean, we were raised to be like that.
01:04:58.200 So and it's up to us now as my parents are getting very much older.
01:05:03.460 You know, we need to start taking the reins to keep that connection alive.
01:05:09.540 You know, my grandmother's sister, that even her entire family, we've all been connected
01:05:16.520 and we all live close to one another and we all grew up with each other.
01:05:20.820 And since my grandmother has passed, as well as my great aunt, we just had a family reunion
01:05:28.960 not too long ago with them.
01:05:30.440 And we're like, geez, what happened?
01:05:32.140 Why why did we get kind of pulled away from each other?
01:05:35.220 And we need to rekindle it.
01:05:36.820 Next generation needs to pick it up.
01:05:38.700 And I made an announcement saying, well, I'm taking my great aunt's role and doing the
01:05:44.260 the parties, bringing the social hours together again and and and rekindling the next generation
01:05:51.060 of of gatherings, if you will.
01:05:54.140 A few of them have homesteads and they all live close by.
01:05:57.400 And and we said, well, you know, we'll come and help.
01:06:00.380 That's no worries.
01:06:01.300 You know, we're a family.
01:06:02.440 We have to be there for each other and support each other.
01:06:04.820 That's right.
01:06:06.120 I think we European people have to get better about that.
01:06:08.640 Some of these other races, well, maybe blacks don't so much, but like, you know, there's
01:06:14.060 some others like Muslims and Latinos and stuff.
01:06:17.040 They have huge extended families.
01:06:18.600 They help each other out.
01:06:19.520 Even Asians, you know, help each other out financially in different ways.
01:06:23.020 And I feel like white people, as we've become so modernized and just radical individuals
01:06:27.900 that that's lost for a lot of people.
01:06:29.860 So we do have to bring back that trend.
01:06:31.840 It's very important.
01:06:32.960 Well, you give such a lovely and important message.
01:06:35.640 And I love what you're doing.
01:06:37.080 And I love that you guys are out there live streaming and stuff.
01:06:40.140 So tell us more about what you and your husband are doing and we talk about.
01:06:44.320 Oh, okay.
01:06:46.080 All right.
01:06:46.640 Well, I do a morning thoughts randomly.
01:06:50.280 You just have to catch me live because I'm a very busy lady, but I just do like quick
01:06:54.480 little 30 minute morning thoughts episodes to kind of motivate people, teach them about
01:07:00.440 how to improve their, their selves or build a community.
01:07:05.380 Together, my husband and I do a show called the Reddington house on the Verbo Tempestis channel.
01:07:10.800 Um, and that's every other Wednesday night that, um, I believe 9 p.m. Eastern.
01:07:18.440 And we talk anything about family, um, relationships, um, anything and everything to do with wholesomeness.
01:07:28.980 So it's, it's, and we, we, we, we choose random topics to discuss from our angle.
01:07:35.480 We have a different view on a lot of things.
01:07:37.620 Um, but my husband, he owns the Verbo Tempestis, um, channel, if you will.
01:07:44.400 And he has four different shows total that he does on that channel.
01:07:49.240 Um, he has the Folkstead, uh, which is talking about homesteading, how to get into it, how
01:07:55.280 to, um, become part of a homestead community and what, what things you need to learn and
01:08:02.520 to do.
01:08:03.740 Um, and so that is on Tuesday nights right before the Reddington house at 8 p.m.
01:08:08.620 Eastern.
01:08:09.840 And then he has two other shows that are more fun and whimsical.
01:08:13.860 One is called the conduit, where they talk about conspiracy theories and try to break them
01:08:19.140 out and, and looking at, um, comparative history, but it's from a trilogy perspective.
01:08:24.480 Um, Celtic roots versus, um, Germanic pagan versus Christian and bringing all three of those thoughts
01:08:35.060 together in one conversation.
01:08:37.340 And then the, the flagship show called Verbo Live with Kaiser, um, that is the original show
01:08:45.680 that started us being online and, um, they do a lot of news posting with jokes, a lot
01:08:52.720 of, um, impressions, um, but they do a lot of deep talking, deep thinking, deep talking.
01:08:59.840 And, um, Verbo Tempestis means word storm.
01:09:03.720 So whatever is said is said, whatever, wherever the conversation goes, it's going to go.
01:09:10.220 So there's no main structure, if you will.
01:09:12.220 It's very free to talk about, um, I used to do a hen house, but we've evolved that to
01:09:19.100 the Reddington house.
01:09:20.220 So I do know some people used to follow me for the hen house.
01:09:24.520 We're, we're still doing it, but we're doing it Reddington house style now.
01:09:28.340 Nice.
01:09:28.540 Well, it sounds like a well-rounded lineup and it's a good life on when you can be out
01:09:32.200 there, you can be doing these shows and then you can work on the land.
01:09:35.360 I think it's a good kind of modern day combo, you know, it's like we can be on the, uh,
01:09:40.620 out online and, and taking part in the battle that's happening ideologically.
01:09:44.460 It's happening in online spaces and we can be in touch, you know, outside the ground and
01:09:50.060 in the land and being outside and enjoying all that.
01:09:53.620 So I think that's the, I don't know, it seems very like a 2020 pagan to me, you know, in the
01:10:00.500 year 2020 paganism.
01:10:02.540 Well, well, a lot of people, a lot of people talk, right, but we're all about, um, practicing
01:10:08.040 what we preach, if you will, and living a wholesome life.
01:10:11.680 And our main motto across all of our shows is, you know, build a family or build yourself
01:10:18.180 first mind, body, and spirit, then build a family and then build a community and accept
01:10:26.100 not a degenerate amongst you.
01:10:28.420 So, and so that's our main message to everybody.
01:10:32.460 Well, it's been lovely getting to know you.
01:10:34.540 Uh, it's, I always meet all the best people out there.
01:10:37.460 I'm telling you, we have so many cool people listening and coming in every day into these
01:10:42.680 topics that we're discussing.
01:10:43.900 And there's a lot of us out there.
01:10:45.500 Not everyone is doing live streams.
01:10:46.960 Not everyone's doing shows, but there's still a lot of people doing that, thankfully.
01:10:50.260 But think of all the people who are listening and all the people who aren't doing shows
01:10:53.980 who are on our page.
01:10:54.820 I think there's a lot of them out there.
01:10:56.460 So it's very encouraging and I'm very glad to have connected with you.
01:10:59.960 Yes.
01:11:00.420 Well, definitely.
01:11:01.180 I really appreciate this, Lana.
01:11:02.900 It was very nice to talk to you.
01:11:04.700 We'll do it again sometime.
01:11:05.680 Thanks.
01:11:07.080 Bye.
01:11:07.960 So what message can I leave you with?
01:11:09.420 Well, self-sufficiency doesn't and can't happen overnight, but there's little things that
01:11:13.680 we can do to get us on our way.
01:11:15.760 I think some is better than none.
01:11:17.880 And of course, it's very tough to be 100% independent because we still do need each other and all the
01:11:23.400 things that we all bring to the table in order to survive.
01:11:27.040 And lastly, make more babies and continue to support Red Ice.
01:11:33.740 We are under attack and we can't do this without your continued membership.
01:11:38.380 We have big plans for the future for our future.
01:11:41.840 So thank you so much for all your support, donations, and memberships.
01:11:46.120 We do need it.
01:11:46.860 Much love.
01:11:47.380 See you next time.
01:11:48.200 We'll see you next time.
01:12:18.200 Bye.
01:12:19.200 Bye.
01:12:20.200 Bye.