Grown man/ every time I hear and listen to Bush/ tears appear.
@manuelastefan1187Ай бұрын
Dr Bush is spectacular indeed. Pure inspiration. I am looking at myself differently, and definitely blaming myself less for perceived damaging choices. He said it so well, there is no construction without destruction.
@karalough4402Ай бұрын
HOLY MACKEREL ✨✨ most powerful podcast from Zack yet…
@aaronschmoller37175 ай бұрын
Zack Bush has such an interesting point of view on such a broad band of subjects he is a true student of life thanks for having him on your show Mr Tony Riddle
@dennismeehan30595 ай бұрын
So much beauty in here! Zach just dropping incredible wisdom! Smell that soil, smell that humus! Thank you for sharing such beautiful light truth
@barbarakoester80895 ай бұрын
You bring such joy to my heart ❤️ I know this information, but didn’t have the words. Thank you for the words!😊
@cindyspiess99635 ай бұрын
Yes ! 100% I feel that way as well 😊
@MNSkeetFamily5 ай бұрын
Huge fan of both of these guys.
@dawnbern29175 ай бұрын
Thank you both! I'm insatiable for everything Zach puts out, always blown away. About the mint! Beyond the tea, I use it to stuff grape leaves, tabouli salad, and Indian green chutney :)
@gailmanley31305 ай бұрын
Me too. When I see a new podcast with him in my que I get butterflies 🦋 Start his class in September 🎉
@yogicats10575 ай бұрын
So heartfelt! Enjoyed this interaction very much, thank you!
@lindagumbleton65695 ай бұрын
So loved the way after all the mind blowing information on the foetal and child development Zac talks of his childlike wonderment at the sense of simply being present driving through the British countryside being interspersed by thoughts arising from his human conditioning. So reassuring to hear him sharing his open authenticity with us. I was initially quite emotional to think of the way I had treated my two boys as babies (over 40 years ago ) through sheer unawareness of any of this information! Amazing conversation thank you both for sharing. 🙏💚
@claudiafegari51162 ай бұрын
1:53 "The cultures that live long are those that are curious about who they can share their abundance with. If you've ever gone into any indigenous culture Garian, it's insanely generous. You got people that don't have food for tomorrow, but they'll go find it and whatever they have today. They're going to give to you and they'll probably take something off the wall and give it to you as well. They might take some you know piece of clothing off their own back, and give that to you too. The amount of generosity that comes out from a being who is present with nature and knows that everything IS infinite; there's no end to the generosity." What a delightful, elevated, expansive and healing conversation! I am immersed in deep gratitude right now for this level of conversation on KZbin AND deeply grateful for Zach's life, for living his purpose, and due to that, educating us, supporting our reconnection, healing and blessing us. Zach is a gift to this world! Thank you!
@ST-pp3fk5 ай бұрын
Beautiful conversation. Thank you to both of you.
@thenaturallifestylist5 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@sandranaude57785 ай бұрын
What a conversation! Thank you both so much ❤
@thenaturallifestylist5 ай бұрын
Our pleasure!
@mikey2x2725 ай бұрын
thank you for this beautiful conversation ♥️ may light continue to grow into all of your hearts, 10x fold 😄🙌🏾
@cindyspiess99635 ай бұрын
This is making me so Happy !☺️🤣
@beamyers88115 ай бұрын
Thank you Zach and Tony. The colonisation of Australia shipped out ‘‘convicts’ from the UK. The truth is they were not thieves, they were not bad people. They were stolen from their homeland for slave labour. They were victims of a con, not convicts.
@thechrisgeisler5 ай бұрын
So grateful you both made this happen. One helluva conversation
@thenaturallifestylist5 ай бұрын
Our pleasure!
@baileyeddy4445 ай бұрын
Beautiful 🙏🌞
@barretjames83205 ай бұрын
120.13 perfect timming get in it in there smell it
@leamckibben96074 ай бұрын
Thx!!! Love this!
@amandaholley87175 ай бұрын
Humanure in the soil also feeds the microbiome ... what a connection we lost there. I recall a scientist explaining what happens with beans when they go through our digestive tract .... we poop out a lot of goodness which then also provides and feeds the soil microbiome ... something like that! I forget his name .. but it got me present to how i connect to the soil in other ways ... not just what i take out. His name was fuerberg or Fuhl something! Lol ... sorry!
@waldenfarmacy5 ай бұрын
If you remember please share!
@MrPHIGGS22 ай бұрын
Eating food grown on compost made from human excrement is not good for human health. Ya, there is nutrients in it but doesn't mean we should use it
@faza5535 ай бұрын
“All disease, at some period or other of its course, is more or less a reparative process, not necessarily accompanied with suffering: an effort of nature to remedy a process of poisoning or of decay, which has taken place weeks, months, sometimes years beforehand, unnoticed.” - Florence Nightingale
@dusty-lynnbristol5195 ай бұрын
🙌🏻
@MattAngiono5 ай бұрын
When i hear him talk about plants having feelings, on one hand, i agree and think that means we should have more compassion for them than we currently do. I assume he thinks it's great to take our kids to the park to play barefoot in the grass and feel connected to the living ecosystem. But that entire park gets mowed every week. Just how does Zach respond to the ethics of this? There are millions of individuals who get chopped up in those mowers, not to mention the insects living there, and this happens week after week. Does he see an ethical dilemma here? What about the plants we eat? What does Zach think we should eat if every life form has feelings? Are we considering just feelings alone, or sensations of pain? What does it mean to cause suffering to a plant versus and animal? I know my answers to these questions... I just want to hear his... We should all be considering the effect our actions have on other lifeforms. But our sphere of compassion can only go so far. If you try to have compassion for every life form in the same way you do to family or friends, you will go insane. It's just not possible. What is possible is to have scales. You can care deeply about certain people you are close to, and then various scales below that. You can care more deeply about the beings whom you actually affect directly in your own life. For example, by choosing more carefully what you're going to consume at every meal. Also, by extending a non aggression principle to all those you come into contact with. But again, how does this apply to your lawn or to insects that will die every time you get in the car?
@victoriangirl835 ай бұрын
I wonder what Zach Bush's opinion is on abortion.
@jopshua47035 ай бұрын
Why is this where your mind goes? He seems too fascinated by life to ever desire a life to be intentionally terminated, but he seems too pragmatic to think it won't occur.
@victoriangirl835 ай бұрын
@@jopshua4703why? Because he used to be a leftist and hard core Democrat and I'm not sure if that's still the case. Everything he professes to believe would contradict being in support of the leftist ideology. I hope he doesn't support that side anymore.
@jopshua47035 ай бұрын
@@victoriangirl83 democrats used to be somewhat sane and not only campaign on appeasing the disenfranchised, sexual degenerates, and baby killers.
@r3b3lvegan8923 күн бұрын
Lol Zach isn’t into politics he exposes it especially considering no US politician would back up his work. He’s pro choice if I had to guess because if the mother was raped or if there’s complications, abortion is preventing further trauma and suffering. Zach is not for suffering of infants
@amandaholley87175 ай бұрын
didnt specialisation perform a function? Our cells all begin the same ... and then environment determines the 'specialism' or function of that group of cells ...