Monk Peace Walk to Medbeds: Can Hidden Technology Heal the World?
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In this powerful and deeply reflective episode of Eye Opener Society, the host sits down with guest Lizzie for an expansive conversation that begins with the Monk Peace Walk — a group of monks walking silently and intentionally from Texas to Washington, D.C. — and unfolds into a far-reaching exploration of peace, healing, technology, privacy, and human responsibility.
What makes the Monk Peace Walk so moving isn’t noise, destruction, or protest — it’s presence. The chanting, the visual simplicity, and the quiet persistence transmit something deeper than words. This episode explores why peaceful action often penetrates the collective psyche more profoundly than conflict, and how peace itself may function as a steady frequency that others instinctively feel and respond to.
From there, the conversation widens. Drawing from monastic principles of simplicity, interdependence, and intentional living, the hosts reflect on how communities can anchor peace not as an idea, but as a lived experience. They ask what it would look like if modern culture adopted slower, more sustainable rhythms — rooted in care rather than consumption.
The episode then turns toward one of the most controversial and speculative topics circulating today: medbeds — alleged advanced healing technologies discussed in fringe and underground spaces. Rather than making claims, the hosts ask critical questions: If transformative healing technology existed, who would control it? Governments? Militaries? Pharmaceutical interests? Private capital? The discussion examines secrecy, black budgets, counterintelligence, and the ways capitalism can suppress tools that could fundamentally change human well-being.
Lizzie and the host also explore grassroots invention, basement-built technologies, small teams solving big problems, and why meaningful innovation often emerges outside institutional power. Privacy-focused systems, resistance to surveillance culture, and the importance of protecting human autonomy are woven into the conversation — alongside spiritual practices like meditation, intentional frequency-setting, and self-healing.
At its core, this episode emphasizes that peace is not passive. It requires internal work — meditation, intention, emotional regulation — and external action — sharing ideas, building alternatives, supporting community, and questioning systems of control. Peace spreads when individuals embody it and when communities choose cooperation over domination.
Key themes explored include:
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The emotional and cultural impact of the Monk Peace Walk
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Peace as a frequency rather than a concept
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Monastic living as a model for sustainable community
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Healing technology, secrecy, and ethical control
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Capitalism, scarcity, and withheld innovation
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Grassroots invention and decentralized solutions
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Privacy, surveillance resistance, and autonomy
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Meditation, intention, and anchoring peace daily
The episode closes with heartfelt gratitude to Lizzie, as well as Carly and Carla from Appalachian Root Works (Rooted in Ruins), and a reminder of the host’s Wednesday night guided meditations for listeners seeking to actively anchor peace in their own lives.
This is not just a conversation — it’s an invitation to slow down, question deeply, and become the frequency you wish to see reflected in the world.
I could not think of the name during the episode, but here is a link to ABOVE PHONE
https://abovephone.com/
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