In this message, my friend Todd Adams shares his experiences as a worship percussionist. Todd is not your typical musician. His approach to music and worship is rather unique. Here are a few of the topics we discuss:The heartbeat of GodWhy Todd uses aboriginal instrumentsHow different instruments imitate sounds in the spiritHow sounds trigger memories and transform usHow emotions can be expressed through musicHow his music helped a man deal with chronic painWhy music tuned to 432 HZ can bring healingHow worship can be used as warfare and what the goal of
warfare isOpening portals through worshipResources
House on Liberty StreetTenino Portal
Todd Adams Facebook
Now the show about faith, miracles, and the supernatural, Praying Medic Live.
Our host is a paramedic and a former atheist who now sees miracles nearly every day, and he teaches others how to live a supernatural life.
Here he is, Praying Medic.
Good evening.
Welcome to Praying Medic Live.
I am your host, Praying Medic.
In the studio tonight, joining me is my amazing and beautiful wife, Denise.
Hello.
And our awesome friend, Todd Adams.
I almost said hello on the amazing beautiful part until you said wife.
I better hold back.
Dude, it is so good to have you home here.
You're amazing and beautiful, too.
You are amazing and beautiful.
I'm often referred to as the beautiful and talented.
And the wiseacre.
Yes, more often than not.
The beautiful and talented wiseacre.
Well, for those of you who don't know my friend Todd, Todd is, he is quite a supernatural fellow in a natural way.
This hour we're going to be talking about some of the things that he experiences and some of the things he does.
Todd, you're not exactly really like a spiritual superstar.
I mean, you're not an author, you don't have any films out.
You actually drive a bus for a living.
I do.
I drive a bus that is required for any transit company to get a grant from the federal government.
The ADA made an amendment to the Constitution that said that people with disabilities had to have a way to get around.
And I drive one of those buses.
So you drive like a wheelchair lift bus?
Yeah, there's one of those.
Walkers and people who aren't sure if they're walking up the stairs or down.
I get to help all of them.
Right.
And you work in Tacoma, which is where I used to work, on the ambulance.
Right.
So we transport a lot of the same people.
I'm pretty sure, but I don't ever mention your name.
I know!
Thank you very much.
That's awesome.
Now, I want to talk about what happened at the gathering last year.
Now, for those of you who don't know, I went up to Tacoma, back to my old stomping grounds.
I was invited to go to one of the few conferences that I actually... I just don't do a lot of conferences, but we got together with our friend Steve Harmon.
We did a lot of teaching about emotional healing and about traveling in the Spirit and seeing in the Spirit.
And one of the featured guests was Todd and the worship band.
Well, it was Elizabeth and the Worship Band.
Elizabeth and the Worship Band.
Right, I should say.
Well, the three of you did an awesome job.
Yeah.
During the worship sessions, there was a lot of people who got emotional healing.
Yeah, we should say that Todd is a percussionist and also plays Native American flutes and other aboriginal instruments.
He's not a drummer.
Yeah, it's not your typical worship.
It's not your typical worship at all.
It is not.
I mean, the earth moves when Todd plays his instruments.
And the angels dance.
Yeah, and I had an experience as well as many other people in the room during the worship Would you like to testify?
Oh yeah, I totally would.
Go for it.
Can I get a witness?
Yeah, Elizabeth started singing about, well she sings prophetically, I believe it just flows through her from God, and then Todd is a support system behind that on the percussive instruments and everything and other instruments like flute.
And it was just flowing.
I mean, there were people in the room just falling on the ground, and I was one of them.
I'm leaning up against the wall in the side of the room, and Elizabeth started singing about, it's not too late.
God says it's not too late for you, for the things that you dreamed of, the things you always wanted to do, and you think you missed out, but you really didn't.
And I was just thinking of my life and the way that I wanted to do art again.
Fine art and I just felt like I wasted so much of my life and then when she started singing that it was like speaking right directly to me so I just I just slid literally slid down the wall to the floor and was in tears for like just being healed of my Uh, my issues over that whole thing and feeling like free.
Okay, God is saying it's not too late for me and I can still do this, you know.
And there were other people with similar experiences that night.
There were a lot of people who were on the floor.
I looked around and I saw people.
Getting healed and going through a lot of interesting things, which I don't see at a lot of church services.
But that was just an amazing thing.
Well, and the heartbeat thing.
The heartbeat thing.
There's something that Todd does a lot, and it sounds like a heartbeat.
It's like God's heartbeat.
And something about that just speaks to people on a deep level, I think.
Todd, talk to us about the heartbeat.
I believe that we all need to hear God's heartbeat, and I believe that it has a different sound indigenously on each continent.
I try to get in touch with the aboriginal things around me.
I'm not afraid.
A lot of people look at drums and they're like, oh my gosh, this is horrible.
You've got to get that away from me, because you touch it and there's demons going to come.
Yeah, because it's considered tribal and it's not Christian, typical Christian.
If I do my job and I go deep into worship, if something like that shows up because the drum's familiar to it, it's going to have its backside handed to it on its way out the door.
It's just, it's not going to last.
Yeah.
And the heartbeat is, we all long to hear.
I mean, from the time that we're in the womb, there's a heartbeat that surrounds us the whole time.
We hear our mother's heartbeat and as we grow older and we, Yes.
We long for that kind of intimacy.
And when you're intimate with someone, you lay your head on their chest and you hear their heartbeat.
And it's just such a tremendous—there's a security that comes out of that.
There's a comfort that comes out of that.
And so when I drum, depending on the drum that I have, how that performs, the heartbeat is always involved.
Are you trying to connect people to the heartbeat of God?
I used to be very intentional about it, but it's part of me at this point.
I've done that for long enough that it isn't something that I think about very often when I'm playing.
But there are times, Elizabeth will talk about getting close to God or hearing His heartbeat, and I play into that.
I have a lot of strange things that surround me in my little cage at church when I'm—because I play on the worship team at church.
I'm still hanging in there.
So I have a sound cage around me and hanging from all around.
I've got wind chimes.
Some of them are very light sounding and very angelic.
And some of them sound like dry bones and they're coconut or they're, you know, some of them are very deep toned.
And I seek these things out.
I seek out different sounds because the sounds click.
They're not quite like aromas, smells.
Click memories pretty quickly, but sounds do too.
And we connect with sound and rhythm and it changes how we feel or it coincides with how we feel.
I heard a pastor say one time that he would get depressed and so he would put depressed music on.
And it was so that he could wallow in the depression.
And we, I believe, as a Christian community, as a Christian body, have come to a place where we have stopped wallowing and realized that we can use that as a lifeline to get out.
And it will change your spirit.
It will change your heart.
It weakened Denise's knees up there against the wall.
Yeah.
Just because of the internal sense.
It touches the integrity of our emotion.
And so it changes it.
It cleans it up.
It makes it real.
It makes it true.
And the sounds that you put out there are just very natural and earthy.
I mean, that's one thing I really love about it.
It's not like rock and roll.
Right.
It's deep.
It cuts right through your soul and your spirit.
It's just, it's made of things, you know, the drums are made of skins and of wood and of things that are of the earth.
There is kind of a primal sound to it when you're doing your thing.
It's very much unlike anything I've ever heard before.
Well, it's very unlike.
I've actually had some issues in my own coming to grips with what I do because I don't know anybody who sounds like that.
I don't know anybody who makes it a point, and I'm sure that they're out there, I just haven't met them, make it a point to collect the sounds in order to express thought processes Cymbals are great for lightning and some drums are better for thunder than other drums.
And they've actually created a tube called a thunder tube that's got a spring hanging off of it.
And you shake that thing and you've got the, you know.
It sounds fun too, you know.
It is.
Well, I noticed your percussion cage has a lot of things hanging off of it.
Is that your idea is to find instruments that convey different sounds and evoke different feelings and emotions and things?
Right.
Because of the way that we do worship these days, it's led, and so I lead with sounds.
Todd, what is it that you try to accomplish through your music?
Depends on the setting.
In worship, I just want to be there to facilitate the leadership that is vocal.
I long for a time when we, as a worship leading organization, more or less, get to stop leading people emotionally and mentally and allow them the opportunity to worship from their own heart rather than tell them what to be thankful get to stop leading people emotionally and mentally and allow them That's a place I long to get to.
And then I can do the same thing.
I'll be able to just emote.
Or if I'm struck with an intercession, there's times when I intercede through the drum or if I have a Native American flute, whatever I have, I will use that thing to express a feeling that's within me.
A friend of mine died and I had a flute that was, it's a Native American style flute.
Flutes and drums, they're tools to me.
I mean, they're right and left hand kind of thing.
Uh, but I have this flute that is, uh, it's split.
It's got a drone on one side and then the other side is, is the melody side.
And, uh, my friend Elvin passed away.
Elvin Gladney.
Elvin Gladney.
I didn't know this was going to come if I even started talking about him.
I might get a little furry in my throat.
Because the man was a father.
If anybody, to me, if I was going to point to someone and say, this is what an apostle looks like, that's the guy.
Because he always led from the bottom up.
And when I heard that he passed away, because I'd heard that he was sick, he was taken, It was ugly, how he passed away.
And it looked like diabetes.
It looked like a diabetic coma.
And he was not diabetic.
And it just took him fast.
And we were praying for his healing, and then for a month afterwards, we prayed for him to be raised from the dead.
You said you had a flute.
We're looking forward to meeting up again anyway.
But I had this flute.
It was emotion that was coming out of me.
It was an intercession for his wife and family and for myself at the loss of a father in the community.
And so I played it and then it struck me that I needed to play for the resurrection.
And so I played and it sounded like sunrise.
And I didn't know that was coming.
I didn't know what that was going to sound like.
And it sounded like sunrise.
And on my bus, there was a gentleman on my bus, and I was just sharing with him that I played the flute and what things sounded like.
And I had the ability to play it through the bus sound system.
And I played that song.
And I said, just tell me what you think of this.
And he says, my God, that is the saddest thing I've ever heard.
And that was the part where I was mourning.
And oftentimes my emotions, that's where they're expressed best and most powerfully is through playing.
Okay, I'm going to come back to... Because I might have forgot the question.
No, that's okay.
No, you answered it.
I'm going to come back to the bus and have you testify.
We'll come back to that in a minute.
But I have a question.
So, you play a lot of Aboriginal instruments.
Why those and not the other instruments?
The ones that we typically see in music?
The biggest reason that I play aboriginal instruments is because the church at large has told aboriginal people groups that they're unwelcome.
And the way that they've done that is to say, don't bring that drum.
Don't bring your Native American drum.
I don't want to see a drum with tobacco hanging off the back.
People are going to have a hard time with that.
But if we look in Scripture, it talks about incense.
It talks about when they burned the palm leaves and whatnot.
All of those things that they used were things that were indigenous to the people.
And so what's indigenous to the people where I live are cedar boughs and sage is big down here.
They use sage up in Seattle where I'm at, Seattle area, Tacoma.
And so I'm not afraid of that.
And if I'm leading a church service, if I'm having a church service, and we need to have incense or we need to have something to burn, For the smoker, you know, because the point of the thing was that our prayers are carried off into the smoke.
And that's the point.
That's what the Native Americans do with it.
Their prayers are carried on the smoke.
So as long as we don't allow those things, as long as we vilify those things, that's part of those people's identity.
And as long as we say that that's not acceptable, they hear that as, you're not acceptable.
It's a rejection.
And God does not want... God doesn't value you.
Doesn't value your... You need to be European.
So talk to us about India.
Uh, the guy's name is McCullum, and he said that the reason that there has never been a revival, a national revival in the nation of India, is because no one is doing Aboriginal praise.
No one is using an Indian format for their music.
It's all European.
It's all European.
Now that's changed.
There's a guy, there's a band called Aradna.
A-R-A-D-N-H-A, I believe.
And a young man with YWAM went over there and already played the guitar.
He learned to play the sitar.
Which is a beautiful instrument from over there.
He learned to play that and began writing music in the style of the people that he was around.
And it's beautiful music.
He's got a couple, three albums out, I think.
And it's very gentle, and it's very much the way that they see things.
And there's stirrings.
There's stirrings in India now that there weren't before.
That's cool because we both know people that are going to India.
Tyler Johnson has been going to India lately.
I think Jeremy Magersheen is going to India here in about five or six weeks.
My landlord built an orphanage there from the ministry that he had in Olympia called Revival Town.
Oh, right on.
Jason?
Yeah, Jason.
Right on, that's cool.
I would love to see some cool things happen in India.
There are some cool things happening there.
Getting back to the original and the native, the heartbeat and the music will help that happen.
Right.
Well, and it, you know, Jesus said, go to every tribe and tongue and disciple them.
But he didn't say change who they are.
He didn't say change their identity.
He said, teach them to worship.
That's what he meant, was teach them to love me.
Teach them how much I love them.
That was the big thing.
Teach them how much I love them.
Don't teach them to act.
Don't teach them to do, because that's not what he likes.
Oh, gosh.
Teach them how much I love them.
Because once people know how loved they are by God, that kind of changes how everything works.
Changes everything.
Yeah.
I mean, you're not trying to jump through hoops to please Him because you know that He loves you.
Right.
Right.
To do the do, it doesn't count unless you be the be.
Frank Sinatra, I think, said it.
A little bit different.
Can I quote you on that?
Absolutely.
Right on.
Oh, that's awesome.
You had a testimony from a guy who was on your bus.
Same guy.
Was the same guy?
It was the same guy.
Oh, you didn't tell me that.
No, I didn't.
I had put together an album to pay for a mission trip.
Well, I didn't put it together.
I had some stuff that I recorded, and my friend, I think on Facebook, he's called Al Mack.
Anyway, he wanted to help me out, so he put these songs together on a CD, and then it became a CD, and it's called Prototype.
And we're going to talk about that after the break.
Sure thing.
Do not go away.
I'm Praying Medic.
This is Prairie Medic Live on Independent Talk 1100 KFNX.
Welcome back to Prairie Medic Live.
I am your host, Praying Medic, in the studio with my friend Todd Adams and my beautiful wife Denise.
So Todd, you were telling us a testimony of a gentleman who used to ride your bus.
Yep.
And you were playing a song from one of your CDs.
Yes.
It's track number five on the prototype CD.
Track number five on the Prototype CD, and what happened to this gentleman as he was listening to your music?
This particular song, I had added a Native American drum.
The particular drum that I had was special made.
It was very large, and so the When you would strike the drum, the sound would carry.
Was that Priscilla?
No, Priscilla's my djembe.
This was before Priscilla.
This drum's name was Joseph.
And I took Joseph to Europe in July, and Joseph came back in not-so-good health.
And so I don't have Joseph any longer.
And I wept over that too.
But anyway, I'm on the bus and we're driving along and I said, Hey, just listen to this.
Tell me what you think.
I didn't tell him it was me.
And so stuff is just playing.
And this song came up and there's this flute that's kind of alone.
And then periodically through the flute, I just touched this drum and allowed the sound to sustain and decay and it was about a minute and a half into the song and I look in the rear view mirror and he's got tears streaming down his face.
And I waited till the song was over and I said, so how you doing?
And he said, that was cathartic.
It just became, it took him away.
He wasn't in his wheelchair anymore.
He was somewhere else.
And I talked to him another time and he said, you know, he said that song has become part of Of my pain management.
He says, the drugs don't do it anymore.
And I use that song.
See, you never know.
At that point, I was convinced that I needed to do more of that.
Yeah.
Well, we're just learning.
I mean, we've been studying this for a while because I'm interested in healing.
Oh, you are?
A little bit.
When did that start?
I'm curious about it.
We have a friend who is putting out some music, and her music is all about frequencies, finding this right frequency.
I forget what it is.
It's 432 hertz, which seems to, for some reason, be a frequency that is very powerful for healing.
Yes.
They believe that it's the ancient, that it's the ancient tuning that things just naturally come up to.
Most everything that you hear on the radio, most everything that you buy in a store, the note is A and they tune it to 440 Hertz.
And everything is tuned to 440 Hertz.
And so it's all the same.
If you tune down to this, the A as 432 hertz, things happen.
Things happen.
Yeah.
Things that you just don't expect.
The friend of ours is Del Hungerford, and she's put out a bunch of CDs.
I might put in some links to her music in the podcast notes, because I've heard some testimonies from people who said they've been healed listening to this music.
It's tuned to 432.
It's very interesting.
I have a friend that tuned... Actually, I'm going to make some CDs with this friend of mine up north named Steve Hampton.
And he was leading worship at a conference over by Lake Chelan, and he tuned his instruments to 432, and then he told everyone on the team to tune to him, and they had no idea why.
And without knowing that that happened, they wouldn't just naturally hear it.
They wouldn't naturally know that that change had happened.
And at the end of the conference, he was telling me that this woman came up to him and said, after the first worship service, I didn't stutter any longer.
She said, I had a horrible stutter, and I'm singing this worship with you, and I'm not stuttering.
And I thought, well, that's different.
I'm paraphrasing.
She thought that that was different.
And then, but when you sing, I mean, Mel Tillis doesn't stutter when he sings.
He's got a horrible stutter.
Right.
So later when she was just talking to people and it wasn't there.
And so she didn't run right up to tell Steve.
She wanted to make sure that this was for real.
And so when it was all done, when the conference was over, she went up to Steve and she told him, she said, I used to stutter and I don't anymore.
And it happened during that worship.
That's awesome.
So, you believe worship is warfare, don't you?
Very often.
Very often.
I think that everything is vibration.
Everything.
The things that we touch, they say that my hand is on a marble tabletop.
I could beat my fist against that and break my fist.
But if I could change my own vibration, then I could pass through it.
Right.
Like when Jesus walked through a wall, Jesus changed his resonant frequency and walked through the wall because it no longer matched.
And so the vibration of the different This is really deep and goofy, but the vibration of the different cells within his body no longer matched, and so they weren't bumping into each other.
Right.
So he could pass right through that wall.
So with these vibrations, it's also light.
And so Adam's initial mandate was to subdue the earth.
And that didn't mean put all your cows in a pen.
It didn't mean that.
What it meant was bring light.
Bring light throughout the earth and dispel the darkness.
Make the darkness go away.
Jesus said that he saw Satan fall from heaven like lightning.
And at that point, he fell onto the earth.
And the earth was covered with darkness and void.
And God began to bring in the first thing that he created was light.
Let there be light.
And then he separated the light from the darkness.
But being as the earth rotated, it was still everything was dark at some point.
What I believe Jesus handed us, by being the second Adam, was a new mandate to subdue the earth.
And I think that when we praise, when we worship, we're establishing the kingdom in the earth.
Bringing the kingdom of heaven to earth.
Yes.
That's what it's all about.
And so as often as that happens, we've subdued that territory.
And the darkness is dispelled.
And so then we need to hang on to that territory and move on to the next bit.
Because the goal of war is victory, but the goal of victory is occupation.
Yes.
Yes.
Last wall, now.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, so I mean, I'm with you.
I totally see worship as a form of warfare, displacing darkness, establishing the righteous rule of the kingdom on earth.
You know, you and I both believe the same thing.
I think we're both in tune to the idea that Rather than waiting for the earth to fall apart and burn up and God's wrath and judgment coming on it, that what we're supposed to be doing is establishing and building and pushing the darkness out and bringing further light into the earth.
And taking care.
Taking care.
And being gardeners.
Adam loved creation around him enough that it was him that was giving names to the animals.
It was him that was tending the garden, and if we have that kind of love, we're going to maintain.
Jesus said if your donkey falls in a hole on the Sabbath, you're going to go get your donkey out of the hole.
Well, you're going to do that, not because of the expense.
You're going to do that because the donkey's part of the family, sort of.
Right.
And so you bring that, you have respect for that which serves you, and you serve it in the same capacity.
There's always that ongoing relationship.
I love my dog, St.
Bernard of the Unfolding Goodness.
He's a great name.
Bernie's awesome.
He really is.
I bet he's missing you.
I don't want to get into that.
I'll cry again.
I don't want to think about that.
I'll cry again!
Well, hey, we're going to have to take a break here for a second, but when we come back, Todd is going to tell us the one teaching about God that he hates the most.
Do not go away.
I'm Praying Medic.
We'll be right back on Independent Talk 1100 KFNX.
Hey, honey.
Hey, we're on air.
It's the woohoo girls.
Welcome back to Praying Medic Live.
I'm Praying Medic.
In the studio with me is my wife, Denise.
Hello.
And Todd Weizsäcker-Adams.
And now it is time to show when I get to ask my guests a deadly question.
Before you ask the question, I want to know if you know the woman who does that CD.
Do you realize that she's a Korean Scottish woman?
Did not know that.
That's cool.
I like her music.
And now I know more about her.
Alright, Todd, here's your magic wand.
You have a magic wand and you can make any teaching about God disappear off the face of the earth forever.
Oh, that changes everything.
What is the one teaching about God that you'd get rid of?
See, now what I was thinking about was the fourfold ministry, fivefold ministry.
I would change that, but that's not really about God.
Change it to four?
No.
So, next question?
No.
Answer the question!
I'm trying to remember it.
The teaching about God you hate the most.
There's a lot of those that I just completely disagree with.
Pick one.
I have a lot of attitudes about people in the church that I would love to see changed.
But foremost, I want people to know that God loves them.
Beyond anything, God loves them.
But what about wrath?
We're getting there.
Before Jesus, God was in the ether.
God was above everything.
People couldn't relate to God.
In Moses, they were afraid to go up the mountain and talk to God because of his wrath.
They were afraid that he would hate them.
I just the other day listened to a little snip on YouTube, and it was a pastor who is not pastoring any longer, and I used the word pastor particularly incorrectly with reference to this guy.
And he was just talking about how much God hates us.
He hates us because we're evil, and we're filthy sinners, and we can't—and it's as though Jesus never died on the cross.
And there are people who have to have—God has to be angry.
Well, what if Jesus took all of God's wrath on the cross?
All of it.
All of it.
All means all.
All of it.
Not a little bit left for me?
No.
But it's like people can't accept that.
Well, because they look at, they look at, well my life, I'm living, I'm doing, I'm doing for him, and so he needs to.
Those people need to avoid hell.
I'm going to tell them that there is hell, and they need to avoid hell, and they need fire insurance, and I... Well, there's a scare tactic involved.
I'm not feeling it.
I've been on this walk for 46 years.
I met Jesus when I was 10 years old on Easter morning.
You're not 56 years old!
You're younger than me, so knock it off!
I forget.
I look ancient, so I do forget.
You look like the Ancient of Days.
That's one person I look like?
There's others that I get sometimes.
But I just had this discussion with somebody and I said, all means all.
And then they went to Thessalonians and it said, warning of the wrath to come.
In that context, to me, wrath is the devil.
Wrath is... We have an accuser.
God does not accuse us of anything.
I had a... I won't say I had a vision.
I'm going to say I had a vision.
I had a vision one time, and there was Jesus, and Him and the Father were sitting side by side, and they were talking, well, judgment's coming.
Judgment day's coming.
Are you ready?
Are you ready to judge Him?
Oh, I'm not going to judge Him.
You judge Him.
And I just, I can see them having this conversation, saying, well, I already judged them.
They were in me on the cross, and they were judged there.
And that's, they were judged there.
That's the end of it.
There is no more judgment coming, is that what you're saying?
Our job now is to judge ourselves.
Jesus came.
He was judged for us.
Yes.
And He gives forgiveness to the people who don't know Him.
And the people who do know Him, He gives them the criteria to judge themselves by so that He doesn't have to.
You know, you just turned into George Carlin for a minute there.
That doesn't surprise me.
That was really cool.
How did you do that?
I'm a shapeshifter.
All right, we're gonna shift gears here, Shapeshifter.
What can you tell us about the Tonino Portal real quickly?
A few years ago, I didn't tell y'all the story before, I had an experience driving the bus where there was a bald eagle.
My whole life, I wanted to see a bird of prey come down and snatch up something.
There was a bald eagle pick up some kind of rodent on the street in front of me.
I'm doing 40 miles an hour and I see this bald eagle circling in front of me.
And I went, Ooh, this is going to be really cool.
And so, uh, I don't know if the, if the rodent got away or if the eagle got him, but I realized that God was saying something because the eagle looked over his shoulder at me.
Like, did you get that?
So what I understood that to mean was that we needed to have a circle that pressed in for... the point was evangelism.
Well then we went out and I talked to these folks and they allowed us to have this drum circle in the field at their house.
And so we had four drum kits and three other percussionists out there and we played for four hours.
And you recorded some of it?
Recorded all of it.
Okay.
But I have one CD.
Tenino Portal.
That's just an hour, and it's called Tenino Portal, and you can find it on Facebook at the House on Liberty Street.
So go to the House on Liberty Street Facebook page.
Facebook page.
Find a link to the... So tell us about what happened with the... Well, worship.
We played.
We were submitted to one another.
This is the way I like to perform.
I like to get groups together to be submitted to one another so that you have room and I have room and there's security and nobody's putting their lips on somebody else's worship or their sacrifice or their gift to God.
And we understood at some point that we were opening a portal over this farm.
The portal got like two-thirds done, and it was 11 o'clock and nothing was changing, so we stopped.
And we packed everything up and we went home.
And at about 3.47, the following morning, I'm home, which is probably 15 miles away as the crow flies, and there is a thunder strike loud enough that it wakes me from my sleep.
And I sleep like a rock.
I talked with the folks at the farm, it's Trinity Farms in Tonino, and at that exact time they had a thunderbolt and the wind came from the end of the field where we had been playing.
And the wind came whipping through there so fast that the trees were laying over, and she was looking outside.
It was bright as day outside.
And we knew then that that was the moment where the portal was completed.
Since then, she boards horses out there, and that's gone fantastic.
They prospered.
They prospered.
The opening of the portal prospered them like crazy.
Interesting stuff to think about.
God bless you.
That music means it is the end of our show.
You can find more of Todd on Todd Weizsäcker Adams on Facebook.
You can go find him.
Be nice or he will not friend you.
You can also find his Facebook page, House on Liberty Street.
I am Prang Medic for Denise and Todd.
Thank you for joining us here on Independent Talk 1100kFNX.
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Thank you all for joining us.
You can check us out again next week here at 8 o'clock p.m.