In this third installment of "A Childhood Stolen, A Voice Found", the conversation picks up mid‑stream, with Mike continuing to describe the unusual and often startling experiences that have followed him since childhood. He talks about seeing images in dreams that later appear in waking life, knowing details about people without explanation, and moments where movies, conversations, or events around him line up with uncanny precision. For Mike, these aren’t abstract ideas — they are lived experiences that have shaped his understanding of how he has been monitored, influenced, or used.
Greg steps in at several points to slow the pace and create space for dialogue, introducing concepts like déjà vu, precognition, and intuitive resonance as ways to frame what Mike is describing. Their exchange becomes a back‑and‑forth between Mike’s urgency to articulate what has happened to him and Greg’s effort to keep the conversation grounded, reciprocal, and accessible to listeners.
As the episode deepens, Mike connects these psychic and intuitive experiences to larger forces he has encountered: bloodline manipulation, intelligence‑agency involvement, synthetic telepathy, and the sense of being activated or directed without his consent. He recounts specific events in Washington, D.C., including interactions at the Peace Vigil and encounters with individuals he understood to be connected to intelligence work. These moments, for Mike, are part of the same long arc of targeting that has been going on for years.
Greg challenges and contextualizes without dismissing, asking questions that help listeners follow the thread while allowing Mike to speak from the reality he has lived. The tension between experience, meaning, and interpretation becomes the emotional center of the episode.
Part 3 is not a conclusion — it is a continuation of a man trying to articulate a lifetime of experiences that have shaped him in ways he is only now able to speak aloud. It expands the portrait of Mike as someone still emerging from confusion, still piecing together the truth of his own life, and still finding his voice in real time.
Music credit:
Inside the Box Factory by Kjartan Abel.
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This music is licensed under CC BY-SA 4.0.