The Telepathy Tapes
The Telepathy Tapes

S2E30: The Story That Chose Her

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Animation producer and first-time director Pilar Flynn shares the extraordinary story of a creative download that arrived during a meditation retreat beneath ancient redwoods. The experience was so sp...

Transcript

EN

Hi, everyone.

about a creative download or some would say big magic. If you haven't listened to season two

episode three about the consciousness of creativity and how ideas choose us, I really encourage you to

start there. But today you're going to meet Pilar Flynn, a producer and now a director in the animation space, and here one of the most remarkable big magic creativity choosing us stories I've heard in a long time. So Pilar, welcome to the Talk Tracks. Hi everyone. I'm Kai Dickens, and welcome to the Talk Tracks. Brought you weekly from TTT Media. In this series we explore the threads that we've together are understanding of reality. Science, spirituality, consciousness, and yes, even unexplained

phenomena like side abilities. We examine the mysteries that sit just beyond the edge of what science can currently explain alongside researchers, thinkers, families, and experiences. If you haven't yet listened to the telepathy tapes, I encourage you to start there. It lays the foundation for everything that we'll be exploring, because every era has ideas once dismissed as impossible until someone was willing to investigate them seriously. And on this show, we do just that. If you want to see

our incredible guest in person, we have a video version of this episode on the telepathy tapes YouTube

page. We're so excited to have you today. I'm so excited to be here, thank you for having of course. And one of the reasons I wanted you to come in here is you have quite a big magic story

I think. And when I say the term "big magic," people who listen to a season two, remember that

that was a book written by a very famous prolific American writer, Elizabeth Gilbert, who wrote E. Pray Love, and she really love her. She's wonderful. And you know, this idea that creativity comes to us, chooses us, engages with us, especially if we're working in ready, and willing recipient. But why don't we start by you just introducing yourself? Who are you? What do you do? Well, my name is Pilad Flynn, and I've been in the animation industry for over two decades,

I'm originally from South America, from Chile and Ecuador, so I grew up mostly in countries in South America and some of Europe. And I guess the reason I'm here in LA to begin with is because

at five years old, I went to the theater for the first time to see my first movie, and in that moment,

when I looked around at the audience and saw how connected everyone was, how they were all

feeling the same emotions. I knew from that second that what I wanted to do is come to LA and tell

stories. And from that day, I would just tell my family, "I'm going to grow up and move to Hollywood, and I'm going to make movies." And of course, being a little girl that only spoke Spanish, living in Latin America, they were like, "Okay, me heat that good luck with that, you know, great dream." But I was so determined. There was just something in me that knew, you know, I just didn't question it. And lo and behold, everything in my life ended up

almost magically lining up so that I ended up coming to the states, going there for college, meaning mine now, husband and college, and I actually landed in an animation, which is something

I never quite expected, because I didn't think animation was the thing you could actually do,

but realize that animation was the perfect way for me to tell stories, because it had the greatest impact reaching children and making a change, and just to make people feel like they were watching something profound, meaningful and connective with something that, yeah, meant so much to me. Love it. So what have you been up to recently? Like, if you were to fast forward to the past few years, where has your career taken you? Yeah. So I've gone all over the map to almost every studio

in animation for big studios to small studio, but the most recent was my extent at Disney. I was there for nine years, and I worked on two of the shows that meant the most to me, my family, my kids, which were a Lenovo Avalor, which was Disney's first ever Latina Princess in a TV series, and Moon Girl and Devil Dinosaur, which was of course Marvel's first ever Black, Teen Girl Superhero, and her best friend was Latina, and so for me to see myself represented on

screen like that, and for my girls to grow up seeing that, meant everything. It was a true work of heart. Yeah. Beautiful. Okay, so why don't you talk about our introduce us to Isabel, for those people who don't know her, and how she was significant to you growing up, maybe who she is, what she's known for, especially in Latin America, and yeah, take us on to that journey. Yeah, Isabel Yen is pretty much literary royalty to the Spanish language world. She is

Incredible.

copies around the world and over 42 different languages. She was part of, you know, when Chile, Latin America was going through a lot of political upheaval in the 70s, she was a beacon of hope

for a lot of people and especially women, and her books have always been about strong, powerful

women and people in the supernatural and magical realism. She's actually one of the creators of magical realism, and throughout her life, she's told stories about herself personally, but also about people, you know, either in Latin America or different countries, and she even won the Presidential Medal of Honor that Barack Obama gave her. So yeah, she is literally, yeah, the Queen, and growing up in Latin America as most kids will tell you, she was taught in schools,

and how so the spirits is one of the most famous of her works, but she's got so many novels and to this day, she just turned, I think, 81, 82, and she just put out two more books, you know, in these last, kind of, in this last year and a half, so she's incredibly prolific and has not

slowed down despite her age, which is such an inspiration. Magical realism, that's what you said she's

known for, her act. So can you talk about that? I mean, she's one of the most prolific writers in the world, she's beloved. What is magical realism, and how do you understand that he's about engages with the world? Like, what is her philosophy? Just to let everybody know that really got to see him out of gas was also the founder of magical realism, and so they both kind of were the founders of this beautiful literary term, which basically means that their stories and their

characters live in a very grounded world with very grounded chapters and stories, but the supernatural and magic just happens all around them naturally. So nobody questions it. It's just there. So say we're sitting here and the ghost might join us and sit next to me and I might just not to them and keep going or, you know, some of the characters have magical powers that just are.

And so I find that so beautiful because, honestly, I think that does exist and to them, they just

bring something that people question to the forefront, and especially in Latin American culture, I think a lot more than culture here, we just accept the supernatural as part of every day life. I remember growing up, my, not nice to call her, my nanny. She'd be tucking me in her bed and whenever she'd hear an owl hoot, she'd go, "Oh, well, that means someone's dying tonight. Well, good night, and it was just like, you know, just something you just kind of said and just was and you

lived with." So I got a lot of her novels feature that and like I say house of the spirits as the most famous that was known for that, that included ghosts and magical powers and premonitions.

And I've always found that so fascinating and beautiful because, yeah, I believe in all those things.

Yeah, I love that. What a different perspective and liberating as well. And it seems, and tell

me if I'm wrong, but I think the way that Liz Gilbert plays with creativity and sees the world

as this non-physical thing engaging with us, making it's own creativity, making it's own will manifest through us, seems almost, like almost identical to how Isabella goes through the world. Would you agree with that? Yes, I think so because I know she said she sits down and the story comes to her and she feels like a vessel for the story. So a story that's kind of waiting in line or ready to be told, she's kind of there, ready with her pen and paper and here it comes and she

allows it to just roll through her, you know, as it wishes to kind of live. Yes. And now your, it's just so amazing. Your life has now intersected with her an amazing way around an amazing short story, which is so crazy. And I, to this day, I have to pinch myself, I can't even believe because growing up and seeing her such an inspiration and light for me to be crossing over in any way with her, especially in this way has been such an honor. I can't even begin to tell you.

So what happened? Because I've just think the story is so beautiful and just shows that anything can

happen. Yes. And kind of like you say, definitely was not expected, never thought. I'd be saying

here, you know, talking about this or this having come to me. So the way it started was, I just finished Elena of Avalor and Mungral and Double Dinosaur at Disney. And like I was saying to those two shows meant so much to me. And even though the stories we were telling the characters were something that I truly held close to my heart, they weren't stories that I had created. And when they were over, I just had the sense of, well, now what? I'm like, I've put those helped put those out into the

world. And now there's something still left in me that I just felt like was dying to come out and I didn't know what. So I had finished the shows. And the longer I thought about it, the more I started getting this feeling inside me that felt like I was vibrating on a cellular level. And I couldn't

Shake it.

And I was like, what is it? Like what is this thing? And it was so funny because it was almost like this weird internal itch, you know, even though it didn't hurt in any way. It was just kind of like just really like sitting with me. And I finally decided to just put it out into the world. Because I was like, what is this feeling? Why can I shake it? When am I supposed to be paying attention to? But I also put it out to my family, my friends. I told my husband, I told all my

girlfriends, you know, who I have a group of amazing girlfriends that are so supportive and that

I tell everything to. And I just said, there's something in me, and I don't know what it is,

and I feel like I need to be centered to figure it out, help me. Like, what am I supposed to do?

And after I put that call out, one magical girlfriend, my friend Amanda really heard me. And she called one day and she said, I've been thinking about what you said, and I think I have a solution. And I was like, what is it? And she lives in Northern California near the redwards. And she said, why don't you and some of our friends come up. Stay with me. I know this awesome little area that has cabins and mill the redwards. Why don't we just have a weekend,

you know, get away from the kids, jobs, the city, and just sit and be together in nature. And when she said that to me, just something in me lit up. And I was like, yes, that's exactly what I need. So even though it was this crazy time of year, dropped everything, went up there. And it was five of us. And the second I got there, I just started feeling centered. It was almost like all of my cells and whatever was shaking inside. He started lining. And we got to the cabin area

and Amanda let us in. And it was so beautiful. It was just these little rustic cabins and the mill the woods, like nothing around. And we settled in and I'm looking at these giant, beautiful ancient trees. And so, of course, we started unpacking everything. And then Amanda comes over to us and she's like, uh, Pilar, I have another surprise for you. She said, I've set up the front porch so that we can have a really deep meditation. And so we can just take the afternoon

to meditate and be together and commune with the energy of the trees. And I was like, who is this

friend? This friend is amazing. She is amazing. And of course, my first thought was like, okay,

the sounds kind of woo, like, when you talk about what you mean, we're going to sit and meditate in commune with the tree. But then another part of me, not my brain, my spirit, my heart was like, yes, that sounds amazing. Well, let's do that. So okay, so this isn't something you normally do with her as I go into the trees and meditate. Never. These are all people that are kind of an animation. We're professionals. Um, you know, we, we love spiritual stuff and talking about it,

but never something this intentional. And I guess that's what was the difference. Is she was like,

I heard you, I'm going to help you. I'm going to set something up intentional for you too, talk with in yourself. So it wasn't like it was anything. This bigger magical and that's what was so beautiful about it was so normal in a way. But her speaking those words and saying, we're intentionally going to sit, you're surrounded by people you love, you're away from all the noise, you're communing with these trees in nature. By her intentionally saying that to me,

it kind of just realign me from the inside out. It was, it was incredible. So we all sat there and we just, you know, sat together and in first we started talking and, you know, we drank our tea and we had crystals and, you know, the seeds and everything. And then we just kind of had a moment of silent meditation and it was so silent and beautiful and all of a sudden as I was sitting there and for a lot of, a lot of my girlfriends, things were coming up, you know, especially because we felt

safe, you know, incredible. And in the silence and in closing my eyes, I suddenly started hearing this inner voice and it was kind of an outer voice but by inner and outer it was kind of one in the same and it was almost like the trees were starting to speak to me telepathically and maybe

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And then the most amazing thing happened. My friend Melinda, who had decided to go to the

backyard to meditate because she felt like she wanted to kind of be on her own forbidden nature, she comes out and she says, "Plar, she goes, I was just in the backyard."

And I think the trees back there have a message for you. And the craziest thing was,

normally, you know, my mind, again, my mind was like, "What is she talking about?" But somehow I heard myself say to her, "I know." And she just kind of nodded and I got up and I walked past and I went to the backyard and I see this beautiful, you know, I say beautiful. It was actually just this like plastic launcher, but in the moment, you know, everything looks so beautiful. So this plastic launcher that you were climbing on was just sitting in the middle of these trees. So I go

and I lay down on them and I look up and I suddenly realize that right above me is this circle of giant ancient redwoods, just looking down on me and it almost looked like ancient and cestral kind of, you know, grandparents. I want to say a well-less, you know, looking down and right in the center above them was this beautiful kind of space where you could see the stars. The stars were starting to come out. Wow. So I was laying there, looking at them and I was just

Marveling at the beauty.

I said, "Okay, I'm here, I'm intentionally here. What is it? What is it? I'm supposed to know? What is it? I'm supposed to be doing?" Because I knew it was something that I was meant to do. And all of a sudden, I heard back, you know what you're supposed to be doing. And I was like, "Whoa, what?" I was like, "What was that?" And it was crystal clear. And I heard it in my mind almost telepathically,

but it wasn't like a thought. It was a voice. And the best way to describe the voice was,

it was almost a mixture of what felt like ancestors and guides and the trees. It was all like one in the same. But it was crystal clear. And I said, "Well, what, what do you mean?" And they said, "I think about it." And I thought, "Okay, am I part of it? Are they trying to say?" And I said, "Okay, I know the feeling of what I'm supposed to do doing. I definitely know I'm supposed to be doing something." And they said, "No, you know." And so I just took a step back, I guess,

you know, laying there. And all of a sudden, it was almost like a beautiful mind moment where all these weird puzzle pieces started coming together. And what I heard was, you know, you're supposed to take all the knowledge that you've spent all this time acquiring, all the people that you've connected with, you're meant to put together an animated short film with a story

by Isabella Yende and you're meant to put together a team of incredible Latino creators and you're

meant to, by the way, put an Oscar campaign together and create an incredible film. And I was like, what? And it was just like such a clear, oddly specific download that I was kind of in shock. But at the same time, it made perfect sense, which was equally shocking. And then I heard myself saying, "I know, but I'm so scared." And then they said to me, "Okay, you have fears. What are they?" And so all of a sudden, I started launching in on. I'm afraid of people laughing at me for wanting

to be a director. I'm afraid of what if it's not good, what if Isabelle doesn't give me the rights to one of her stories, what if I can't get funding, what if it sucks, what if, you know, and I'm just like, what if, what if, what if my family is mad at me for doing this? And I just started kind of vomiting up all these fears. And then when they were all out of me, I looked back up with them. And I could just feel when looking down at me with amusement almost. And they were like, "Okay,

those are your fears." So what? And in that moment, it was almost hysterical because

in the next millisecond, I got this incredible download realizing how much my ancestors had gone

through, how much my family had gone through, how much I had gone through in this life to go through all these obstacles, all these challenges for me to be sitting in this launch air, talking about this film I wanted to make, and realizing that it was achievable that I could do it

and the only thing that was stopping me was all these ridiculous fears because now they seem so

small compared to what all these incredible ancestors had gone through. And I suddenly realized, "Oh my God, you're right." So what? And in that moment, actually, I realized I had tears running down my cheeks because it was such a beautiful, like, a ha moment. And, you know, I lay there for a little longer, kind of communing with them and speaking to them because it was just such an incredible connection. And you were, like, sober. Like, you weren't on any of a psychedelic

thing. No, we'd gone through this kind of just deep meditation and tea, and it was more, I just felt so connected to myself, to nature, to my girlfriends, that was a really important part of it, I realized it was almost like a little covenant we'd created right there of safety and vulnerability. So yeah, it was just so wildly incredible and shocking that this had just happened,

that they almost couldn't believe it. And honestly, to this day, I don't know if I would believe

it wasn't for my four girlfriends being there adhering all this the second after it happened, and now them seeing how everything has come together after that. So after I had gotten up, you know, what my tears went back down, the first thing I did was I went to my bedroom, I grabbed my phone, and because what had happened was in the vision and in the puzzle pieces that had come, I had literally seen everybody that was meant to be a part of this. And so the

first thing I did was I reached out to the first person I saw in my vision, which was a writing partner that I'd had, Rafael Agustín, where it worked on one thing together, but he was extremely

busy, would never, like, really professionally collaborated other than this one small thing we

done. And I texted him, and I said, Rafael, I'm in the red woods. I just communed with, I think, our ancestors, he's from Ecuador. And I got this vision that we're meant to do this,

Isabelie and the animated short film together, we're supposed to create an Os...

and I'm supposed to do this with you. And I hit send. And I waited a few minutes thinking,

what the hell am I doing? And I saw the three little dots come up, and I was like, okay,

he's either going to block me forever or like, I don't know what, and I suddenly get his message back. And he writes, oh my God, this is the crazy thing I've ever read. I don't know what you're talking about or what you're on, but I love every word of it. I am so in. And from that moment on, I was off to the races. And every single person in my vision that I come to or gone to and asked to be a part of it from then on, including Isabelie and they has said, yes. And so I want to talk

about some of the pragmatic fears you had, because obviously nothing has stood in the way of this

project wanting to get into a world. Yes. First one, have you ever directed anything? Never.

And other than college. Yeah. And so I just want the audience to know, like, it is hard to get people to fund anything as a first-end director, especially high level. Yes. And then Isabelie

and Be. I mean, it must be so expensive to option her book. She's one of those famous writers in the

world. So talk to me about how on earth you went about this and what happened. Yes. Well, what happened was, and actually before that, let me just insert the fear part and the Oscar part, because because I don't want to forget to tell you this part. So what's amazing is the last little button of. And by the way, you're going to be putting together an Oscar campaign for this because of what

you said, because of never having directed. It just sounded so audacious, so wildly, like,

ecotistically crazy to be like, I'm going to put together an Oscar campaign for something. I don't even have the rights to or own. And as I've gone through this journey, I've realized that that last little bit was not about winning an Oscar, winning a statue. It was about telling myself, because I am worthy of it. And those words were almost like the present day, this world, password to say, I'm worthy of this. I'm worthy of the best. And everybody I've brought on to the

project telling them that, and by the way, we're going after an Oscar campaign has been a way to tell them because I think you're worth it. And one thing that I really realize is as Latinos, and especially

in this industry, the only thing that holds us back, not talent, not knowledge, not storytelling,

not having each other. It's that fear that we're not worthy, and that other people will not find as worthy. So those few words was just that I found the very quick and easy way to tell people when I was pitching this. Yeah, I'm standing here, and I believe in myself, I'm worthy, you should believe in myself too, which is crazy because I would never, I'm such a humble person that to have those words come out of my mouth was almost the first challenge that they gave me.

But that has kind of made me feel like, yeah, you know, I can do this, and then you can all do this with me. So anyway, back to your question. Yeah, because I think like one getting the rights, you know, two, yes, tell a story to a book from one of the most famous prolific, you know, best-selling authors in the world is no easy feat. And then fundraising is no easy feat. And I would imagine one of the most difficult things to fundraise for as I've documentaries. It's like

a short animated film animation is so crazy expensive. Not to mention nowadays, animation is in a total slump. It's so hard to get anything made, even the big studios can barely find money to get anything done. So when I first went about this, to be crazy enough to want to bring this into the world, and any stability, and the story into the world, not even something that's for kids, and to get it funded, and to make it 50 minutes long. It's like most people would have thought,

including myself, by the way, before this vision came to me, that I was crazy. But what's funny is I didn't even know what story the vision was about. I had no idea. I didn't even know she had written

short stories. I'd never read any of them. I'd only read her novels. So first thing I did after

Rafa said, "I'm in. I got home. I was dying to get back home. I get in, and I immediately start Googling. Has Isabelle again, they're written any short stories, and it turns out she's only written one book of compulsions of short stories, and it was based on her novel, Evaluna, and the short story compilation is called Quentos de Valuna, basically stories of Evaluna. And so the second I saw that, I bought the digital copy, because I could not wait for the hardcovered, to come,

bought the digital copy, started reading it right then and there, and the very first story I read was called "Vos Valeras", two words, and I read the story, and as soon as I finished reading it, and it's just the short little story, I knew, with every cell of my being, "Oh my God, that, that is the story I meant to tell." And I knew so profoundly that I started reading the other

Stories, and it was weird.

to waste time. I was like, "Why am I wasting time? I know this is the story. I just trust

the intuition." And so immediately emailed Rafa, I took screenshots of it, seven to him, I was like,

"This is it, this is the story we're meant to do." And he was just on board, you know, he was like, "Okay, that's the story we're meant to do now, what?" And I was like, "Okay, now, I guess we've figured out who has the rights." So we write her a letter and actually Rafa wrote her the letter about me, which was so beautiful and humbling, because he put all his favors that he could possibly muster into this letter to her about me wanting to do the story and the why. He writes for this letter,

and then we wait. And about two weeks later, we hear back from the agents, and they kind of said, "Oh, my God, yeah, those faladas?" Yeah, that happens to be her most beloved short story. She's ever written. She wrote it in 1989. She's been asked for the rights by multiple people, and she has said, "No," to every single one of them. They're like, "So good luck." And we were like, "Okay." And the funny thing is most people would have been deterred by that and thought,

"Oh, my God, she doesn't give the rights to anyone." But all I could think was, "No,

one has the rights." That means it's possible. And then a couple weeks later, we got a call back from the agents, and they're like, "Oh, my God, this is crazy. We don't even know what's happening. This is so weird and rare." She read the letter, and she said, "Yes," she said, "Yes, you can have the rights." And then we said, "Okay, so we'll need the shopping rights for

year because we're going to have to gather the funds first." And they said, "Well, how much do you want

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They're like, "All right, we'll go back." And we thought, "Well, what do we have to lose?" You know, maybe they'll come back with something. They call us back and they're like, "This is crazy. This is so rare. We don't even know what's happening. Who are you?"

Like, "You're nobody. We've never heard of you." She said, "Yeah, she'll give you the shopping

rights for a year for free." And we were like, "Whoa!" And I tell you kind of the moment,

The contract came in, and her signature was on the contract, next to my signa...

person I showed was my mom. She burst into tears and she said, "Oh my God, I believe those would have been so proud to see this." And all I could think was, "Yeah, they see this. They help make this happen." And it was just so profoundly beautiful, you know? Because they would have known her, too. I mean, growing up. Oh, my gosh. Oh, my gosh. Everybody, ask anybody in Latin America. Yes, they know her. She's, she's a Stephen King. It's like Stephen King giving the rights to his

most beloved short story to someone he's never met for nothing. Like, "When does that ever happen?

Never." But when that happened to me, I thought, "Okay, I have been given this precious gift, this beautiful baby that wants to be brought to life." And somehow it's found its way to me. And I'm going to do everything in my power to get to bring it up and bring it out into the world.

And so then the next challenge, you have to find money. So then have the shopping rights,

now we need to have money, don't have much time. So I started, again, I first started reaching out to friends of mine that were artists that I admire hugely. Mostly Latinos, some not, all of them immediately resoundingly said, "Yes." But the biggest part of the puzzle I had to put together was who the production company was going to be and or how I was going to get the money to hire a production company. And there's a yearly festival that's the biggest film festival for

the animation industry in France, called the Anasy Film Festival. And one morning, I just woke up, and I thought, "I have to go there. I'm meant to go to France and find what I'm looking for there." Which sounds absolutely crazy. I was out of work, so was my husband at the time. And so to spend money to drop everything, leave our kids behind and go all the way to France, just sounded insane, but I just knew I had to do it. And so I booked it. We fly out there and one of the companies

I met with was Icon Creative Studio. I pitched them the story and the most amazing thing happened. They said to me, "Plar, we can make this happen." And of course we want to do this with you. And I was like, "Wait, what? I mean, usually to do a short, I mean, it can sometimes cost millions, you know, to make something, especially the quality of it's going for. And here they were going, "Yeah, we can do this for you." And they reminded me that when they rescued their start in the industry,

I was one of the biggest advocates of theirs, and I helped them get their first job at Disney. And they said, "Don't you remember? You were our biggest supporter when we first started. Now we want to do this for you." It's cool. And but I somehow knew I had to fly all the way to France, sit with them, look them in the eye, have this physical energy exchange for us to be on that same wavelength, to then move forward with this giant gamble on both of our parts.

Mostly theirs, honestly. Yeah. I mean, it's pretty wild to go all the way to France.

And that's like a big bold swing when you are out of work. How do you work at this point? I mean, it's a huge swing when you're out of work. That would terrify me. So, where are things that now? Is it out of production? Are you doing out of your campaign? What's the status? Yeah. So now we go into production next month. We already have the animatic pretty much locked and done. We've done our cast auditions, but it has just been in such

beautiful flow. It has all just come together. And I have to say in directing this project,

I've never felt more in flow, centered, feeling like it was something I was meant to be doing.

Like everything has just felt so right all along the way. Even the words I use when I'm launching my artists are talking to them. And it's funny because, you know, this is a story about the power of words and the magic of words, but it's also a story about female empowerment and kind of the divine feminine. And sometimes, you know, you know, dudes that have nothing to do with is that have never heard of Isabella and then me talking to them about magical realism and her hair

flows upside down because it's meant to symbolize water flowing upwards. For the first time in my life, I haven't held myself back as far as how I describe it or how I let it pour out of kind of my inner being. And I found that is absolutely been the way to go, you know, for all this. For people who feel like they have a download like this, the creative download the feels impossible.

They've never directed anything. They don't have the option. They don't find them money. I mean,

those are obstacles that I think turn people completely away from chasing their dreams. What would

be your advice? My advice would be that it is partly believing in yourself, but the other huge part is doing the work and putting in the work. And I think there's a balance. One cannot exist without the other. And, you know, at the stage of my career, I feel like I couldn't have done this. I couldn't have told the story or taken on this responsibility at the beginning of my career.

I feel like I had to go on this journey to get to this point where, yes, I be...

but be know how to do it. And so bringing both of those things together is bringing this to life.

So I would say to anybody that has a dream that wants to follow it. It's equal parts, you make it happen as much as the universe does. And you're kind of one in the same. So when I felt that calling, I could have pushed it aside, but I did the work to ask the universe. What is it to tell my friends? Help me find it to fly myself out places and look for it. And I almost feel like those were obstacles or challenges that were put in front of me

to prove to myself that I was serious, that I really was committed to this story that was precious enough to choose me. And had I not chosen to do those things or intuitively follow that

yeah, I think it would have kind of easily dissolved or left or gone to someone else.

But one thing I feel strongly, it's that this story wants to be told. Now it needs to be told.

It wants to come to life. And I almost just feel like it's vessel. And it's I'm kind of following it's lead not the other way around. So whatever points me to or whatever I intuitively feel, it's putting in my path. I've just wholeheartedly said, yes, and grabbed on. And followed it as best I could. Can you just briefly and like two lines tell us what the story is about for those who don't know the short story? Those Palavras, which means towards is a story

about the magic of words. And it's the story of a woman named Belisecar Pusculario who comes from nothing and in her journey, discovers that words make their way around us in the world and that anyone, absolutely anyone with a little cleverness or, you know, the the Mania we say in Spanish, which is kind of like the the want, can grab a hold of them and create something magical. But it's also a story about our intention with those words and that we have the power to bring

those words to life. And we can use them for either darkness and tyranny or for love and inspiration. And it's truly what's within us and what our intention is that brings those words to full life. It's such, I mean, I just love that a story that is truly about big magic, the creative muse existing around us, being wanting to be main manifest, that is the story that came and shows you through that exact thing. I mean, it's like the story is mirroring your story. It's just so unbelievable,

which is why I love this so much is when you hear what the story is about. Yes, the fact that it shows you the way it did. Yeah, I mean, I'm getting full body chills, you know, you just saying that because

that, yeah, that's what I marvel at almost every day and what's funny is that I was a little girl who

wanted so badly to tell stories, but growing up, I actually was really afraid to speak. I was incredibly shy and I was one of those little girls that was afraid to talk to anyone even people I knew. I used to make my brother answer the phone when it rang because I was so afraid to talk to anybody on the other line. And so speaking words, you know, into being with something I was terrified of growing up. And then to become a producer, I guess, in this industry was a shock to me as well,

because as a producer, you have to speak, you know, in so many meetings, you have to rally

so many of the troops, per se, and actually something I always tell so many of my young girl,

mentees, is that you don't have to be the loudest person in the room. You don't have to be the one with the strongest words. You just have to be the one to listen. And then repeat the words back

with your strongest intent. And that is what I think makes the best creatives, the best producers,

is someone who leads by listening. Yeah. And then repeating back the words that you hear, whether from your own intuition or from the intuition of others around you. Yeah. Well, it's an incredible story. When can people expect to finally see it? Do you think? We're hoping to be done this year. And so to start the film festival route next year, which again is super fast in the world of animation. It's crazy that we could be done in a year.

But that's our goal. So hopefully 27/28. We'll have those Palavras be out in full magical, beautiful realism in the world. And have you talked to Isabelle lately, like, do you give her updates on things? We've sent her kind of images and what we've been doing. And I think we're going to hopefully get together with her soon. We have a press release coming out. She's given us a quote for some super excited to have that press release out and to feel like

it's real and that we're all partners. Now, and I'm just every part of my being is just so excited to happening this story that is clearly wanting and dying to be out into the world at this time and to make it a reality about stories that are wanting and dying to be out in the world.

I mean, that's what's so amazing about this.

animation is dying. And at a time when Isabelle and this book, even though she's written so many,

not one of them, which I can't believe has ever been translated to animation, even though she's

one of the founders of magical realism, which is another thing that's just crazy to me. It's amazing.

It's a brilliant story. Thank you so much for coming and sharing it. The first time I heard it from you, it was just like, this is, it's truly the big magic moment that so many creatives work for and want.

Yes. But you're right. It's about effort and surrender. And thank you for asking me about it

because beautiful. Yeah, it's been something really special to me. So thank you, Kai. I really appreciate it.

Of course. Thank you for that. That was awesome. Thank you, Kai. That's it for this episode of the talktracks. But new episodes will be released every Wednesday. So stay tuned. As we work to unravel

all the threads, even the veiled ones that knit together are reality. And please remember to stay kind,

stay curious, and that being a true skeptic requires an open mind. To dive in deeper, subscribe to our backstage pass by visiting our website with it, you'll unlock access to bonus content like telepathy tests, ask me anything interviews with myself and guests. You'll be able to enjoy the podcast ad free, connect with other members on our telepathy tribe discord, and hear and see exclusive content from the telepathy tapes vault. Visit our website at the telepathytapes.com

for more info on how to subscribe to our backstage pass. Thank you to my amazing collaborators.

Producer's Katherine Ellis and Selena Kennedy, technical directing audio mix, and finishing by Jeremy Cole, opening and closing music by Elizabeth PW, and original logo and cover art by Ben Condor Design. I'm Kai Dickens, your executive producer, writer, and host.

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