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  • EvolutionFM Transcript: How Inner Work Rewrites Your Future Timeline (Yasmeen Turayhi)

EvolutionFM Transcript: How Inner Work Rewrites Your Future Timeline (Yasmeen Turayhi)

Listen to the episode on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube or on your favorite podcast platform.

Yasmeen Turayhi shares a fascinating conversation about intuition, consciousness, and the unseen forces that shape our lives. Once on the path to becoming a tech executive, she felt called to explore a deeper understanding of reality, leading her into the study of natural law, energetic alignment, and personal transformation. She explains how balancing logic with intuition can help people navigate life with greater clarity, purpose, and trust. Through stories from her own journey, Yasmeen reveals how our beliefs, attention, and choices influence the experiences we create.

The discussion dives into topics like karma, timelines, manifestation, discernment, and the importance of developing an inner compass in a world filled with noise and distraction. Yasmeen challenges listeners to think beyond conventional perspectives and embrace a more expansive view of human potential. With insights on consciousness, AI, and the future of society, this episode offers a thought-provoking look at what may be possible when we learn to trust ourselves and the deeper intelligence guiding our path toward an entirely new way of experiencing reality.

Transcripts may contain a few typos. With many episodes lasting 1+ hour, it can be difficult to catch minor errors. Enjoy!

Scott Britton (00:00.622)

Boom. There we go. Okay.

Scott Britton (00:06.37)

Yasmeen, here we are. It's very excited to have you on the podcast.

Yasmeen Turayhi (00:10.85)

Thank you so much, Scott. I'm so excited to be here.

Scott Britton (00:13.912)

So I think I think where I wanna dive into first is just when natural law started to become apparent to you, and maybe we could start off by even describing for the audience people that aren't as familiar what that concept is.

Yasmeen Turayhi (00:28.95)

Mm.

Yeah. Okay, so I'm gonna have to bring it all the way back to a trip in Hawaii. And it all started when a woman that I met said, you know, we live in a subjective universe. In order to see it, you actually have to believe it. And it was the first time in over a decade that I started to pray. I asked for a signal. I said, please show me what I don't know. show me something that I that I don't understand. I'm asking for guidance, I'm asking for help. And in

Yasmeen Turayhi (01:03.914)

And so that was my first kind of foray or an entryway into the world of the unseen, the invisible, the non-local. And natural law only makes sense when you account for the invisible world. So natural law are the organizing principles of how nature works, the seasonality, the cyclical nature of human consciousness, the way that we, the way heartbeats kind of breathe in and breathe out, the way our breath moves. These are all important to understand in terms

Of vibration and how things move in nature. So I also understood energetic accounting through that lens that anytime we borrow against the system of energy, we actually have to pay for it later. And the opposite is also true when we actually create a lot of good karma, good debt, you know, good credit, then we have an abundance, prosperity, and flow to borrow from.

Scott Britton (02:00.182)

So in your so is it f can you give an example maybe of of like a natural law that you talk about in the book that might be in this invisible realm to make it tangible for people?

Yasmeen Turayhi (02:11.714)

Yeah, okay. so the law the I would call it the karmic law, the law of cause and effect, the mirror principle is all the same thing. So essentially it is that whatever you are believing, whatever kind of energy that you're creating in the world, it has a ripple effect. So imagine you're throwing a stone into an ocean, it creates this vibration a couple times, and then that sound actually comes back.

And so that is kind of the law of cause and effect though that we live in this universe where everything we do has an accounting ledger, has some sort of accounting system. And sometimes, you know, what I tell people is that the time

piece portion of of what we put out in the universe sometimes has a delay. And so we don't necessarily have an accounting for exactly when that stone's sound is going to come back, but we know it's going to come back either in this time space dimension or another time space dimension.

Scott Britton (03:10.766)

I always think about like I have you know, in startup land there's people like, you know, what think about your ten year mission, right? And I always am joking to myself, I'm like, Well, the real long game is working on your karma. You know, the real long game is working on your consciousness because we're talking about multiple lifetime level cause and effect, sowing the seeds now for a much, much bigger time scale than we're used to operating on.

Yasmeen Turayhi (03:37.538)

Yeah, I mean, we are infinite beings. We live in an infinite universe. And I think that is so hard for so many people with, you know, left brain dominant minds to grasp and understand. We want to put everything on this linear time clock with an end. We say the afterlife, it's actually the other life. and you know, energy can't be dis created or destroyed, and so we go on to other time-space dimensions. And I think a lot of people can't grasp that and then for we forget that.

We are infinite beings when we're in this human body with all the limitations and all the social programming. So, you know, I think that's something I try to remember every day is that I'm an infinite being. I have so much more capacity. there's so much more sacredness in my life, in my field than this current moment. And and everything's gonna be okay.

You know, that there is an organizing principle, there's a mathematical order to this universe. And whatever created it has created me. And I know that that intelligence is far greater than anything my limited ego self and mind can comprehend and understand. And so I think there's also kind of this piece of trust in this organizing principle, and co-creation with it, rather than acting out of fear.

Scott Britton (04:58.222)

For sure, for sure. I I think that's that word organizing principle resonates with me about how to think about natural laws where we are living in this time space continuum. There does seem to be repeatable patterns. And at a certain point, the intelligent thing to do is just learn how to work with that. And I'm curious for you, like, did you have a specific process for learning the laws? Like how did you go about kind of really grasping these?

Yasmeen Turayhi (05:27.084)

Yeah, so my journey took me in a lot of different directions. I think that the journey of natural law really is about balancing your right and left brain hemispheres. Because the right brain hemisphere looks at patterns, looks at intuition, looks at energy, where the left brain is all about the analytical side, logical side, strategic side, linear thinking. And you really need both to really grasp the full picture of natural.

Natural law. So I grew up in a very academic family, you know, and you know, went to went to all these fancy schools, got different jobs in mergers and acquisitions and tech, and then I realized in my early 30s that I had an overdeveloped left brain, logical, analytical mind. And

My heart and soul was trying to get me back into seeing the bigger picture. So the right brain is the macro. I see this the way I kind of see it is like this diffused awareness where you go when you meditate. And then the left brain is like the micro. And I think being able to switch between both is really critical for understanding how patterns work, how the universe works. And most of us are left brain dominant.

Even, you know, I learned this recently that even when you write with your right hand, money many of us in Western culture are taught to write with our right hand because we are sort of pushed into our left brain because it works the opposite way. So many of us are are kind of forced to be left brain dominant. I even remember people, you know, in my childhood who are left brain left hand writers who are forced

to be right hand writers, forced to use the right hand in sport, I mean right leg in sports. So it is interesting that we are we've become a culture that has prioritized and I would say privileged left brain thinking, left brain thinkers. We reward them and right now we we're seeing the sort of what we've been missing.

Yasmeen Turayhi (07:23.558)

I think a lot of people have to really work on developing their right brain. And that means like using your left hand, using skills, motor skills that you haven't used, that you haven't really practiced, looking at sacred geometry, drawing sacred geometric structures, working with you know, music, working with the nonverbal.

Things that you you can't really speak about. It's it's the places that that sort of move you to pieces, you know, that move you in your heart. But that's what I did for the last 10 years. I studied Kundali Yoga, I studied intuition medicine, I went into different mystery schools. I mean, I was really going through how to shift my left brain dominant way of interpreting the world into more right-brain ways of understanding spatial recognition, where I am in time-space dimensions.

And spending time in nature, I think, was also a big one. So yeah, those are some of the things that I did to sort of learn about natural law. But it it's I think that the Western world is unfortunately really hard for people to it's a hard system to be in for people who want to work on their right brain because

it's not rewarded as much. and so that's a whole other conversation. but yeah.

Scott Britton (08:47.638)

give you I mean I give you a lot of props because there's not a lot of recognition for these right brain abilities. What motivat I mean what kept you what kept motivating you because certainly in yeah society wasn't like wow like you're so intuitive. Like I love that. I mean maybe some people said that but it's not like how people think about I'm gonna build a big bank account or I'm gonna get a million followers or I'm gonna do all these other things.

Yasmeen Turayhi (09:03.714)

Yeah.

Yasmeen Turayhi (09:15.404)

Yeah, you know, I think I grew up Iraqi American, so for me, like my mortality was such a big part of my life. Like I always knew that we have such a limited time left on this earth. And I really don't want to get to the end of my life and be like, well, what was that all about? What was the point? And so when I hit, you know, my early 30s, I was working in tech. I actually was on the trajectory of a of of like a an executive in tech at some of these big tech startups. So my life was really operating at a high level.

And I remember thinking, I know that there's more to this game. I know that there's more to life. And I need to spend time in my inner world investigating.

What that is. And that to me is more important, my own sense of self, my own understanding of reality. And then being able to steward that and help others cross that bridge from the left brain to the right brain. I knew that that would be much more impactful for me. that would make me feel really good every day, that would make me feel

you know, I would have a regulated nervous system doing that. And so that was the path that I took, but it was very unconventional. I was definitely gaslit by so many people who were like, What are you doing? Like, you know, what like have you lost your mind? but it became rewarding in a very short period of time because what I noticed is that whenever my colleagues were going through hard times, I was the first person that they called. And I still am.

The first person many people call when they're going through hard times, which tells me that I know that whether people can say it or not, I know that they look to me as someone who can hold them at in the places that don't make sense, in the places that don't have linear conventional thinking models. And what a privilege to be able to witness.

Yasmeen Turayhi (11:04.332)

That level of depth in the human psyche and to see people also evolve and grow from that space. So I know that that right now, especially like now leading this intuition school, working with executives and seeing them cross that bridge, I know that it's been absolutely worth it. It's also been worth it in terms of creative productivity, efficiency, again, regulated nervous system, being able to sleep well at night. But yeah, so the the rewards are are, they might look different, you know, but I think in the

Day to day, I feel like it's extraordinarily w rewarding.

Scott Britton (11:38.028)

What's your perspective on the forward looking perspective on developing this part of ourselves? Do you think it's changing?

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