Radio Show Archive – March 2026
Listen to MindShifter Radio with The Forgiveness Doctor, dr. michael ryce
Read in the daily notes for links to listen to the archives. You can pick all of them up on our YouTube channel (https://www.youtube.com/michaelryce_whyagain) and we have a Podetize player on our website at https://whyagain.org/mindshifters-radio-show-player-for-archives/
| March 1
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NO SHOWS ON WEEK-ENDS. SEE YOU MONDAY.
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| March 2
To Listen, see the link in the note |
March 02, 2026 Michael Ryce and Jeanie opened the show with reflection on current world turmoil and the need for conscious breathing and healing on the planet. The conversation quickly moved into a review of why the Reality Management Worksheet works. Michael revisited the analogy of a flooded basement, explaining that doing forgiveness work is like removing standing water, cutting out damaged drywall, and clearing hidden mold rather than merely masking the odor. The unconscious mind stores unresolved energies—hostility, fear, grief—and until those are brought to awareness and processed, they continue to shape perception and behavior. Referencing Carl Jung’s insight that the unconscious directs life until made conscious, Michael emphasized that forgiveness is the technology that allows this internal “cleanup” to occur efficiently rather than over decades of analysis.
The discussion expanded into the impact of thought and speech on physiology. Drawing on cymatics and Bruce Lipton’s research, Michael described how thoughts become molecular events in the body. Mind energy becomes flesh; neuropeptides circulate and land on receptor sites, influencing cellular function. Hostility and fear alter vagal tone, restrict breath, and reduce frontal lobe functioning. By contrast, as internal work deepens, a gentle, sweet vibration becomes perceptible in the body—an aliveness that reflects humanity’s original design. Participants were invited to examine generational emotional patterns by rating family members on a scale of joy versus distress, often discovering that one’s current emotional baseline mirrors the family system average. This exercise illustrates inherited energetic patterns and reinforces the necessity of personal responsibility. A core theme was dismantling blame. When someone says, “That upset me,” the mind must project causation outward. The nine-bit conscious mind selects evidence consistent with that instruction, reinforcing dissociation from internal cause. Shifting language to “That showed me upset in me” transforms projection into introspection and reclaims agency. This movement from blaming the world to healing internal energy was framed as the difference between dreaming and awakening. The show highlighted how cultural conditioning normalizes blame and how forgiveness restores coherent perception. Cammie shared powerful milestones: one year free from cigarettes after a Quantum StillPoint session and three years sober after decades of alcohol use beginning in adolescence. She described the profound shift that occurred during her StillPoint opening, including healing around her father and the dissolution of long-held emotional heaviness. Michael encouraged her to revisit the video of that breakthrough to reinforce new neural and energetic patterns. The group reflected on inertia in both physics and generational emotional patterns—without conscious intervention, old momentum continues. Breath and forgiveness serve as the interrupting force. The conversation also touched on noise-canceling technology as an analogy for perceptual gating. Just as microphones cancel opposing frequencies, the mind filters out information when focused elsewhere. However, suppressed emotional energy remains in tissue until consciously released. Anita contributed insight from Internal Family Systems, noting that viewing emotions as “parts” rather than identity reduces charge and allows more graceful processing. Michael connected this to earlier worksheet language emphasizing that issues are not one’s identity and that maintaining connection to Source through breath is more important than any issue. The show concluded with encouragement to continue personal code evaluation work and to participate in upcoming discussions. Throughout the broadcast, the central message remained consistent: responsibility, breath, and forgiveness restore coherence, elevate generational baselines, and open access to abundant life. YouTube https://youtu.be/2OTR7RM7-VA or on our Podetize player at https://whyagain.org/mindshifters-radio-show-player-for-archives/ |
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March 3 To Listen, see the link in the note
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March 3, 2026 episode of MindShifters Radio, Dr. Michael Ryce guided listeners into a deeper understanding of breath as a direct physiological regulator of life, emotion, and perception . Michael expanded on research into the vagus nerve, explaining how speech, breath, and nervous system regulation are intimately connected. Referencing cymatics, the science of how sound shapes matter, he described how spoken words create measurable vibrational effects in the body. The recurrent laryngeal nerve and vagus nerve form a biological bridge between voice and autonomic regulation, meaning that hostility or fear expressed through speech can literally stimulate sympathetic dominance, shunting blood away from higher brain centers and essential restorative functions. Conversely, words spoken in active love support parasympathetic balance, enhancing digestion, cognition, healing, and emotional integration. The ancient teaching that “the power of life and death is in the tongue” was framed not as metaphor but as physiological fact.
The show moved into an extended guided breath meditation centered on Rukha d’Qudsha, the conscious breath aligned with love. Michael described three modes of breath: the ordinary breath shared by all living creatures, the dysregulated breath of hostility and fear, and the conscious, coherent breath taken deliberately in love. Through slow, balanced inhalation and exhalation, listeners were invited to align awareness along the center of the body, soften resistance, and allow what he calls the “D’Qudsha factor” to activate. This conscious breath dissolves incoherent energies—what Aramaic tradition refers to as sin, meaning energies off the mark—and restores nervous system coherence. Rather than reciting prayer as petition, Michael reinterpreted the so-called Lord’s Prayer as instruction in how to become the aligned space that captures the presence of love. Prayer was defined as setting a trap for love by becoming receptive, entering inner stillness, and allowing breath to reorganize physiology and perception. Andrea shared a profound experiential reflection on torus field imagery during meditation, describing how shallow, fear-based breathing generated distorted holographic realities, while surrendered breath expanded perception into unity and interconnectedness. Michael affirmed this as the shift from carbon-based memory to creation in alignment with Source. The conversation emphasized that sympathetic dominance, when chronic, leads to hypervigilance, predictive threat modeling, emotional reactivity, and fragmentation. Breath in active love interrupts this loop and restores safety signaling in the nervous system. The discussion also addressed “functional freeze,” described as a state where sympathetic activation and parasympathetic shutdown coexist. In this condition, higher cortical functioning is reduced, emotional numbness increases, and one operates mechanically from stored survival programs. Blood flow to frontal brain centers is restricted, impairing reasoning and choice. Functional freeze often appears in relationships, especially where past trauma is resonated. Michael encouraged recognizing breath holding as the first signal of freeze, softening resistance, observing sensations without labeling them as pain, and using conscious breath to reestablish coherence. Rather than forcing through collapse, individuals are invited to pause, reconnect, and apply forgiveness to dissolve stored threat energy. Throughout the episode, the central message remained consistent: conscious breath linked with active love stabilizes the nervous system, dissolves generational patterns, and uplifts the mind from reactive carbon-based memory into the Mind of Christ—coherent awareness rooted in safety and compassion. The breath is presented as the gateway to healing, alignment, and the restoration of humanity’s original design. YouTube https://youtu.be/B9XtO0AM3cQ or on our Podetize player at https://whyagain.org/mindshifters-radio-show-player-for-archives/ |
| March 4
To Listen, see the link in the note |
March 4, 2026 episode of MindShifters Radio, Dr. Michael Ryce and Jeanie opened the program with discussion among participants about current global tensions, particularly geopolitical dynamics in the Middle East and how political strategies often reflect outdated models of power and control. The conversation touched on concerns about resources such as water and the increasing stress on aquifers and environmental systems. Michael framed these topics within the broader perspective that humanity frequently approaches global issues from fear-based and adversarial mindsets rooted in carbon-based memory rather than cooperative intelligence. The group explored how collective perception shaped by hostility or threat narratives influences political decisions, public discourse, and emotional reactions in society. Michael emphasized that when individuals operate from unresolved fear and hostility, their thinking narrows, creativity diminishes, and solutions tend to reinforce cycles of conflict rather than healing.
As the discussion moved forward, the focus shifted to the internal processes that mirror these larger societal patterns. Michael explained that the same fear-driven dynamics that shape political conflict also operate within individual relationships and personal perception. He described how unresolved trauma and generational patterns stored in physiology and carbon-based memory distort perception and create reactive responses that appear justified to the mind but are actually reflections of unresolved internal content. Through the Aramaic forgiveness process—understood as the release and dissolution of internal energies that drive perception—individuals can step out of reactive patterns and return to clarity and responsibility. Michael highlighted that forgiveness in this context is not about pardoning another person but about collapsing the internally generated realities that keep conflict alive. Listeners were invited to recognize the signals that indicate when they are functioning from reactive memory rather than conscious presence. These signals include tightening in the body, emotional agitation, defensive thinking, and the impulse to assign blame. Michael encouraged using conscious breath and awareness to soften these responses and create space for insight. When a person becomes willing to look at the internal source of their reaction rather than projecting it outward, perception reorganizes and a different level of intelligence becomes accessible. This shift from reaction to awareness allows the nervous system to settle and opens the possibility for compassionate understanding, creative solutions, and authentic communication. Throughout the program, Michael and Jeanie reinforced the central principle that healing the human condition begins with individual responsibility for perception and internal state. They described how practicing forgiveness, conscious breathing, and self-observation dissolves the energetic patterns that perpetuate conflict both personally and collectively. As individuals heal their own hostility and fear, their interactions naturally become more coherent and supportive of life. The show concluded with encouragement for listeners to continue applying these tools daily so that personal transformation contributes to broader cultural healing and a movement toward a world organized around love, cooperation, and conscious awareness rather than fear and competition. YouTube https://youtu.be/oKFjOt2Nmlg or on our Podetize player at https://whyagain.org/mindshifters-radio-show-player-for-archives/ |
| March 5
To Listen, see the link in the note |
March 5, 2026 episode of MindShifters Radio, Dr. Michael Ryce and Jeanie Ryce explored the nature of perception, responsibility, and healing through relationships, emphasizing how most human experience is shaped by unresolved content from the past that the mind projects into the present moment. Michael described how the mind functions through carbon-based memory, constantly massaging old experiences to appear as if they are current reality. Because of this mechanism, people often believe their emotional responses are caused by someone else’s behavior when in fact those reactions arise from previously stored patterns within their own minds. The discussion highlighted the importance of responsibility communication, a form of communication in which individuals recognize that the emotional constructs appearing in their mind belong to them rather than to another person. By contrast, projection communication blames others for what one experiences internally, reinforcing cycles of conflict and misunderstanding in relationships.
Michael explained that many of the most painful relational dynamics originate in early childhood experiences, particularly those involving blame, helplessness, and feelings of failure. These emotional imprints become deeply wired into the nervous system through what he calls the “file folder effect,” where experiences that resonate together become neurologically linked. When similar circumstances arise later in life, those stored patterns automatically activate, influencing perception, physiology, and behavior even if the person is not consciously aware of them. He noted that many adults unknowingly carry childhood beliefs formed during moments of powerlessness, such as children blaming themselves for parental conflict or divorce. Without tools for healing, these hidden patterns surface repeatedly in relationships, often leading people to leave partnerships while believing the other person is the problem, when in fact the unresolved content remains within themselves. The conversation further examined how hostility often acts as a psychological anesthetic that masks deeper pain. Michael described hostility not as a true emotion but as a coping mechanism used to numb underlying hurt, guilt, or fear. Cultural patterns such as sarcasm were discussed as socially accepted forms of hostility that can subtly reinforce separation and emotional injury. He suggested that many behaviors people later regret occur when hostility overrides awareness and intelligence, temporarily shutting down the mind’s capacity for compassionate perception. Through the practice of forgiveness—defined as removing the internal energies that distort perception—individuals can dismantle these patterns and restore clarity. Another key theme involved how unresolved emotional energy accumulates over time and unconsciously attracts similar experiences through resonance. Michael illustrated this concept with the metaphor of compressing a spring: each time painful issues are suppressed rather than addressed, more energetic tension is stored. Eventually this energy seeks expression through relationships that mirror the unresolved patterns. What appears to be “bad luck” in relationships is often the mind’s attempt to bring hidden material to the surface for healing. When individuals take responsibility for their internal reactions and apply forgiveness, the same relationships that once triggered conflict can become pathways for deep healing and transformation. The program also touched on energetic concepts such as resonance and vibrational patterns in thought, referencing experiments like the Delaware camera that attempt to capture energetic fields associated with living structures. Michael used these examples to illustrate how patterns for growth and development already exist within the energetic blueprint of life, much like an acorn contains the pattern of an oak tree. In the same way, human beings carry generational patterns that can unfold unless consciously addressed. Through breath, awareness, and forgiveness practices, these patterns can be dissolved before they manifest as emotional or physical difficulties. During the latter portion of the show, callers discussed generational dynamics, particularly patterns between mothers and daughters, and how breath-based awareness and MindShifter exercises can help uncover and heal inherited emotional patterns. Michael guided participants to observe their breath as an indicator of where unconscious material may be surfacing, explaining that breath restriction often signals internal resistance to seeing hidden emotional content. The episode concluded with a short guided reflection encouraging listeners to breathe consciously in active love—what Michael described in Aramaic terms as Rukha d’Qudsha—and extend that awareness toward themselves, their parents, and their children as part of a generational healing process. From Chatroom: DeLaWarr camera – https://marcelvogel.org/#camera MindShifter: SECTION 39: HEALING ISSUES AROUND THE “JOHN THE BAPTIST” SYNDROME #13: “My safety and aliveness is generated internally through Breath, not through agreement or approval.” YouTube https://youtu.be/yJPED81AIwE or on our Podetize player at https://whyagain.org/mindshifters-radio-show-player-for-archives/ |
| March 6
To Listen, see the link in the note |
March 06, 2026 replay of May 15, 2025 2nd hour hosted by Dr. Michael Ryce opens with a reflection on how our innate nature is love, using the universal experience of holding a newborn as a way to access that remembrance. He emphasizes that the newborn isn’t doing love—it is love. This fundamental essence is our true nature, but it becomes obscured when we are molded by cultural, familial, and generational distortions rooted in fear and hostility. He draws from ancient Aramaic teachings and quantum physics to illustrate that these distortions become embedded energetically and physiologically, forming unconscious patterns that repeat until healed.
Ryce explains that what the Aramaic text refers to as “the sins of the father” being passed down through generations is not about moral failing, but rather a description of how unresolved trauma and energy patterns are genetically and energetically inherited. Using metaphors like Humpty Dumpty and David Bohm’s concept of “unbroken wholeness,” he shows how fragmented identities shaped by pain cannot return to wholeness without undoing the separation. The key tool for healing this fragmentation, he insists, is forgiveness—not in the distorted form of letting others off the hook, but in the Aramaic sense of “shabag,” meaning to cancel. Canceling the goal behind a triggered upset collapses the false perception and opens space for truth and healing to emerge. A caller named Harry shares his realization that the pain he experiences from his child’s mother mirrors the pain he once inflicted in past relationships. Dr. Ryce helps him shift further from blame to responsibility, encouraging him to recognize that hurt is internally generated and can only be healed from within. This segues into a discussion on Responsibility Communication, a method of honest, ownership-based dialogue that allows individuals to stop projecting and start healing. Ryce stresses that blame—even disguised in polite “I” messages—fuels conflict, and the healing path demands owning one’s pain and asking for support, not assigning fault. Another caller, Terry, works through a worksheet on resentment and the goal of being honored. Ryce guides her in pinpointing deeper goals beneath the surface—such as fairness, validation, and the broader cultural impact of patriarchy. He highlights the importance of uncovering the exact energetic frequency (goal) that fuels an upset to effectively apply forgiveness. The conversation evolves into how unconscious beliefs inherited from parents or culture may drive behavior and perception without our awareness, and how applying tools like the personal code evaluation can help identify and dismantle these blocks. Ryce elaborates on how denial causes us to dissociate from our internal content, creating an unconscious mind—which he asserts is an unnatural condition for humans. Most people, he claims, are driven by unconscious dynamics formed through their power-person interactions and generational trauma. He links theology, psychology, and physics to show that the mind’s “nine-bit” capacity becomes overloaded by false constructs unless goals are canceled and deeper healing allowed. He explains that the forgiveness work accesses the unconscious mind, allowing the dissociated content—rage, guilt, fear, shame—to emerge and be released. This is not just theory, he insists, but the product of 50 years of practical refinement. Finally, the show closes with an attempt to bring Jeannie on the call, and though her connection fails, Dr. Ryce wraps up by reinforcing that consistent use of the forgiveness and responsibility communication tools leads to deep transformation. The show underscores the message that we are creators, not victims, and we can reclaim our true nature as love by actively dissolving the lies we inherited and the energies we carry. YouTube https://youtu.be/96icp1JLxJc or on our Podetize player at https://whyagain.org/mindshifters-radio-show-player-for-archives/ |
| March 7
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NO SHOWS ON WEEK-ENDS. SEE YOU MONDAY.
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| March 8
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NO SHOWS ON WEEK-ENDS. SEE YOU MONDAY.
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| March 9
To Listen, see the link in the note |
March 9, 2026 episode of MindShifters Radio focused on the introduction and discussion of the book Healing Generations: One Breath at a Time, with Dr. Michael Ryce interviewing Jeanie Ryce about the inspiration, purpose, and practical application of the material. The conversation began with Jeanie sharing gratitude for the community’s support as the first shipments of the book were being mailed out and discussing how listeners could help expand awareness of the work through reviews and online engagement. The dialogue then moved into the deeper purpose of the book, which is to help people recognize how generational emotional patterns are carried forward through families and how those patterns shape perception, relationships, and personal identity. The Ryces explained that much of human suffering comes from unconscious emotional content inherited through family systems and reinforced through culture, belief systems, and unresolved trauma. By understanding these inherited dynamics, individuals can begin to see that many of their reactions are not caused by current circumstances but arise from stored patterns that have been activated.
Jeanie and Michael described the healing process presented in the book as a practical pathway for dismantling these generational patterns through awareness, breath, and forgiveness. They emphasized that forgiveness is not about letting others off the hook but about removing the internal hostility and fear that distort perception and keep people trapped in repeating cycles of pain. The practices of MindShifters and StillPoint Breathing were discussed as tools that allow individuals to access deeper layers of the mind where these patterns reside, bringing them into awareness so they can be released. The conversation highlighted how healing oneself can shift the energetic patterns carried through a family lineage, allowing future generations to live with greater clarity, love, and freedom. Michael reflected on how the work helps people move out of blame and victimhood into responsibility for their internal experience, opening the door to genuine transformation. Throughout the discussion, the Ryces illustrated how healing generational trauma is not simply an intellectual process but an experiential one that requires consistent practice and willingness to face painful emotional material. They encouraged listeners to engage the tools presented in the book, to breathe consciously, and to allow the presence of love to guide the healing of family patterns. The show concluded with an invitation for listeners to participate in the ongoing community of learning and healing, reinforcing the vision that when individuals clear the patterns within themselves, they contribute to the healing of humanity as a whole. YouTube https://youtu.be/olufj7sMH0Q or on our Podetize player at https://whyagain.org/mindshifters-radio-show-player-for-archives/ |
| March 10
To Listen, see the link in the note |
March 10, 2026 episode of MindShifters Radio continued the introduction and discussion of Healing Generations: One Breath at a Time as Jeanie Ryce read and processed portions of the book with Dr. Michael Ryce and the listening community. The program opened with conversation about the early response to the book’s release, encouragement for listeners to share the work and post reviews, and discussion of possible future formats such as an audiobook. Michael emphasized that the book presents the core practical teachings of Y’Shua in a clear, experiential form that allows people to apply the tools of forgiveness and healing in their own lives. Jeanie then began reading a powerful section describing a breath session that became the catalyst for the book. During this experience she encountered vivid imagery and intense sensations that appeared to express deep trauma connected with a Native American child who had been abused and enslaved. The memory-like imagery unfolded through conscious breathing, and when she awakened she found herself on the bedroom floor with severe hip pain and emotional distress, which she and Michael later processed together using breath, awareness, and energy work.
Jeanie explained that the experience seemed to surface layers of generational or ancestral trauma stored within the body and mind. As the healing process unfolded over the following years, physical symptoms such as hip pain, emotional reactions, and memories related to earlier abuse began to release through repeated breathing sessions and forgiveness work. Michael described how trauma and unresolved experiences are often stored energetically within the tissues of the body and can surface during healing work. Over time, the pain and emotional intensity gradually diminished as each layer was processed. The conversation highlighted how generational patterns, family experiences, and early trauma can shape an individual’s perception and behavior long after the original events have occurred. The book’s purpose, Jeanie explained, is not to focus on the traumatic story itself but to show how the tools of Aramaic forgiveness, breathwork, and conscious awareness can remove these energies and restore a person to their natural state of love and wholeness. After reading this opening chapter, Jeanie outlined the structure of the book and the journey it describes through her life. She shared how childhood experiences, feelings of insecurity, early marriage, abuse, miscarriage, and years of struggle led her to search for deeper healing and understanding. Despite success in school and later in her career, she described feeling lost and driven by a need to prove herself. Over time she began to recognize how these patterns were rooted in earlier trauma and generational beliefs. Her life shifted dramatically after encountering Michael Ryce and beginning the process of self-realization and forgiveness work. Through that process she faced buried emotional pain, returned to college, earned a psychology degree, and began helping others heal through workshops and counseling work that integrates physical, emotional, mental, and spiritual healing. The discussion emphasized that healing requires courage, support, and the willingness to bring hidden memories and beliefs into the light where they can be released. The latter portion of the show included interaction with listeners who reflected on their own experiences of trauma, purpose, and personal identity. One caller shared how motherhood had provided a sense of meaning during difficult times but later realized that relying on a child as one’s sole purpose can mask unresolved internal pain. Michael explained how power-person dynamics and unresolved childhood beliefs often shape adult identity and behavior. Through forgiveness worksheets, breath awareness, and the recognition of these patterns, individuals can move from victimhood toward responsibility and reclaim their personal purpose. The conversation concluded with encouragement for listeners to continue breathing consciously, using the tools presented in the book to heal inherited patterns and return to their true state of being. The episode closed with gratitude for the courage it takes to face personal history and with an invitation for the audience to continue the healing journey together, one breath at a time. From Chatroom: For the 1st (free) MindShifters Radio Show where Jeanie facilitates the 1st facilitated session of the “Healing Generations One Breath At A Time”… https://youtu.be/olufj7sMH0Q?si=BmSXqTtaoCAz2HZh To join her on an ongoing basis and stay engaged with a healing stream, with minimal effort, I would suggest joining us on MindShifters Radio 5 days a week from 1-2 PM EASTERN Time. Listen. Participate. Ask for support and ask all the questions you have! Here is the link… All you need is the free Zoom App on your phone or computer…To Join just hit this link and the show will automatically open and you will be listening… https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84613824189 Meeting ID: 846 1382 4189 No Password Required. For thousands of hours of ARCHIVES go to: https://www.youtube.com/michaelryce_whyagain CAN I ORDER FROM OUTSIDE THE US? Please email Jeanie@whyagain.org for international shipping rates or bulk order inquiries. HOW DO I CLAIM MY E-BOOK CREDIT? (Valid March 6-13)
HOW DO I JOIN THE BOOK CLUB? Sign up for the community support and book club here: https://whyagain.org/healing-generations-book-club/ Frequently Asked Questions & Quick Links: WHERE DO I ATTEND THE RADIO SHOW? We are live Mon-Fri, 1-2 PM Eastern via Zoom: https://us02web.zoom.us/j/84613824189 YouTube https://youtu.be/a6fIis8SshU or on our Podetize player at https://whyagain.org/mindshifters-radio-show-player-for-archives/ |
| March 11
To Listen, see the link in the note |
YouTube or on our Podetize player at https://whyagain.org/mindshifters-radio-show-player-for-archives/ |
| March 12
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YouTube or on our Podetize player at https://whyagain.org/mindshifters-radio-show-player-for-archives/ |
| March 13
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YouTube or on our Podetize player at https://whyagain.org/mindshifters-radio-show-player-for-archives/ |
| March 14
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NO SHOWS ON WEEK-ENDS. SEE YOU MONDAY.
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| March 15
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NO SHOWS ON WEEK-ENDS. SEE YOU MONDAY.
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| March 16
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| March 17
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| March 18
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| March 19
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| March 20
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| March 21
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NO SHOWS ON WEEK-ENDS. SEE YOU MONDAY.
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| March 22
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NO SHOWS ON WEEK-ENDS. SEE YOU MONDAY.
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| March 23
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| March 24
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| March 25
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| March 26
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| March 27
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| March 28
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NO SHOWS ON WEEK-ENDS. SEE YOU MONDAY.
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| March 29
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NO SHOWS ON WEEK-ENDS. SEE YOU MONDAY.
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| March 30
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March 31 To Listen, see the link in the note |


