When Quiet All Along Met Conjuring Chaos: Talking Reincarnation on Spotify
For twenty years, my life was anchored in logic, cold facts, and the unrelenting pursuit of "the tangible." I lived in a professional world built on deliverables, KPIs, and quarterly growth. In that environment, you don’t present a strategic plan based on "gut feelings" or "anomalous recollections." You present data. You stay within the rigid guardrails of what is verifiable, repeatable, and—above all—profitable.
But for a long time, I lived a double life. By day, I ensured the gears of the corporate machine turned smoothly. By night—and in the quiet, shadowed spaces of my own history—I was an experiencer. I was a skeptic who had seen things that modern science insisted were impossible. I eventually wrote my debut book, Quiet All Along, as an act of rebellion against that corporate silence. I didn't write it to get rich; I wrote it because I was tired of the stigma surrounding metaphysical exploration. I wanted to speak!
And then, last night, the silence broke in the best way possible. I heard my name and my work discussed on Spotify by the powerhouse duo at Conjuring Chaos.
Chase, Aly, and the Chaos they Conjure
It started on Reddit—the modern-day town square for those of us looking for "our people." This is where I met Chase, one half of the creative force behind the Conjuring Chaos podcast. The synchronicity was immediate. We weren't just two people talking about ghosts or the "spooky"; we were two researchers looking for the "how."
Chase zeroed in on a specific section in Chapter One of my book regarding pre-birth memories and the mechanics of the soul. In Quiet All Along, I discuss the staggering case of Ryan Hammons, which the podcast covered in their recent episode, "The Boy Who Lived Twice?"
The Case of Ryan Hammons: Evidence of Reincarnation
If you are new to the study of verified reincarnation cases, the Ryan Hammons story is the gold standard of evidence. At the age of three, Ryan began recounting a life as a Hollywood agent who had died four decades before his birth. He didn't just have "vague feelings" of being someone else; he had specific, granular data points that no toddler in Oklahoma should ever have had access to.
He spoke of a man named Marty Martyn. He talked about dancing on Broadway, traveling to Paris, and working with stars like Rita Hayworth. He even corrected his mother on details about Martyn’s home—noting that it had a swimming pool that wasn't visible in the old photographs they eventually found.
When I look at this through the lens of my corporate background, I see a massive "data leak" from the afterlife. In the book, I dissect the sheer impossibility of this: At the age of two months, my own first memory formed. Science tells us the human brain at that age doesn't have the "hardware" for language, nor the neurological maturity for long-term narrative storage. Yet, I remember. Ryan remembered. Many other people remember. If the biological hardware (the brain) does not yet exist to support the memory, yet the memory is clearly present and verifiable, we are forced to admit that the memory must be hosted elsewhere. Consciousness isn't a product of the brain; the brain is a receiver for a much older signal.
Why We Need Paranormal Detectives
When I tuned into the Conjuring Chaos episode, I expected a brief shout-out. Instead, I found two women who are smart as whips and possess what I call "detective minds."
Chase and Aly didn't just "chat" about the Hammons case; they performed a full-blown audit. They brought fourteen pages of research to the table, turning a complicated, often "fringe" metaphysical topic into a relaxed, "coffee-chat" vibe that anyone can digest. This is their superpower. They bridge the gap between high-level paranormal research and everyday relatability.
Listening to them, I felt the "thinning of the veil"—that specific moment where the barrier between our logical world and the unexplained becomes translucent. But above everything else, I felt the connection. There is a thread that ties us all, that brings us all back home, and reminds us that we are one. These Ladies will feel like your people.
If you need to feel that connection, do yourself a favor and hit Conjuring Chaos on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, or the Podcast Index. They are doing the heavy lifting to destigmatize the "woo," and they’re doing it with incredible style.
Behind the Mic
What I love most about this podcast isn't just the depth of the research; it’s the human story that fuels it. I asked Chase how this all began, and her journey is a masterclass in the power of finding your "tribe."
Years ago, Chase was inspired by Celina Spooky Boo on TikTok. Back when Celina was just starting out with a small following, Chase was drawn to an episode Celina had recorded in her hearse—a vehicle she notably used to deliver backpacks full of essentials to homeless women. Hearing her discuss the unexplained with such normalcy, empathy, and lack of pretension was a turning point for Chase. It made her feel less alone in her own experiences, and it sparked a clear, burning mission: to create a space where the "weird" is not only normal but welcomed.
Fast forward six years, and that passion project has blossomed into Conjuring Chaos. Chase’s best friend, Aly, joined her to help anchor this mission. By day, these two are artists of a different kind—professional stylists who met at work and bonded over a shared love for the unconventional. By night, they are the investigators I’ve come to admire.
They are D&D players, lovers of "pretty nature stuff," and the kind of souls who leave offerings on random graves just to let those who have passed know they are still remembered. They aren't corporate suits or ivory-tower academics; they are artists who podcast for "funsies" and for the deep love of the craft. Their goal is simple but profound: to provide a comfortable, safe space to discuss the metaphysical without the fear of judgment, the sting of mockery, or the crushing weight of being pathologized.
Reincarnation: A System Error or a Divine Blessing?
The episode I’m talking about dives deep into the "how" and "why" of the soul's journey. In my corporate life, we spend all day troubleshooting "system errors." To some, the idea of a soul returning to a body feels like a glitch in the matrix.
But as someone who grew up under a Romanian dictatorship—a system designed to crush the individual spirit—I have come to see reincarnation as the ultimate universal reset. Under the eyes of a regime, you are a number. Under the eyes of the Universe, you are an eternal traveler.
I believe reincarnation is a blessing bestowed upon us by God. Nihil Sine Deo—nothing without God. Whether you look at modern accounts or ancient texts like the Books of Enoch, which hint at the complex journey of the soul before it ever touches the earth, the narrative remains consistent: we are more than one-shot biological accidents. Why would God allow us just a taste of this beautiful Life, only to take it away so quickly? No. I am sure we will come back.
One lifetime isn't nearly enough to appreciate this gem of a planet. To me, reincarnation isn't a curse, a punishment, or even just a "lesson." It’s a second (or fiftieth) chance to get it right. And in a world that can be as harsh as ours, I’m always grateful for second chances.
The End of Being Quiet: Go Be "Woo"
For years, the "powers that be"—the scientists who mock these topics, the institutions that pathologize them, and the systems of faith that demonize them—have made it systemically difficult to talk about the soul. They want us focused on the ROIs of this world because a soul that knows its own eternity is very hard to control.
Hearing Chase and Aly talk with such moral clarity and intellectual rigor made me realize: I’m no longer scared of being judged. If you’ve ever wondered if you can be "woo" and "cool" at the same time, the answer is a resounding yes. The ladies at Conjuring Chaos are living proof.
How to Support the Chaos
If you are looking for a community that doesn't shy away from the hard questions—the questions about past lives, shadow work, and the quantum nature of reality—you need to follow these two legends immediately.
Listen on Spotify: Conjuring Chaos | Podcast on Spotify
Follow on Instagram & TikTok: @ConjuringChaos
Visit the Website: Conjuring Chaos
The system we live in is built on the relationship between fear and privilege. Once fear dissipates—once we realize that death is merely a door—the system falls. When we stop fearing death, we become uncontrollable. When you realize your soul is part of something much larger, much older, and much more loved than any corporate or political system, the walls start to crumble.
And that’s scary. And that’s beautiful. And thanks to voices like those on Conjuring Chaos, it’s inevitable. Go be woo! It’s better than anything else you’ve done this week, I promise.