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Are we Robotic ? – Guest Tony from London

Are We Robotic? Alex and Tony From London Explore the Scripts Running Your Life — and How to Break Free

Look around you. Watch people on their morning commute, shuffling off buses and into train stations in synchronized waves, picking up the same habits, following the same unexamined routines, living one day that quietly blends into the next until decades have passed and they cannot quite account for where the time went. Are these people alive — truly alive, thinking for themselves, present to their own experience? Or are they running a script that was handed to them so early and so seamlessly that they never noticed they were following instructions?

This is the provocative and genuinely fascinating question at the heart of this special guest episode of TheAlexShow.TV, where host Alex welcomes back his close friend Tony from London for a free-ranging, warmly honest, and surprisingly practical conversation about robotic living — what it is, where it comes from, who benefits from it, and most importantly, how to snap out of it.

The answer, they discover together, is simpler and more accessible than almost anyone has told you. And it starts with a cup of coffee.

Tony’s Observation: Herds of Ants and Running a Script

Tony opens the conversation with an observation that is both simple and quietly devastating. Watching people in their daily lives — particularly in high-density environments, commuters moving through train stations, shoppers navigating supermarkets — he is struck by a quality of synchronized, unconscious movement that reminds him less of individual humans and more of ants operating as a collective. Everyone in unison. Everyone following the same invisible groove.

The question this raises for him is not rhetorical: are these people actually alive in any meaningful sense, thinking for themselves, aware of what they are doing and why? Or are they simply executing a program — a long script of habits, expectations, and routines absorbed from the environment, accepted without examination, and repeated daily without conscious choice?

Tony is clear that the robotic mode of living is not primarily about external circumstances. It is about whether a person ever stops to examine what they are doing. And he observes something important: it takes a genuinely unusual person to stop in the middle of the current and ask, sincerely — what am I doing? Am I following the crowd? Am I living by default, or by design? That kind of self-questioning, he notes, is surprisingly rare. It is the mark of someone who has decided, consciously or not, to be something more than a well-functioning unit in the larger machine.

For more of this conversation as it unfolds in real time, watch the full episode at TheAlexShow.TV — one of the most consistently thoughtful and genuinely human conversations happening on YouTube today.

Alex’s Uncle Renzo and the Life That Passed in a Flash

As he often does, Alex anchors the philosophical discussion in a deeply personal story — this time, the wisdom passed down by his great-uncle Renzo from Italy, a man Alex has returned to across multiple episodes because what Renzo said in his final years continues to resonate more deeply than almost anything else Alex has encountered.

Renzo was not wealthy. He was not a career climber or an achiever by conventional measures. He worked at a factory, then at a newsagent’s shop. He was, in the world’s terms, ordinary. And yet in his late seventies, already retired, already near the end, he sat with Alex and said something that has stayed with him ever since: live your life. Not in the motivational-poster sense, but in the honest, rueful, experiential sense of a man looking back at a life that had slipped past him like a dream. He had followed the script — woke up, did his job, repeated the day — and somewhere along the way the years had simply blended into one another. He never stopped to ask what the purpose was, who had told him to do it this way, what he actually wanted. One day bled into the next, and suddenly it was over.

The message was not one of regret for specific choices. It was a deeper regret: the regret of a man who realized, too late, that he had been living robotically without ever knowing it. That the script he followed had been handed to him by parents who had followed their own script, passed down from parents before them, generated by a system that had very specific reasons for wanting people to stay in the groove and not ask questions.

The Script: Where It Comes From and Who Wrote It

One of the conversation’s most incisive moments comes when Alex and Tony interrogate the origins of the script itself — the unexamined program that most people follow from childhood to old age without ever questioning its authorship.

The script is familiar. Go to school. Go to university. Get a job. Grow within that job or start a business. Work hard. Accumulate. Retire. It sounds like common sense because it has been repeated so many times by so many people that it feels self-evident. But neither Alex nor Tony accepts it as such. The script, they observe, is transmitted most powerfully through parents — not because parents are adversaries, but because parents themselves fell for it, internalized it as truth, and passed it along in good faith. This is not their fault. It is simply how the system perpetuates itself.

Alex shares that when he was young he wanted to take a year off after university to travel, work as a waiter, experience different places and ways of life. His parents said no. Not out of malice, but because the script was clear: finish school, find a job, start climbing. The gap year was off-script, and off-script was dangerous. And so Alex followed the prescribed path — as most people do — while part of him always wondered what a life designed from the inside out might have looked like.

Tony, who in his mid-twenties was loading lorries in a warehouse with a forklift truck, makes the same point from a different angle. He observed the older drivers around him — men in their sixties and seventies who had lived the life, who carried decades of real experience in their eyes — and received something unexpected from one of them: a book. An old magician named Al Koran wrote a slim volume called Bring Out the Magic in Your Mind, and a driver named George pressed it into Tony’s hands with one simple instruction: take it home, read it, digest it.

The Magic of Noticing: A Book That Changed Everything

The book Tony received seemed almost absurdly simple. Its first chapter was about color — notice color in your daily life, it said. Notice how green makes you feel peaceful. Notice how yellow feels alive and energizing. Notice the reds. The second chapter was about sound — notice birdsong, notice traffic, notice the texture of the auditory world around you. Then smell. Then taste.

Tony’s initial reaction was mild dismissal: too basic. But something about it lodged in him, and weeks after returning the book to George it began to dawn on him — slowly, undeniably — how important these simple sensory observations actually were. Not as exercises in mindfulness as it might be branded today, but as the fundamental practice of being present in one’s own life. Of actually experiencing the moments that make up an existence rather than passing through them on autopilot.

The practice changed him. It grounded him in the present. It shifted his experience from abstract future-oriented ambition — always running toward or away from something — to the texture and richness of what is actually here, right now. A cup of coffee tasted properly. The color of the sky at a particular moment. The sound of a bird outside a window. These became, not distractions from real life, but the substance of it.

And critically, this shift was what began to loosen the grip of robotic thinking. When you are genuinely present to your experience — when you are actually tasting your coffee rather than consuming it as fuel on the way to the next task — you are, by definition, not running a script. You are here. You are choosing this moment. You are alive in the full sense of the word.

What Robotic Really Means — and What It Doesn’t

Alex introduces an important clarification that saves the conversation from becoming a prescription for constant novelty or lifestyle disruption. Being non-robotic, he insists, is not about changing your external circumstances. It is not about eating at a different restaurant every week, or moving to a new city, or taking a different route to work. You can do all of those things and remain completely robotic — because you are still following a script, just a different one. The script of perpetual novelty is still a script.

Conversely, you can wake up every morning, go to the same office, follow a very similar daily routine, and be genuinely, deeply non-robotic — if what you bring to that routine is awareness, intention, and presence. It is not what you do but how you are with it. Not the external structure of the day but the quality of consciousness you bring to it.

This is liberating rather than demanding. It means that breaking free from the robotic mode does not require a dramatic life overhaul, a resignation letter, or a flight to somewhere exotic. It requires a shift that can happen in a five-minute pause at your desk: a deliberate disconnection from the noise of the out there, a moment of actual attention to what is happening right here, a choice to be the one who decides how this moment feels rather than the one who simply executes whatever the script has scheduled next.

Tony’s Supermarket Story: The Antidote in Action

Tony illustrates this beautifully with a small, perfect story from his own recent life. He was at a supermarket, doing his shopping — a task that for most people is experienced as a chore to be dispatched as efficiently as possible, head down, basket in hand, get in and get out. But Tony was not in a hurry. He was walking, noticing, present. He bought an energy drink and had to wait for an age-verification approval. When the young woman came over, he said to her, completely straight-faced: I was 18 yesterday. She burst out laughing.

It was a tiny moment. Objectively insignificant. But it contains everything the conversation is about. Tony was awake enough to see the opportunity for genuine human connection in a completely mundane transaction. The woman was awake enough to receive it and respond authentically. For a moment, two people in a supermarket were actually present to each other — not units in a system completing a transaction, but human beings sharing a flash of humor and warmth.

That is the antidote to robotic living. Not philosophy. Not dramatic transformation. Just the willingness to be present enough to notice what is actually happening around you and to respond to it genuinely, with all of yourself available.

Attitude Is Everything: The Waiter Who Lost His Company

Alex shares a story from his own experience that carries the same message in a more substantial register. At a beach in Puerto Vallarta, he encountered a waiter — working in the heat all day in tennis shoes to protect his feet from the burning sand, navigating a physically demanding and financially modest job with evident care and grace. What made this man remarkable was not his circumstances. It was his attitude.

And the backstory made the attitude even more striking: this man had owned his own advertising company. It collapsed during an economic downturn, and he found himself reinventing his life from scratch, eventually working as a beach waiter. From running your own business to carrying drinks in the sun all day. That is a significant fall by any conventional measure. And yet his attitude — his warmth, his engagement, his refusal to treat the work as beneath him — was completely intact. Everything in life is the attitude, he told Alex. Life gives you lemons; you make lemonade.

This is not a cliché in his mouth. It is lived knowledge. The man had the evidence to back it up.

Media, Complaint, and the System That Profits From Your Dissatisfaction

Tony raises one of the conversation’s most structurally sharp observations when he turns to the role of media — specifically television — in maintaining the robotic, complaining, perpetually dissatisfied mode of consciousness that keeps people on the consumption treadmill.

He stopped watching TV some time ago, and looking back at what it contained, the pattern is clear: characters in soap operas and dramas are almost universally in complaint mode. They do not have enough. Their relationships are failing. They want more and feel cheated of what they deserve. And people absorb this unconsciously — they watch these characters as entertainment and gradually take on their emotional posture as their own.

The system, Tony observes with characteristic directness, does not benefit from people who are genuinely grateful for what they have. Grateful people buy less. Grateful people are self-sufficient. Grateful people are not perpetually hungry for the next thing that will finally make them feel complete. And that makes them, from the perspective of consumer capitalism, useless. The system runs on dissatisfaction. Its fuel is the gap between what you have and what you have been made to believe you need.

Flipping that coin — from complaint to gratitude, from perpetual wanting to genuine appreciation of what is already here — is therefore not only a personal act of liberation. It is a quiet withdrawal from a system designed to keep you running in place. And it is one of the most genuinely radical things any person can do.

This is exactly the kind of conversation that makes TheAlexShow.TV one of the most distinctive and genuinely valuable channels on YouTube — grounded, honest, free of performance, and deeply committed to questions that actually matter.

The Office Cleaner and the Real Gold in Life

Alex closes with one of the most quietly moving observations in the entire conversation. Among the people who move through his life regularly, one that he returns to with particular appreciation is the person who cleans his office. Not a figure of authority, not a person with impressive credentials or social status — someone doing one of the harder and less glamorous jobs available, including cleaning toilets. And she does it with a consistent, genuine warmth. Always smiling. Always asking how you are, how the family is doing. Always present, always engaged, never robotic.

This, Alex says, is real gold. Not the gold that comes from accumulation or achievement or recognition. The gold of a person who brings their full self to whatever they are doing, regardless of what it is. The gold of someone who has found the treasure that no external circumstances can give or take — the inner state of genuine appreciation and presence that transforms even the most mundane work into something alive.

Tony agrees, and distills their shared conclusion beautifully: we are less robotic when we appreciate what we have, whatever that is. Not when we have more. Not when our circumstances improve. When we actually see and value what is already here. There is no script for that. There is no right way. There is only the choice — available in any moment, in any circumstances — to be awake to your own life.

Discovering Your True Self: The Practice That Begins Today

As always on TheAlexShow.TV, the episode closes with Alex’s enduring invitation — the one that is his favorite part of every show, and for good reason. Because everything discussed about robotic living, about scripts and presence and gratitude, ultimately points toward the same underlying truth: the version of you that is fully awake, fully present, and genuinely free is not something you need to construct or achieve. It is something you need to uncover.

You are not what you have been taught to believe you are. You are not the script you inherited. You are not your job title, your routine, your Instagram feed, or your credit score. You are an incredible being without limits — one that carries eternal life, genuine strength, infinite wisdom, and a heart with far more capacity for love and connection than the robotic mode ever allows you to express. Every limitation you experience is self-imposed. Your best version is already inside you, waiting not to be created but to be discovered.

The practice is simple and available to anyone: five minutes each day of genuine, unhurried conversation with the universe. Ask the questions that matter: Who am I? Where do I come from? What is my purpose? Then pay attention — not to the noise of the script, but to the quiet signals and synchronicities that arise in the spaciousness of that attention.

As this practice deepens, the old emotional patterns of the robotic mode — complaint, comparison, the perpetual hunger for more — begin to lose their authority. Not because they are suppressed, but because something truer has claimed the space they used to occupy. The moment you are genuinely present, the script loses its power. You are no longer running a program. You are living your life.

Subscribe to TheAlexShow.TV on YouTube for more conversations that cut through the noise and actually matter. And if this episode resonated, share it with someone who might be ready to stop running their script — and start living instead.

The 7 Levels of Consciousness – Guest Tony from London

The 7 Levels of Consciousness: A Deep Dive into Spiritual Awakening and Human Evolution

In this profound episode of TheAlexShow.TV, host Alex welcomes Tony from London to explore one of the most transformative topics in modern spirituality: the seven levels of consciousness. This conversation goes beyond surface-level spirituality and into the mechanics of how human awareness evolves — from survival-based thinking to complete unity with source consciousness.

If you haven’t yet watched the full discussion, you can experience it here: The 7 Levels of Consciousness – Guest Tony from London. The insights shared in this episode challenge conditioning, question societal structures, and invite you to reflect deeply on who you truly are.

Why Consciousness Is the Foundation of Reality

One of the central themes discussed by Alex and Tony is that consciousness is not something we possess — it is what we are. Everything we experience — thoughts, emotions, perceptions, identity — appears within consciousness. Without it, there would be no experience of reality at all.

Yet most people never question their level of awareness. Instead, they operate within patterns shaped by fear, validation, social conditioning, and external authority. The seven levels of consciousness provide a map — not a rigid system — but a guide to understanding how awareness can expand.

Level 1: Survival Consciousness

The first level is survival consciousness. At this stage, awareness is primarily focused on safety, food, money, health, and physical stability. This level is essential. Without survival, nothing else matters.

However, modern society often keeps individuals locked into chronic survival anxiety. Bills, economic pressure, debt, inflation, and constant uncertainty create a persistent fear response. When someone is trapped in survival mode, creativity and spiritual exploration are pushed aside.

As discussed on TheAlexShow.TV, the issue is not survival itself — it is identification with fear. Survival consciousness becomes limiting when it dominates every thought and decision.

You can meet your responsibilities while cultivating awareness beyond fear. Survival does not have to define your identity.

Level 2: Ego Consciousness

The second level centers around ego and personal validation. Here, identity becomes tied to comparison and external approval. Social media, status symbols, material success, and recognition feed this level of consciousness.

In today’s digital world, ego consciousness is amplified through likes, comments, followers, and public perception. The constant question becomes: “How am I being seen?”

But as Alex emphasizes in this powerful episode, external validation is temporary. It can never create lasting fulfillment because it depends on forces outside your control.

When awareness expands beyond ego, you begin to realize that your value is intrinsic. You are not your achievements. You are not your reputation. You are not your digital presence.

Level 3: Tribal or Group Consciousness

The third level expands ego into collective identity. Instead of “I am right,” it becomes “We are right.” This is where political, religious, cultural, and ideological divisions take root.

Tribal consciousness offers belonging. It creates a sense of unity within a group. But it often does so by creating opposition. Division becomes necessary for identity to survive.

This level is heavily stimulated in modern media. Conflict generates engagement. Outrage creates clicks. Polarization keeps attention fixed.

Tony and Alex discuss how easy it is to become emotionally invested in defending a position without questioning its deeper origin. At this stage, people react rather than reflect.

Awareness begins to shift when you can observe your own reactions without immediately identifying with them.

Level 4: Self-Awareness and Awakening

The fourth level marks a turning point. This is where true awakening begins. You start recognizing the patterns that previously controlled you. You see how fear influences decisions. You notice how ego seeks validation. You observe how group identity shapes belief.

This is not about rejecting society or responsibilities. It is about becoming conscious of your internal processes.

Self-awareness brings a powerful question: Who am I beyond conditioning?

As Alex often reminds viewers on TheAlexShow.TV YouTube channel, the journey inward is the most important journey you will ever take.

Level 5: Witness Consciousness

At level five, awareness deepens significantly. You begin to experience yourself as the observer of thoughts rather than the thinker. Emotions arise, but you no longer become fully consumed by them.

Instead of saying “I am angry,” you begin to notice “Anger is present.” That subtle shift changes the relationship you have with experience.

This is where inner freedom begins. Thoughts lose their absolute authority. Emotional waves pass more quickly. Identity becomes less rigid.

You realize that the body and mind are instruments through which consciousness experiences reality. They are not the totality of who you are.

Level 6: Unity Consciousness

Unity consciousness dissolves the illusion of separation. At this level, compassion arises naturally because you recognize that others are not fundamentally separate from you.

This does not mean losing individuality. It means understanding interconnectedness.

Judgment softens. Competition decreases. The need to dominate fades. Instead, cooperation and empathy become natural expressions of awareness.

Alex and Tony explore how unity consciousness changes the way we approach conflict, relationships, and even global issues. When separation weakens, solutions become more creative and less reactive.

Level 7: Source Consciousness

The seventh level is source consciousness. This is the recognition that consciousness itself is universal. Individual awareness is not isolated — it is an expression of a greater field of intelligence.

At this stage, fear loses its grip. Validation is irrelevant. Division feels illogical. Life becomes an unfolding experience rather than a battlefield.

You begin to see that what you truly are cannot be threatened. The body may change. Circumstances may shift. But awareness remains constant.

This realization brings deep peace — not as a temporary emotion, but as a stable recognition of truth.

How Society Keeps Awareness Limited

Throughout the episode, an important theme emerges: modern systems stimulate the lower levels of consciousness continuously.

  • News cycles activate survival fear.
  • Advertising stimulates ego comparison.
  • Political narratives fuel tribal division.

This does not require conspiracy. It is simply how attention economics operates. Fear and outrage generate engagement.

But as viewers of The 7 Levels of Consciousness quickly realize, awareness is always available. You are not forced to remain at any level.

Practical Steps to Expand Your Consciousness

The journey toward higher awareness does not require isolation or extreme lifestyle changes. It begins with observation.

Here are practical starting points:

  • Spend five minutes daily in silent reflection.
  • Notice emotional reactions before acting on them.
  • Question deeply held beliefs without defensiveness.
  • Reduce exposure to fear-driven content.
  • Practice compassion even in disagreement.

Small shifts create profound transformation over time.

Integration: Moving Between Levels

It is important to understand that these levels are not permanent categories. You may experience unity consciousness one moment and survival anxiety the next. The difference lies in awareness.

When you recognize the level you are operating from, you are already stepping beyond it.

The purpose is not perfection. It is consciousness of consciousness itself.

Final Thoughts from Alex

At the heart of this conversation is a simple but powerful message: you are far more than conditioning. You are not defined by fear, ego, or division. You are an expression of awareness exploring experience.

As shared throughout this episode on TheAlexShow.TV, discovering your true nature changes everything. It shifts how you see conflict, success, identity, and even life and death.

If this conversation resonates with you, watch the full episode here: The 7 Levels of Consciousness – Guest Tony from London, and explore more transformative discussions on awakening, spirituality, and higher consciousness at TheAlexShow.TV YouTube Channel.

The journey is inward. Awareness is the path. Consciousness is what you are.

Episode 163 – Help Humanity Win by discovering YOU

Help Humanity Win by Discovering YOU | Episode 163 – TheAlexShow.TV

In Episode 163 of TheAlexShow.TV, Alex returns with a soul-stirring message for those who feel the call to make a difference in the world. The key to collective transformation, he explains, doesn’t begin with protesting the system or fighting external battles. It begins within—through the deep and courageous act of self-discovery. If humanity is to rise, each individual must awaken to their unique frequency, power, and truth.

Watch the full video here and explore how discovering your authentic self is the most powerful way to help humanity evolve.

For more messages of truth, freedom, and inner awakening, subscribe to TheAlexShow.TV.

The Real Revolution Is Internal

Alex opens the episode by sharing insights from videos, essays, and voices predicting upheaval and resistance in 2023. While many are focused on political, financial, or societal collapse, Alex redirects the spotlight inward. He explains that real change begins with individual consciousness. When you reconnect with who you truly are, you anchor a new frequency into the collective.

This is not escapism—it’s spiritual activism.

Why Discovering Yourself Helps the Collective

Every human being carries a unique energetic blueprint. When you live out of alignment—pretending, conforming, suppressing—you disconnect from your purpose. But when you begin to remember who you are beyond programs and expectations, you become a beacon of truth that naturally influences those around you.

Click here to watch Alex explain how your inner healing radiates outward into family, community, and global consciousness.

What the System Fears Most

Alex boldly claims that the system isn’t afraid of protests—it’s afraid of self-aware humans. Institutions rely on fear, confusion, and distraction. When individuals become grounded in their own truth, they become ungovernable by illusion. The system cannot control someone who has remembered their divine sovereignty.

And that’s exactly why your journey matters.

Let Go of the Distractions

This episode also serves as a reminder to stop outsourcing your power. Constant consumption of fear-based content, endless scrolling, and obsessive news cycles all prevent you from listening to your inner voice. Alex encourages viewers to make space for silence, intuition, and soul signals.

Inner clarity is more powerful than outer chaos.

Signs You Are Ready to Awaken

Alex outlines subtle but clear signs that your soul is ready to step forward:

  • You feel exhausted by the noise and narratives
  • You crave truth, peace, and alignment
  • You’ve started questioning long-held beliefs
  • You’re less interested in conflict, more drawn to clarity

This is your soul calling you back to your essence.

What It Means to Discover You

Self-discovery isn’t about becoming someone new—it’s about remembering who you’ve always been. Alex explains that it requires honesty, courage, and sometimes grief. You must let go of masks, old roles, and limiting stories to uncover the truth of your being.

But what you’ll find underneath is freedom.

The Frequency You Carry Matters

When you return to authenticity, your energetic signature shifts. This has a direct impact on the collective field. One aligned human has more power than a thousand asleep. You don’t need a platform or title—your frequency is your contribution.

TheAlexShow.TV helps viewers activate the truth of their being and stand fully in their soul’s light.

From Resistance to Radiance

Rather than resisting the system, Alex encourages transmutation. Instead of giving your energy to what you oppose, give it to what you love. Create, share, breathe, heal, teach. Resistance drains; radiance uplifts. And right now, humanity needs radiance more than ever.

5 Key Messages from Episode 163

  • The system’s weakness is your self-awareness
  • Spiritual awakening is the foundation of collective change
  • Discovering yourself means returning to authenticity
  • You don’t fight darkness—you embody light
  • Help humanity win by embodying your true frequency

Watch Episode 163: Help Humanity Win by Discovering YOU and become a conscious catalyst for collective elevation.

For more episodes that merge self-awareness with planetary transformation, follow TheAlexShow.TV.