Ian Xel Lungold presents research correlating the Mayan calendar with the acceleration of creation itself, arguing that time is not speeding up but rather evolution and consciousness are. Lungold describes nine levels of creation spanning from the Big Bang 16.4 billion years ago to present day, each level occurring twenty times faster than the previous. He reveals a formula converting the Gregorian calendar to the Mayan system, allowing individuals to attune their consciousness to natural rhythms rather than artificial timekeeping. The discussion explores how the same amount of evolutionary change that took billions of years now occurs in mere years or even days. Lungold explains the calendar's 13-section structure alternating between enlightenment and adjustment periods, with historical validation across cellular evolution, mammalian development, human consciousness, and technological advancement. The broadcast examines predictions for the "fifth night" disaster periods and what awaits humanity as creation accelerates toward the calendar's conclusion in 2012. Later, Dr. Gary Schwartz joins to discuss empirical research into life after death. He outlines controlled experiments using double-blind testing of mediums, examining whether accurate information can be obtained without sensory cues. The conversation probes the possibility that consciousness survives bodily death, touching on energy models of awareness, ethical limits of experimentation, and implications for science and religion. Bell and Schwartz weigh skepticism against emerging data that point toward an expanded view of mind and matter.