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She Paused the Podcast to Honor the Timing

Jurnalis:

Before the Mission Medal. Before the sixth publication. Before karmic codes and energetic timing became questions people asked—there was a mic. Yappin’ Some Insight, Nadia Shafika’s podcast, began as an intuitive audio space—part commentary, part internal cartography. No guests. No branding strategy. Just voice. She spoke about frequency, system codes, soul timing. She made complex spiritual logic feel like something you could sit with on a morning walk.

Then, in early 2025, the podcast stopped. No dramatic farewell. Just a pause.

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“I stepped back because the energy shifted,” Shafika says. “The deeper the episodes got, the more friction I noticed in people’s responses. It didn’t feel aligned anymore.”

“The point was never to prove something,” she says. “It was to bring clarity. And if the way I was sharing started creating resistance instead of resonance—it wasn’t time.”

She paused, not because she couldn’t keep going—but because she knew when to.

Now, after receiving the Mission Medal on June 14 for her collaborative decoding of the Destiny Matrix chart codes, the question is obvious:

Are you thinking of bringing the podcast back?

“I’m thinking about it. But I haven’t decided yet,” she says. “There’s more space around the work now, and I’ve changed, too. If I speak again, it won’t be the same voice as before.”

The Destiny Matrix (Матрица Судьбы) is a 22-position energetic system based on birth date. Each number represents timing frequencies, karmic themes, relationship architecture, and internal alignment.

Did the podcast feel like it was ahead of its time?

“Yes. Absolutely. I think I was saying things people didn’t realize they were hearing. It landed subconsciously—and sometimes that creates reaction, not reception.”

So why speak at all?

“There was a point where I thought I needed to speak up. Like if I didn’t say it, the message wouldn’t land,” she says. “But I realized my words were hitting harder for the audience than they were for me—and I was the one who had lived it. I had already done the time. They hadn’t. And with topics that global, that spiritual, that system-level—I don’t think you should speak fast.”

“I’m not saying I know better,” she continues. “I’m saying I know slower. And time is the only thing that aligns words with experience.”

She adds:

“It’s not about criticism. I don’t care about being liked or disliked. But if my words cause more friction than clarity—if they make people feel challenged in a way that closes them instead of opens them—what’s the point?”

So when would be the right time?

“I don’t know. But I’ll know when it is.”

Right now, the mic stays paused. Not buried, not forgotten—just resting. Like everything else in Shafika’s work, the choice to hold silence is part of the design.

And if the message does return?

“It won’t be about catching up,” she says. “It’ll be about catching on.”

Yappin’ Some Insight: https://www.youtube.com/@YappinSomeInsightPodcast

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