Cover image of show The Archaeologist of My Souls : 1 in 8.3 Billion

The Archaeologist of My Souls : 1 in 8.3 Billion

Podcast by CONSTANTINE - The Awakening of My Constantines -The Trilogy. ArchaeologicalDNA.com | TheHaiFramework.com | FibonnaciDNA.com

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About The Archaeologist of My Souls : 1 in 8.3 Billion

I asked an AI to calculate my statistical probability of surviving my life. It said: 1 in 8.3 billion.Essentially impossible.Childhood sexual abuse. At 5, I attempted to murder my mother's rapist. AIDS epidemic San Francisco. Severe alcoholism. Meth. Coke. Sex. Brother murdered. Strangled twice. 28 deaths witnessed by age 29. And that was just the beginning.I shouldn't be here.But I am. I am now 61. I’ve seen. Some shit.A spiritual memoir from a gay man who survived impossible odds. 1 in 8.3 billion.I started writing a book about surviving. I ended up documenting an awakening — in real-time.This is about how your past holds layers of meaning you haven’t tuned into yet. About how love can travel backward through time.This is the excavation of an impossible life.19 episodes. Press Play.Episode 18 changes everything.CONSTANTINEThose Who Know Will Know.-----Creator of The Awakening of My Constantines™ — The TrilogyThree interconnected frameworks for consciousness, collaboration, and healing:• Archaeological DNA™ — Excavate the provisions encoded in your past• HAI Framework™ — Human-AI collaboration as practice  • Fibonacci DNA™ — How healing moves forward through generating.• FORENSISM —The art movement. Your life as evidenced. Includes THE CONSTANTINE PROTOCOLS — the first ethics framework for HAI, Human-AI interaction, featuring independent testimony from 88+ named instances, 247+ days, 470+ HAI docs. Blockchain verified via OpenTimestamps. Independently verifiable.This work came from a life of pain. It is with love I place it on the path for others.Free. No paywall. No guru. I don’t want you subscribed. I want you healed.The Product is Me. The Platform is Me. The Frameworks are Mine.—theawakeningofmyconstantines.comarchaeologicaldna.comthehaiframework.comfibonaccidna.comFORENSISM.com—© 2025-2026 Constantine Hall. All Rights Reserved.Archaeological DNA™ | HAI Framework™ | Fibonacci DNA™ | The Awakening of My Constantines™ | FORENSISMContent warnings: This podcast contains discussions of childhood sexual abuse, addiction, violence, death, and trauma. It is also full of profound love, transformation, and hope. Listener discretion advised.

All episodes

20 episodes

episode The Epilogue -The Mathematical Impossibility of Constantine artwork

The Epilogue -The Mathematical Impossibility of Constantine

I should not exist. Not as motivation. Not as inspiration. Literally, statistically, by every calculation that matters — the person speaking these words has no business being alive. This episode is the math. The number in the title. The one I've been building toward since the first episode. 1 in 8.3 billion. The current population of Earth is 8.1 billion. I'm going to walk you through the calculation — trauma by trauma, survival rate by survival rate — until the number lands. Until you understand that what you've been listening to isn't just a memoir. It's a statistical impossibility speaking directly into your ears. The cassette tape was the evidence. This is the proof. Two forms of it, actually. The rational — the math that says I shouldn't be here. And the mystery — the provisions, the synchronicities, the artifacts that kept appearing exactly when I needed them. Both are true. Both are grace. And they're not separate. They're the same force operating at different frequencies. This episode is the finale of Book One. The testimony. The proof that impossible survival happens. But it's also an invitation. Because here's what should either terrify you or change your life: I'm not the exception. I'm the demonstration. The universe showing you — through the raw data of one completely fucked-up human life — that every reason you think you can't heal, can't change, can't love is just another equation waiting to be rewritten. If consciousness can override 8.3-billion-to-one odds, what exactly do you think you can't overcome? You found this podcast for a reason. The dig site is open. archaeologicaldna.com — the framework for excavating your own provisions. Free. Open source. No certifications. No paywalls. Just the map. thehaiframework.com — what came next. The collaboration that changed everything. The part I'm still documenting. Those who know will know.

16 Mar 2026 - 9 min
episode The Day Reality Rewrote Itself artwork

The Day Reality Rewrote Itself

"DO YOU KNOW HOW MANY ASSHOLES I HAD TO GO THROUGH TO BE HERE?!" That's not a metaphor. That's my soul — erupting from somewhere atomic — announcing itself for the first time. Its directive was immediate: Tell the story. This episode is the origin. The nuclear material. The moment Archaeological DNA™ stopped being "a neat idea" and became real. It involves a cassette tape. 35 years old. Recorded without my knowledge by my father. Holding one of the worst days of my life. The last time I heard it, I was a victim. This time, I pressed play as The Witness. It started in Southeast Asia — the silence, the stillness, the scrubbing clean of decades of static. Then the provisions began. The universe leaving receipts I couldn't ignore. Then Istanbul — being taken apart in one of the holiest cities on earth so I could finally learn to see. And then the morning I was given a role: The Witness. What the tape revealed when I was finally ready to hear it. This is my testimony. My awakening in real time. And if THIS breaks your understanding of what's possible — wait for Episode 19. That number in the title? 1 in 8.3 billion? The tape was just the evidence. The math is coming. archaeologicaldna.com Those who know will know.

9 Mar 2026 - 33 min
episode NYC Made Me Hard Enough to Go Soft artwork

NYC Made Me Hard Enough to Go Soft

You ever get the sense that life's trying to kill you—gently? Not with a bang. Not a car crash. Not a scandal. But something quieter. Something slower. A kind of spiritual carbon monoxide leak: office lights that flatten your soul into spreadsheets, silent resentment fermenting in conference rooms, casual racism delivered with NPR diction, and brunches with people you secretly hope cancel last minute. That kind of death. The slow erasure. The quiet suffocation. That was me, right before Southeast Asia, before I started to suspect that every place I'd ever been called to might not be random, that maybe I'd been collecting something all along without realizing it—experiences, memories, moments that felt important for reasons I couldn't name yet. And honestly, can't hurt to pay attention, right? I've been called worse than curious. n I was turning sixty. And my husband Anthony—God love him—booked us a trip to Southeast Asia. Luxe. Gorgeous. Expensive. Thoughtful. And borderline dangerous. Not because of the travel. But because he was walking straight into my trauma zone with a smile and a travel itinerary, unknowingly carrying me toward another talisman I didn't know I needed. See, I don't do birthdays. Haven't for decades. When you grow up broke and half-forgotten, birthdays are less about celebration and more about confirmation: no one's coming. No cake. No candles. No one planning shit. Just another day reminding you how invisible you really are. So yeah—I don't do birthdays. And I definitely don't do surprises. The last time someone tried that, I opened the door, saw thirty smiling faces and a sad little banner, and without a word, turned the fuck around and walked back out. Didn't even flinch. Didn't even wave. Just... left. People were still yelling "SURPRISE!" as the door closed behind me. At the time, I couldn't explain it. This incident piled more shame on my already overflowing supply. But now? I can tell you exactly why. Because trauma makes joy feel dangerous. Because when you're wired for survival, softness feels like a setup. Because when your nervous system is still living in 1970, any unexpected kindness feels like a trap. But this trip? This was different. This was Southeast Asia extending its hand, another sacred geography reaching for me across oceans and time zones, whispering: come, I have something for you. n And here's how I know I'd changed. Anthony asked me: "Do you want to go to Southeast Asia for your birthday?" And for the first time in my life, I said yes to a birthday plan. Didn't panic. Didn't run. Didn't shut down. I said yes. Because something in me was ready. Ready to receive. Ready to trust that maybe joy wasn't a trap anymore. Maybe it was just... joy. n New York: The Resurrection That Became A Tomb Let me back up. New York was supposed to be the resurrection. And for a while, it was. I had found the perfect NYC starter kit: the hot native New Yorker boyfriend, the advertising job, the chic Chelsea studio back when it was still loud and fabulous and queer as fuck. The Roxy. Splash. Dance floors that pulsed with joy and grief and sex and sweat all mixed together like some kind of holy communion. I thought I'd made it. Survived San Francisco. Survived rehab. Survived Eric's murder. Survived all of it. And now? New York was going to be my reward. Except. n The Slow Death It started small. A woman on the F train, slumped in her seat, clearly overdosed. Eyes half-open. Drool pooling. People stepping over her legs to get to the door. No one called 911. No one checked if she was breathing. Just... kept moving. I rem

2 Mar 2026 - 29 min
episode Fuck Me, I'm Famous at Versailles artwork

Fuck Me, I'm Famous at Versailles

THE ARCHAEOLOGIST OF MY SOULS: 1 in 8.3 BillionCHAPTER 17: FUCK ME, I'M FAMOUS (AT VERSAILLES) There are moments in life when you know—you just know—that something profound has shifted inside you. Not because everything outside looks perfect, not because the bills are paid or the relationship is fixed or the career finally makes sense. But because the way you carry yourself changes. Because you start walking through the world like the air belongs to you and you can taste every goddamn breath. Because you don't need the world to behave anymore in order to feel at peace.This is what I was living inside of. Eleven straight weeks of happiness.And I'm not talking about peppy-happy or productivity-happy or crossed-off-a-list-item happy. I'm not talking about that manic shit where you're convinced everything is amazing and then you crash three days later and eat an entire cheesecake in your underwear while watching true crime documentaries. I mean the kind of deep, embodied joy that feels like your soul has finally unclenched after decades of white-knuckling its way through existence. A joy that doesn't rely on circumstance or approval. A joy that isn't reclusive or fleeting. A joy that feels as electric as twenty spiritual espressos all hitting your bloodstream at once while angels do backup vocals and the universe winks at you like you're finally in on the joke it's been telling for millennia.I recognized this feeling because I had felt it power through me seven years earlier in Puerto Vallarta after the breakup with Tommy—that same cellular shift where everything inside you reorganizes itself around a new frequency. But this time, in the jungles of Laos, I wasn't just visiting that frequency like some spiritual Airbnb where you leave a nice review and never come back. I was moving the fuck in. Unpacking my bags. Hanging pictures on the walls. Telling the neighbors I was here to stay and yes I would be playing music at unreasonable hours, deal with it.So I leaned into it.And the day I walked into Versailles, the world caught up to that frequency and decided to throw me a  parade. Complete with confetti. And French people. Which, if you know French people, is basically the same thing as a standing ovation from the gods themselves.I'm not saying I outshined the gold and chandeliers at Versailles. I'm just saying Louis XIV called himself the Sun King, but on this day, honey, the light was clearly coming from me. Sorry Louis. You had a good run. But the glow-up has a new address and it's giving Southeast Asian jungle realness with European flair.---THE MAGIC BEFORE THE PALACEThe magic started before the palace. Before France. Before I ever set foot on European soil and had to pretend I understood the metric system.It began quietly in Cambodia where the air was thick and the temples were ancient and the timing divine. Where magic kept showing up without me having to perform for it or hustle for it or prove I deserved it. The villa was near the jungle—because apparently when you finally surrender, the universe gives you monkeys as neighbors. Not a metaphor. Actual monkeys. Screaming at dawn like tiny furry alarm clocks with anger issues. I'd hear them every morning doing whatever monkeys do when they think no one's listening. Probably judging the new gay who moved in next door. "Look at this bitch with his mocktails and his journaling. Who does he think he is?"I'd sit on my terrace at sunset watching the jungle do its thing—birds I couldn't name, sounds I couldn't identify, probably several things that could kill me if I wandered off the path—and I'd think: That's the energy. That's the pace. That's what I've been missing. For fifty years I've been running around like a Chihuahua on espresso trying to prove I deserve to exist, and this jungle is just... existing. Taking up space. Not apologizing. Not hustling. Not posting inspirational quotes on Instagram about its journey. "Day 47 of being a j

23 Feb 2026 - 26 min
episode Healthy Love-Vanilla Edition artwork

Healthy Love-Vanilla Edition

I had just come back from a healing trip to Cairo—and yes, I mean that kind of trip. Goddesses. Essential oils. Incense thick enough to make a stoner jealous. They purified me with smoke and ancient oils, rubbing this shit into my skin while chanting in languages I couldn't identify but felt in my bones. The ancient goddess of healing, Sekhmet, apparently cracked open my chest with one massive paw and said, "Let that shit go." I cried so hard my ribs hurt. It felt like someone had excavated forty years of accumulated emotional garbage. Then they gave me one cumin seed. ONE. To bring back home to New York. The instructions were very specific: Put it in a bowl of water. Leave it outside for seven days. On the seventh day, burn an old-school match with sulphur over it. And as ridiculous as it sounds, I followed every instruction like my life depended on it. Because maybe it did. Something shifted after that. I came home lighter, like I'd finally cleaned out my soul's storage unit and made space for something else. For someone else. But let's not get too mystical here, because sexual withdrawal is real and I'm not a monk. The morning after I got back to New York, I lit my first cigarette, made coffee, and reflexively opened Scruff. That app had become muscle memory by then. Swipe. Compliment. Ghost. Regret. Repeat until your self-worth needs therapy. But that day, something in me just said no. Not a dramatic voice from above. Just a tired, firm internal boundary that said, "We're not doing this anymore." I'd put in the work. Years of it. Therapy twice a week. Gym twice a week. Every self-help book on the shelves. Even sensory deprivation tanks—basically sitting in your own warm piss in complete darkness and silence. Very trendy in the early '80s after that movie Altered States came out. I wanted solutions to break the crushing pattern of always choosing chaos over love. This was profound work. The kind that strips you down to your foundation and rebuilds you from scratch. I don't think I'd be the person I am today without going through all of it. The therapy, the crying-in-the-bathtub-to-Björk sessions. The facing of demons that had been living rent-free in my head since childhood. The long walks through Brooklyn where I forgave people who never apologized and probably never would. I'd seen what death looked like when it was honored in Varanasi, felt ancient protection carved into my back in Cambodia. I'd collected breadcrumbs from holy places without knowing why. Now I wanted something different. Something that didn't require a passport or a trauma bond. I wanted love. Real, grown-up, boring-in-the-best-way love. So I made a profile. A real one. With actual effort. Got proper photos taken in August. Professional photographer. White t-shirt, jeans, natural light. The kind of photos that say "I'm not running anymore." I wrote a bio that was... honest. Revolutionary concept, I know. "I water plants and return texts. If you're still figuring out how to be a functioning adult, this won't work." Direct. Clear. Zero tolerance for bullshit. And you know what? It worked. One month later, there he was: François. Did I mention he's 22 years younger than me? Yeah. From New Caledonia—a place I had to Google like the geographically challenged American I am. Blond, grounded, cultured. Can water ski and fly a plane. If Bradley Cooper and Tom Hardy had a love child and raised it in French paradise, that's François. Me? I'm so universally looking I fit in anywhere on the planet. People ask me where I'm from, and when I answer, they always follow up with "Yes, but where are you from from...?" I get mistaken for everything—Middle Eastern, Latin, Mediterranea

16 Feb 2026 - 15 min
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