
Surviving Changes Podcast
Follow my journey from food stamps, to success to food stamps and back again. We will go around the globe, with only a backpack and my bible. After it's all done we will file a RICO lawsuit together and watch justice do its job.
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Surviving Changes Podcast
Learning how to build apps on my ipad
Have you ever had a stroke of genius that you believed could transform into something big? In this engaging episode, we follow Heidi's fascinating journey from a simple conversation in Australia to the complex world of app development for her idea, "2ferfun". This episode sheds light on the challenges she faces, from initial cost estimates to the chaos of navigating partnerships that seem good on paper but falter under scrutiny. With an enchanting blend of humor and realism, Heidi recounts the trials and encounters shaping her entrepreneurial spirit amid setbacks.
Listeners will resonate with her relatable struggles to find trustworthy allies while wrestling with the complexities of entrepreneurial relationships. As Heidi dives deeper into app development, her unexpected revelations and emotional reflections come to life, painting a vivid portrait of perseverance, intuition, and resilience. Whether you're an aspiring app developer, a dreamer with big ideas, or someone curious about the entrepreneurial landscape, this episode is full of valuable insights and hard-earned wisdom. Join us for a compelling discussion that mixes joy, intrigue, and practical advice. Subscribe for more inspiring content and share your thoughts about your own entrepreneurial experiences!
https://www.tiktok.com/@peluchepethero
Hello everyone, this is Heidi and this is the Surviving Changes podcast. So we're heading from Puerto Rico back to Seattle, but before we do that, we need to back up just one second so you can understand why I even knew about the Google program to get your developer license. So, as I was leaving Australia, one of the last things, um, as I was looking for, you know, the flights and all that stuff, Lisa and I are kind of talking, um, and I don't remember what came up, but, uh, I said that there should be an app for that and essentially, um, the app idea that I was thinking of, uh, it ended up being called Two for Fun and it mixed. At the time, there was a lot of like social people wanting to meet up for dates or friendship, online stuff like that. Also, the economy was a lot like it is now to where people wanted to like go do things without spending a lot of money, and so this app idea that I had essentially connected people who had a coupon or something like that and either wanted friendship or dating or just a free meal, whatever, and so they could connect. So, for instance, if you had a buy one, get one free movie, you could put it up and say look, I'm looking for friendship or relationship. I got a free movie, it's not going to cost you anything, let's connect, and so you know then somebody's not out, or they can split it however they want to do it.
Speaker 1:But so I had that idea in my head as I was leaving Australia. I'm like, oh, there should be an app for that. And I don't remember exactly what it was that I wanted it in Australia. When I looked for it it wasn't there, um. But so then I get to Puerto Rico and, um, I'm at the little phone place and I'm signing up getting my little new Puerto Rican phone, because I didn't know the hurricanes were coming, obviously. So I'm trying up getting my little new Puerto Rican phone, because I didn't know the hurricanes were coming, obviously. So I'm trying to get settled the best I can, and the guy who's selling me the phone says, hey, and if you have any friends here on the island, if you sign them up, we have a friends plan and it's only like X amount of dollars more and you both get the plan. I'm like, oh shit, I was just thinking of an app for that Somewhere right in then. I didn't have the name, obviously, when I left Australia. Just the idea, but anyway. So I explained it to the guy who sold me the phone. He was like, oh, that's a great idea.
Speaker 1:And so I was still waiting for that Australian money to come back, you know, from the taxes they had withheld and all that. So I start looking into having somebody build this app. How much it's going to cost? It turns out it's costly. It's crazy. You want somebody to actually develop a native app. It's a lot of money and it's not that quick.
Speaker 1:And so I started looking for all kinds of different options or people that would just buy the idea, and I think it was called Ideas Apps LLC. I remember it was in Texas. I still have the letter here somewhere that I wrote myself before I met these people. So I know first in line is first in right and I didn't know if I could trust them, and so I wrote myself a letter in Puerto Rico with this idea that I could open in court. So it's still not open.
Speaker 1:I don't remember exactly what I wrote, but I know it met the legal qualifications if these guys stole my idea, um, but so anyway, uh, so I meet with them and they're like, yeah, absolutely, that's a great idea. And they looked and put it into their computer. Um, and their computer, you know, if it scored a certain amount or whatever, uh, on this category or this category, then they're like, yeah, we're in. They either like offer to build it for you to discount for part of it or for free. You know they had, depending on what their computer said. But this one actually had like a third category, uh, because they're like, well, we actually could add on all of the restaurants, movie theaters, all that type stuff and make them users too and then get money from them. And so, um, they're like that's a great idea and so, essentially, the deal. So we made a deal, well, but it wasn't signed yet.
Speaker 1:Um, but as part of that, I think it was like they were going to give me like 25 000 and I'd get 51 of it or something like that. Um, which would be great. I'm still the the um majority, because they did want to take it public. I'd still be the majority shareholder in that um. It was actually a semi there's a hybrid public that they wanted to take it.
Speaker 1:But anyway, it didn't matter, because what happened was, as part of that process, they have investors that they go to and have good ideas, and those guys all have x amount of money. They've already proven up front that they can spend on any of these ideas if they're good ideas. And so they had gone to their investors, and to do that they had to have a little packet. And they gave me the packet as well, thinking I wouldn't read it, because people obviously don't read that stuff usually. But I'm a fine print reader, I was a fine print writer, I have no problem reading it. And so I see that these fuckers estimate this thing to be worth like $52 million and they offered me $25,000. And I was just hot as fuck because I felt like they were trying to scam me Essentially, until I talked to the owner, get in a fight with the owner, tell him I'll get back to him, and that's when I find out that I can just build this thing myself.
Speaker 1:Right, but of course, at that point in time'm in puerto rico. I don't have a handler here. I don't realize it at the time that I'm being handled in all these locations um, lisa, my brother's friend, um fusion member, all of that, and so, um, there, I didn't have a handler in Puerto Rico, so I was kind of, for a little while, free from this overreaching fusion center group, and obviously it was making them crazy. But I'm posting this stuff and people start coming out of the woodwork again. You know those people that care about me so much. What? What's going on? You have a great app idea and these people already value this. What'd you say? But you need a little help. You know how. You know who it was.
Speaker 1:It became pretty easy to spot a lot of these fuckers after this point because, although I didn't know there was a fusion center, I got eyes, I got pretty good intuition, and so, of course, jana. The same Jana who was feeding, bringing me food. The same Jana that refused to write a little declaration about my health, even though she was the friend that was taking over my health and my health records. And the same Jana that distracted me at the deposition while Dookie was killed that Jemma. So she shows back up wanting to help, and right after Irma, she immediately she doesn't ask me.
Speaker 1:But so we're forming a little group. Well, heidi, we'll help you. We don't have enough money to do all this. But if you learn this, so we actually forming a little group? Well, heidi, we'll help you. We don't have enough money to do all this. But if you learn this, and so we actually created a board, there was several members on the board and actually, well, hold on, I'll tell you that was the text that these board supposed friends and board members made, so they would have our text group and then they would have an extra text group that they would all talk to together, but also with other people, and I now know that was a fusion center. But that's going to be one of their big downfalls, and here's why.
Speaker 1:So you know Amy the one that I told you I listened to a lot, one that I told you I listened to a lot I think that we're probably we have a connection from many past lives based on some energy classes in Australia and some things that happen, but I love listening to the station regardless. I don't listen to her on her country station, but I do listen to that AG station and she's on five days a week. So if I'm listening to it, um, it's probably Martha Quinn or her, uh, cause that's the time of day that I usually listen, right, um, but so everybody's like oh, heidi's fucking obsessed with Amy, obsessed with Amy, and I let them think that at this point, because I had a little earpiece that um I could use. And I got these in australia, right, it wasn't like a little um, it was like for the phone, so it had several I could hook it to my phone I I actually used it on the scooter when I was riding the scooter around in australia, but it came in a little pack, one of them um in that pack. So two of them that looked very similar, right, the one that I would use to listen to Amy, but the other one that had the phone stuff on it was also a hearing aid, and so I wore that thing around a lot when they thought I was listening to Amy, when I was actually listening to the things that they were saying in the other room. Now, it didn't have great, it wasn't the best technology, but it was good enough that by now I knew there was a group of people that were looking me in the eyes and looking everybody around me in the eyes, saying that they were helping me and they were helping me. So, anyway, janet buys these tickets almost immediately and says you got to come back, you got to come back, we need you back here, let's just do it all back here where you're safe. And so she buys tickets like two or three days out, just enough time for me to barely get a few things together. Um, get palucci, his travel papers and then make it back there and invites me into her house.
Speaker 1:Make sure it's completely um uncomfortable that I don't I, I raised her son while I was staying there, so much that her teachers, that his teachers. When she showed up the first time, they're like who are you? And I was like the mom and they're like who are you? And jenna's like the mom. They're like we thought that other one's a mom. That's because they she kind of kept me enslaved.
Speaker 1:But at this point I knew I needed to wait the 10 years and I'm in the other room being able to listen to what they're doing. Sometimes, um, I'm still getting food. I do like like the boy and so, um, but Jenna's telling everybody she's helping me, but she won't like give me a job. She won't pay me for the work I'm doing. She makes sure I'm in servitude. I can't go anywhere without her. Um, I can't buy anything without her. I can't eat unless it's at the house and it's food that I'm making for the family. Um, but she's telling everybody she's doing all these wonderful things for me, I can see what's going on, I can hear what's going on and now I'm able to hook up to all of her internet and everything, and so there's a lot of stuff I'm not ever going to show you from that time and also from you're going to hear about Chris down in Imperial Beach, which is another one of my brother's friends, and also Angie another one of them Did a lot of fucked up shit when we get there.
Speaker 1:But one of the other things remember that I had done was I had created an app and put it. Maybe you don't know, I talked about it on TikTok. I don't know if I talked about it here, but I needed evidence from my brother and his friends of some things that they were doing and I knew it was going to be on one of their phones. And I also know that, even if I can't admit something directly, depending on how I get it. So evidence comes to you in many ways right and it has to be in a certain chain of command or authenticated, depending on what it is. There's different ways to get it into court and there's different ways to use it, but you can admit it or you can wait until somebody gets up on the stand, like you don't have to tell anybody.
Speaker 1:You have this evidence. If you're just going to use it for impeachment purposes, and that's all I've wanted, um, a lot of this, for I know what I can prove because I I can see it, I have it, but I want them, motherfuckers, because a lot of criminal statute limitations have, um, well, we'll see. It depends on who's prosecuting it. Truly, because it's also an ongoing conspiracy. So, um, but in my, in my thought, um, I would want this evidence to be used as impeachment, so I'll make my claim as a, because I didn't ever expect or know that Trump was going to be in there and we eventually would see justice on this idea. I didn't know for sure I would ever even get a non-corrupt court. Remember, puerto Rico was going to be the best federal court that I could bring this case in and have a shot at being okay and not being touched by Washington State corruption and Ninth Circuit corruption, but still be able to argue this case.
Speaker 1:These motherfuckers thought I was a down and out. No, there's a lot that went into this. Pieces of shit. You're not going anywhere. It's like you never, ever, met me. It's like you never fucking met me. It's like you never fucking met me. Are you kidding me If it took me a hundred years? You pieces of shit.
Speaker 1:Anyway, so a lot of this evidence that I've gotten so I got some from Chris is my point, I did put that app in the app store. I put it in just long enough for my brother's friend, chris, who we'll talk about here, coming up in Imperial Beach probably the next podcast in just a second but so I've got a lot of impeachable evidence, probably admissible early on, but impeachable because I really want them to get up on the stand and lie and then I want to show the jury and the judge they're a liar, but then I also want them to commit those crimes on the stand by lying under oath, and so before we start that flight into Washington to live with Jana, I think it's important that you have that background. So, all right, this is Heidi, this is the surviving changes podcast and we will um talk about that Jana thing here soon.