TrueLife

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At 1 a.m., Bruce clocks in for his first shift in the soft count room — the hidden chamber where the casino’s raw money is weighed, counted, and claimed by the house. What begins as a mundane night shift in a sterile beehive of steel tables and humming machines slowly fractures into something far stranger.

As rivers of cash flow through the counting machines, Bruce starts to perceive the psychic residue clinging to every bill: weddings, divorces, dreams, and despair compressed into cotton and ink. The house isn’t just counting money. It’s counting souls.

Welcome to the Machine.

The house always comes first.


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This  content  is for educational and informational purposes only. Nothing in this transmission constitutes legal, financial, or professional advice. I am not your lawyer, financial advisor, or telling you what to do.

This podcast documents historical events, analyzes publicly available information, and explores hypothetical scenarios. Any actions discussed are presented as educational examples of how systems work—not as instructions or recommendations.

You are solely responsible for your own decisions and actions. Any application of information presented here is at your own risk. I assume no liability for consequences of actions you choose to take.

By continuing to listen, you acknowledge that this content is educational commentary, that you’re responsible for researching applicable laws in your jurisdiction, and that you’ll consult appropriate professionals before taking any action that could affect your legal, financial, or personal situation.


Creators and Guests

Host
George Monty
My name is George Monty. I am the Owner of TrueLife (Podcast/media/ Channel) I’ve spent the last three in years building from the ground up an independent social media brandy that includes communications, content creation, community engagement, online classes in NLP, Graphic Design, Video Editing, and Content creation. I feel so blessed to have reached the following milestones, over 81K hours of watch time, 5 million views, 8K subscribers, & over 60K downloads on the podcast!

What is TrueLife?

What happens when a scientist, a mystic, and a comedian walk into your nervous system and refuse to leave? TrueLife is speculative audio that takes the most dangerous ideas in neuroscience, consciousness, and human potential — and makes them impossible to unhear. Fictional compounds. Real mechanisms. Experiences that don’t have names yet. For the seekers, the rebels, and everyone who has ever suspected that reality is significantly stranger than advertised.

SOFT COUNT
A Psychedelic Sci-Fi Noir Audio Series
Episode 01 | First Drop
Names, locations, shift times, and certain operational details have been changed or fictionalized. Any resemblance to specific persons, casinos, or institutions is coincidental.
ACT ONE
The alarm.
1am.
Not a suggestion.

The room is dark. My wife is asleep. She beat cancer. Did I mention that? She beat cancer and she’s still warm under the covers while I’m pulling on a uniform in the dark like I’m trying not to wake the life I used to have.

The floor is cold.

Funny the things you notice.

I just drive.

The parking structure has one of those electronic signs at the entrance. You know the ones — each level, how many spots available, numbers in green.

Tonight every level says one word.

RED.
FULL.
FULL.
FULL.
FULL.

It’s 2 in the morning.

It’s warm inside. 48 degrees out there, something else entirely in here.

And through the ceiling speakers, I kid you not —

Welcome to the Machine.

Pink Floyd.

I didn’t choose that. That was just Tuesday.

The employee entrance closes behind me and the world narrows.

One corridor. Straight shot. Maybe 75 paces.

At the far end a TV monitor plays casino promotions on a loop. Smiling faces. Big wins. Nobody looks like me at 2am.

I pass HR. Bathrooms. A uniform window that looks like a full scale dry cleaning operation behind glass. I didn’t expect that.

Doors on the right every ten feet. Title plaques. Single offices. The machinery of the place.

Then lockers. A whole wall of them. Uniform black.

I find mine.

Bottom row. Floor level. First column.

I crouch down to open it.

The truth about money is simple: the house always comes first. And on your knees is exactly where they make sure you are when it does.

ACT TWO
I stand up. Take a left. Maybe ten paces. Then a right.

More lockers. More office doors. Black and white photos of smiling gaming executives on the wall. Posters. Upcoming concerts. Tournaments. The casino selling itself to itself.

Then I realize.

I’m lost.

I’ve read the psychological papers. The ones where they put rats in a maze with a piece of cheese at the end. They measure how long it takes. How many wrong turns. Whether the rat learns.

I’ve made three turns and I have no idea where I am.

A security officer appears. Black suit. Small star badge on his belt. He looks at me the way people look at lost rats.

“First day?”

“Is it that obvious?”

He laughs. Says follow me.

I ask him if this place is always such a maze.

He says — and I want you to hear this —

“That’s intentional.”

Two large steel doors. I place my badge on the reader.

A loud click.

I go in.

The steel doors close behind me and I’m inside the hive.

Green shirts. Blue shirts. Black suits. Kiosks. Windows separating people from other people for reasons I don’t yet understand.

It looks like chaos.

It isn’t.

It’s a beehive. Everyone a drone. Everyone precisely where they’re supposed to be doing precisely what they’re supposed to do. The chaos is just what order looks like from the outside.

And the smell.

I know the smell of money. But not like this.

This is the smell of money that hasn’t been counted yet.

And underneath it — something else. The smell of people who already know they’ll never get to keep it.

I fit right in.

My trainer’s name is Ursula.

She’s in her fifties. Once a full time model. Fashion week. New York. Miami. The whole circuit.

Now she’s placing her fingerprint on a reader at 3am under fluorescent lights to let people like me into a room full of money we’ll never keep.

The door clicks.

She doesn’t look back to see if we’re following.

She knows we are.

The training starts immediately. Ursula talks fast. Not because she likes to talk. Because the amount of information we are each responsible for — the protocols, the rules, the procedures, the passwords, the cameras, the tasks — is almost impossible to hold in a human brain all at once.

She talks because she has to.

Because if she stops, something expensive goes wrong.

I listen like my job depends on it.

Because it does.

The room we just left seals behind us.

We are now inside the chamber of a gun.

Steel doors in front. Steel doors behind. No windows. No way back.

On a commercial retail rack — jumpsuits. Navy blue. One piece. Zip up the front.

No pockets.

They look like prison uniforms.

Because they are.

I find mine. Number 488. I don’t know why that number stays with me. It just does.

There is a method. There is always a method. Shoes off first. Jumpsuit over your slacks and shirt. Zip it up. Then pick up your shoes and hold them up to the ceiling mounted cameras.

Show them what you’re not hiding.

Prove it.

Someone picks up the wall mounted phone. Dials.

Nine into soft count.

A pause.

The doors open.

And I see the room.

ACT THREE
It’s a laboratory of a criminal enterprise.

That’s the only way I can describe it. Legal. Legitimate. And yet.

Stainless steel tables. Counting machines humming along the walls — two of them the entire size of the wall itself. Stacks of poker chips. Red. Blue. Green. White. Black. Millions of dollars in symbols.

It moves like an emergency room. Surgical. Precise. Everyone knowing exactly where they are supposed to be and exactly what their hands are supposed to be doing.

“Hey everyone — this is Bruce. He’s the new guy.”

In a New York minute.

Imperceptible almost.

Every head turns.

Every set of eyes finds me. Sizes me up. Files me away.

Then back to work.

The money didn’t stop.

The money never stops.

I understand in that moment that I am the least important thing in this room.

And somehow that feels like a relief.

Then the cans arrive.

Locked carts. Big ones. Rolling in from the floor. From the machines. From the tables where people fed their paychecks into slots all night believing in something.

Hundreds of boxes.

My team moves to the table and without ceremony, without hesitation, they begin.

Open. Dump. Stack.

Piles of cash hitting stainless steel. Bills everywhere. Vouchers. More bills. Box after box after box.

I had never seen anything like it.

I have stood at the edge of things before. Done things in the dark that cracked my perception wide open. Sat with medicine that showed me what was underneath everything.

But this.

This was something else.

Uncertainty.
Exhilaration.
Dangerous.

We stacked. We counted. We processed. Bills moving through machines in rivers. Hundreds. Fifties. Twenties. Tens. Fives. Ones.

Hours passed like minutes.

And then at the end of the shift someone called out the final number.

$6,450,084

And the money didn’t make me feel a damn thing.

It made me perceive.

This paper. Pretending to be lifeblood. Pretending to be meaning. Pretending to be the value of someone’s dreams, sacrifice, energy.

And then I saw it.

The psychic residue.

Every bill carrying its history like a scar. A wedding. A child’s education. A divorce. Years of labor compressed into cotton and ink.

A flicker.

A geometric mandala blooming open with every life each bill had touched. Smiles. Tears. Joy. Sadness. The entire story of every dollar unfolding at once.

The house wasn’t counting money.

It was counting the exact second I would forget which side of the illusion I was standing on.

I got in my car.

The sun was out.

I had gone in at 1am in the dark and come out the other side.

My wife was at the kitchen table drinking coffee.

She looked at me the way wives look at men who’ve been somewhere they can’t quite explain.

“How was it?”

I looked at my hands.

“Strange,” I said.

Suit 488. Clocking out.
The house always comes first.
— END OF EPISODE ONE —