Crouching Mollusk, Hidden Knights
How wide is YOUR life's time?
How wide is YOUR life's time?
| Time | Text |
|---|---|
| Hello humans, hello humans. | |
| It's 8.23 a.m. | |
| And I had started this actually at 7.53 a.m. here on Saturday and October 19th. | |
| And the power went out before it could even get out a single hello humans. | |
| So I had to wait for everything to return and then get it all reset up. | |
| Anyway, so today we're going to talk about basically about the width of time. | |
| But in order to do that, we have to understand the concepts that are involved in time at all these different levels. | |
| And so we're going to start off with the idea that we live in an ontological universe that is not as the Einsteinians and all of the academicians and the Cartesians and all of these kind of people and all the normies would have you understand it. | |
| It's not as they envision it. | |
| We live in a universe that, okay, so their universe and their quest, okay, so their universe is the universe of grit. | |
| And so Einstein and all these people think that there's just particles upon particles upon particles. | |
| And if they find the smallest particle there is, that's the God particle. | |
| And they think that if they get enough of these particles and smoosh them all together, they will create consciousness. | |
| And so that's entirely a delusion. | |
| Universe is not set up that way. | |
| Okay, so we live in an ontological universe. | |
| There's a lot of physicists that are now discovering this. | |
| This will become the central part of thinking and science over the rest of this ascending Bronze Age. | |
| So and into the next Silver Age and Golden Age and then down into the descending part. | |
| So for the next 10 or 12,000 years, people will be working on the idea that we have an ontological universe, and that is how physics should be viewed, as deriving from that ontology, not existing independent of it, or existing exodent it. | |
| So if there's no perception, there is no physics. | |
| And so they think physics exists because the particles exist, whether or not we are there to perceive them. | |
| And they are wrong. | |
| And thus so much of our world is wrong at this point. | |
| They can be forgiven for their wrongness because, to a certain extent, because all of humanity came through the Kali Yuga for 2,400 years, where we were reduced down to the level of thinking required to manage donkeys, right, and barely able to deal with wheels and simple sail arrangements for mode of travel. | |
| So we were all stupid for 2,400 years. | |
| Now we're not stupid anymore. | |
| Well, some of us are not as stupid anymore. | |
| But a lot of people are still stupid and still believe the models that were developed in that period of the stupidity of humanity, which we call the Kali Yuga. | |
| It's cyclic. | |
| Okay, so in the ontological universe, ontological model, everything extends from big consciousness, ultimate consciousness. | |
| Nothing exists except this consciousness. | |
| And that consciousness in a sense makes room for the creation of matter within itself. | |
| Now, that's not really true. | |
| Okay, so the Zohar of the Jew says that God emptied his belly in order that the universe could be created in his abdomen. | |
| So they're giving God a body and they're doing all this other kind of weird shit. | |
| It's not that crude. | |
| So again, that's from a grittology viewpoint of an ontological model. | |
| So they're seeing ontology from distorted and colored and diluted by their grittology. | |
| The same thing is true to a certain extent of the other religions where they say that God extrudes the universe out from itself, from himself usually. | |
| They give God balls and a penis. | |
| Anyway, so I don't conceive of things that way, right? | |
| The ontological model is really straightforward. | |
| It's simple. | |
| It's clean. | |
| It's elegant. | |
| It's ever extensible. | |
| It's ever-revealing. | |
| It's self-referential and it has a self-referential integrity. | |
| Each part supports the whole and it has within it a fractal nature, etc., etc. | |
| Okay, so all of reality comes from big consciousness. | |
| And then, in my thinking, and you'll see this in some other descriptions as well, we have hyperspace, and these are labels applied to non-physical manifestations. | |
| Okay, you know that hyperspace exists because you can take drugs and go there. | |
| You can come back here, mess around in the regular reality, take these drugs, and go there again, and sometimes even see the same personalities in some of the same landscape. | |
| So, there are ways to tell that hyperspace is not simply the delusion caused by the drugs. | |
| Also, people report exactly the same thing about hyperspace from near-death experiences and other validations of the concept. | |
| Okay, so the hyperspace, by the way, is what the Hurrians called the J-Doo. | |
| And that's just as an aside. | |
| Okay, and so in the ontological model, the next layer down is local consciousness, and everything manifests from local consciousness. | |
| You are an example of local consciousness. | |
| Everything that exists in matter, in the materium, exists because of local consciousness, OK? | |
| And local consciousness itself is the filter through which big consciousness expresses the manifest shared reality. | |
| And by that, we mean the materium, where things are solid, right? | |
| And this is an illusion created in our minds, because we're local consciousness, by big consciousness through the filter process of hyperspace. | |
| And in my opinion, hyperspace is very much like the programming layer, the command and control layer of a computer program, an operating system, if you will. | |
| Okay, so the manifest shared reality, the materium, is created through our perception of it. | |
| Our consciousness, our local consciousness, the little bit of us, or the little bit of big consciousness that is isolated as each of us and given a sense of identity as a human or as a dog or a cat or a deer, perhaps even a bird, although the identity layer is probably more focused on a flock and a bird. | |
| But all of this life manifests the manifest shared reality, the materium itself. | |
| Now, we know that from science even, that the space between molecules relative to the actual size, mass, etc. | |
| of the molecule is vast. | |
| So mostly it's empty space. | |
| And the way it works is that the universe fluxes. | |
| The materium comes in and out of existence 22 trillion times a second, more than that actually, I mean, 22 trillion in some change, per second. | |
| And in doing so, it means that it's fluxing everywhere continuously, constantly, including our bodies. | |
| So my fingertips are fluxing. | |
| And so when they touch each other, the odds are that it's going to be fluxing into reality just as I'm touching. | |
| Therefore, I get a feedback that this is solid. | |
| This fluxing manifestation of reality is what gives us the feedback mechanism that allows us to perceive things as being solid, fluid, gas, et cetera, et cetera, right? | |
| Because of the variance on our sensory mechanisms that are induced by the frequency of the stuff we encounter in that flux phase. | |
| So you'll see the frequently you'll see people, well, like Stephen Greer. | |
| Okay, so Stephen Greer makes mention that the early 1950s and late 1940s, alien reproduction vehicles were known as flux liners in the jet propulsion laboratory and that sort of thing, right? | |
| And so it's because they flux in and out of reality. | |
| And so that's that they don't flux at 22 trillion times a second. | |
| That's the base operating system of all of reality created by big consciousness. | |
| Everything in manifest shared reality in the materium, so everything from this point down, and this is a drop in active consciousness levels as you head down. | |
| So way down at the bottom, we would find grit, okay? | |
| Because even grit, like sand, and rocks, etc., even all of that stuff is conscious, all right? | |
| It's a slow, not moving, not motive, you know, it's a static form of consciousness, right? | |
| It's a static form of local consciousness that is assisting in creating the manifest shared reality, the materium, where matter exists, right? | |
| Where you think you have an ass and you can sit it on something. | |
| Anyway, so this is a step down into the actual reality itself. | |
| Now, everything from this point down vibrates and manifests at less than the base operating speed, all right? | |
| Base operating speed, which we, at this point, I've pegged it at over in excess of 22 trillion times per second. | |
| But, you know, it could be some other vibration, who knows, right? | |
| I mean, in terms of the numerics, but it's the base operating speed of the reality in which we live, okay, that we that we persist in, or that we help in manifesting. | |
| Okay, so as things are vibrating at, so this is where the idea of frequency comes in, all right? | |
| So frequency, as we think of it, exists in this part of reality down here and would be a variance. | |
| And the higher you go towards consciousness, the faster the vibration, all right? | |
| That's sort of the idea. | |
| It's a little bit more complicated because there are complexities within the vibrational aspects of our reality and our minds that affect this. | |
| Okay, but this is basically where frequency comes in. | |
| And you could do things with a frequency at this level. | |
| Because we are manifesting this reality, bear in mind. | |
| So this is where the idea of law of attraction comes in. | |
| If you can find the vibratory frequency of what you're after, right? | |
| So you get in your mind an image of whatever it is you want and it vibrating at that level. | |
| And then you come over here and you have a, you know, theoretically, you get a sympathetic vibration here that's close to that one. | |
| You will attract it to yourself. | |
| That's the whole operating idea for all magic and for all the mental law of attraction, that kind of thing. | |
| And it functions, it works, you can do that. | |
| There's reasons in some cases you shouldn't and wouldn't want to, et cetera, et cetera. | |
| And there's always going to be some form of compensatory dynamics. | |
| Okay, so that's what we label karma, is that when you set up this vibration in order to attract that person, that money, that opportunity, whatever the hell you want to manifest, but when you set up this vibration to do that, you create a series of ripples that go out from that in basically in all directions within our universe, | |
| and they make it blow back on you because of the nature of that vibration of you doing that in that time for those purposes. | |
| And that really is sort of a crude approximation of the mechanistic part of karma. | |
| And because you're a vibration up here doing manifestation as local consciousness, the doer in the body, but you have other aspects of you that are not in the body, and that amplifies your abilities, your power, your presence, et cetera, et cetera. | |
| All of those things mean that that karma, the blowback on that, sort of sticks to you as long as you are within the manifest shared reality and you're in here with all these vibrations. | |
| So you're just kind of like a, depending on your age, you're sort of like this walking vibration monster of all of the accumulated karma from all of your years sticking to you everywhere, right? | |
| And when you walk along and you brush up against something, some situation or whatever, where that karma can be used up or expelled, or because the karma is sort of like an irritation within the larger concept of this universe, it will spark. | |
| So it would spark some kind of a situation in order that you might be affected by it. | |
| Okay, because the whole point of all of this, the whole point of all of this right here is change. | |
| Okay, the whole point is change. | |
| All of the universe exists for that one single purpose. | |
| Manifest reality exists to have change. | |
| Because big consciousness that's everything, everywhere, knows all, is all, is only, never changes. | |
| It had to create this entire structure, come up with this whole structure in order that change may exist. | |
| This is the point of consciousness creating the material in order that consciousness can have dynamism and be able to express it, to be able to express change. | |
| Because change originates within consciousness, etc. | |
| Now we change at 22 trillion times a second. | |
| But that 22 trillion times a second, that's the base operating system of our common shared reality. | |
| It's not the speed at which your consciousness, your local consciousness, perceives this change. | |
| Okay, so your consciousness operates in this band in here, and it perceives that as the present instant. | |
| All right? | |
| So this present instant is actually an unknown number of the base operating speed instance. | |
| That's actually a lowercase I. I'm working with people that like math, and we've done some math modeling of this. | |
| Anyway, so the base operating speed instance is 22 trillion times a second, right? | |
| And so there are an unknown number of these 22 trillion times a second fluxes in your awareness of this present instance and the change you are encountering. | |
| But it is not 22 trillion times a second. | |
| So your brain has time to, and you have to understand that this actually is the process by which it must work. | |
| So it's part of this is mechanistic entirely. | |
| And that is that, so even the speed of thought takes an unknown number of these base operating speed instances. | |
| Maybe it, you know, if you take one second to have a thought, and okay, so let me give you an idea here. | |
| Humans can react, some humans like Bruce Lee could react in one twentieth of a second, okay, under extraordinary conditions. | |
| Cats, just lying there dead asleep, and you jostle them, are reacting at one tenth of a second speed at their just normal flopping around kind of thing. | |
| When they're fighting and stuff, they can react at fantastic, 1/40th of a second, 1/60th of a second. | |
| That's the time it takes them to perceive whatever it is is coming at them and to demonstrate and manifest some form that we can pick up on our videos and stuff of a response to that, right? | |
| And they can do it fantastic. | |
| Humans, the best we'll ever do, I mean, the best we'll ever do is Bruce Lee, and most of us are never going to get that close. | |
| Most of us are reacting, you know, maybe a quarter of a second in a car wreck or something, you know? | |
| And so that quarter of a second is this instant in which that change occurred, sliced up into all of these base operating sequences instances, right? | |
| Base operating speed instances. | |
| And so all of your reaction, you have to think about, so parts of this stuff, so you're going to get in a car wreck, okay? | |
| So you're driving along, your mind's all steady, you're in a reasonably steady state, and then there is something that causes this wreck, okay? | |
| Something intrudes on your vehicle. | |
| And we don't care what it is. | |
| Could be just a bird and there's no actual car wreck. | |
| We're just talking about the sequence of events that goes through your body in your mind because you'll note that at the very end of all of that instant of change, the present instant, that instant of recognition in your awareness that there's some shit going on, at the very end of that is all of your body stuff. | |
| That's when you have that seizure in your gut, whoa, you know, or your eyes open up, that kind of thing. | |
| Your body responds. | |
| There's a lot that takes place before you get to that point. | |
| A lot, all of it mental. | |
| Okay, the sensory apparatus. | |
| Okay, so there's the frequencies coming on in that trigger the sensory apparatus of your body that initiates the rest of the process, inducing the thought that you're about to die. | |
| It triggers the, you know, the fight, flight, or freeze, you know, all of those kind of things. | |
| And all this happens, and that is the present instant. | |
| Because in your awareness, there is one instant you're driving, and then there's the present instant when your mind is snapped back into that present instant. | |
| And then your awareness sort of comes back in the next instant here when you relax a little bit, assuming you survive, blah, blah, blah, and you respond to what had happened in your body at the very end of that last instant when your gut seized, you know, you had a seizure that went all the way through from your throat all the way down to your anus, right? | |
| And it grabbed your mind at the same time, that sort of thing. | |
| So those are hyper-fast reactions within our bodies. | |
| Our bodies are just not made to be very fast. | |
| Snakes routinely do like, you know, 1 100th of a second reaction speed. | |
| So, you know, they're faster than cats, but there are cats that can react that fast under certain circumstances. | |
| So basically, on reaction speed, we don't get much, right? | |
| But we have cognition as a sort of compensatory thing. | |
| We have, you know, entertainment, TV, that kind of thing. | |
| Cats would never invent TV. | |
| Anyway, so in this experience of living in the materium, we find ourselves, okay, so mostly, most people are always living mentally out here. | |
| Okay, this is their version of the future. | |
| They're always thinking about it, or they're thinking about the past, which for this purpose I'll just put down here. | |
| Right? | |
| And they think about the past. | |
| And this is their cognition, which is a function of local consciousness. | |
| And it's a function of that local consciousness manifesting the shared reality. | |
| One could see that psychicness, the ability to have precognitive thoughts, the ability to pick up on various different kinds of frequencies emanating from people as their emotions, which you know exist. | |
| Go into a room with someone like myself who's in a terrible mood, and you'll feel the fucking emotions going through the air. | |
| Okay, so that's, you know, there's, or, you know, go to go in a company that's pissed off their drill sergeant. | |
| You'll see the flame coming out of their mouth and the, you know, scorching the butt hairs on the people in the back. | |
| And so it travels, and it's not a physical manifestation, right? | |
| It's in this other layers of frequencies here and relates to all of this. | |
| Okay, so most of the people, most of the normies you're going to meet, their entire life, they sort of like miss, they live, and yet they don't, okay, | |
| in the concept of the people that are the rishi, those who know, the seekers, you know, those people working in hyperspace and metaphysical shit, their concepts hold that the normies never, except for the time they're born, and then shortly thereafter, maybe for their first couple of years, they never live in reality. | |
| Okay, they always live in their minds occupied by this process up here, going from future to past constantly. | |
| And they never live in the actual present instant, which is all we have. | |
| It's called the ever-present now, but it's also called the eternal now because it is eternal. | |
| It's the only time that exists, is this eternal now. | |
| Everything else that we think of as time is merely our keeping track of duration of these instances by the way of the tick of the clock, which used to be able to only do it at, you know, maybe a tenth of a second or so, and then it would, every 10 little ratchets or notches on the gear would produce the movement of the second hand. | |
| Now we've got clock speeds on, well, the old style computers, it was initially it's like 35,847 clock cycles per second, and now we've got computers that can cycle millions, literally can cycle millions of iterations per second. | |
| It's a different sort of a process that they do it with the chips, but nonetheless, they're actually achieving that. | |
| Okay, but we live at a level that's just something less than 22 trillion times a second. | |
| And if you immerse yourself into the present instant, which is also the eternal now, and it's called the ever-present now because all of the materium, all of consciousness, no matter where you go, you know, no matter any fucking galaxy, no matter how far away, right there, right now, it's the same ever-present now. | |
| And anyway, so most normies never live in this now. | |
| They never touch this instant. | |
| And this is where all the power is. | |
| This is where people that are able to do law of attraction shit do that law of attraction. | |
| They don't do it out in the future or the past. | |
| They do it in the present instant through this manipulation of energies. | |
| Now, I think they might be very deluded and they'll get the blowback from doing that kind of thing and they'll learn or not. | |
| But that aside, this is where they do it. | |
| They have some level of ability to contact the present instant and put themselves in the present instant in such a way that the emanations that ultimately come out of their body and their mind and stuff within that instant go back towards creating the vibration of the thing they want to attract. | |
| And this is the basis of all magic. | |
| Now, the people that we call magicians, they work down here, okay, near in the grit level. | |
| And they try and manipulate matter, you know, blood, semen, you know, sweat, hair, all of that kind of shit. | |
| And they try and manipulate matter in order to create a resonant effect within energies to further spread out and affect the common shared reality the way they want. | |
| And so you can see that, you know, magicians aren't that powerful. | |
| They're really kind of deluded because they're stuck in a grit view of reality. | |
| They might be very powerful if they lost that grit view of reality and did the things necessary to learn to manipulate the frequencies and energies natively through cognition. | |
| But not in this life, obviously, for those guys, right? | |
| So this is why all of that spirit cooking stuff, it was like, oh my God, you people are just, you know, your trailer park trash. | |
| You know, you think the point of a Saturday is to get drunk. | |
| Anyway, so, you know, no offense to anybody living in a trailer park. | |
| You know that there's trailer park trash beings around you, right? | |
| And that's what the spirit cooker guys and all of those magicians for the Democratic Party are deluded. | |
| Anyway, though, so this is our ever-present now here. | |
| And I find that quite fascinating. | |
| That is just an interesting concept that most people just, they don't get why I'm fascinated by it, right? | |
| But it is the same now in the Pleiades or, you know, on any of these stars, that kind of thing. | |
| And so that aspect of our common shared manifesting reality is what allows the UFOs to travel instantaneously because they're traveling without time. | |
| They're not traveling within the space of the duration. | |
| They're doing all of their travel within the instant. | |
| And actually, they're doing all of their travel down here within one of the base operating speed instances. | |
| So within 122 trillionth of a second. | |
| That's why it's so disoriented to the human mind. | |
| I think there are things that you can do that eliminate that. | |
| Some of these were hinted at in some of the hymns about the mind-to-machine interface. | |
| And also in like Patanjali's Yoga Sutras, right? | |
| Where they talk about the vitri, the disruption of the mind, and how you can do things to calm that. | |
| And it's very necessary that you do that if you're operating these machineries because of that change in your location that shrinks that instant down into the instant of awareness down to the actual base operating speed of our common shared reality. | |
| Okay, so, anyway, okay, so this is also, this instant is also the eternal now. | |
| And that also has a great deal of power for us, right? | |
| This is the eternal now is how the Buddhists and the meditators, these kind of guys would phrase this. | |
| And they do phrase it that way because they are not concerned with the potential for travel. | |
| That was not their issue. | |
| Their concern was the use of this instant, right, this eternal now, in our awareness in order to produce changes in our awareness that would affect our ability to not only live in the present instant, but to maximize our life within that instant. | |
| Okay, because you could just be a schlub and live in the present instant and have no effect on reality. | |
| They thought that the, so all these meditators, the rishi, the Buddhas, all of these kind of guys thought that there was a greater point to this, right? | |
| And that we could materially impact the manifest shared reality based on the numerous, the numbers involved in particular kinds of sympathetic, vibratory self-awareness within the instant. | |
| This is where it gets really deep, okay? | |
| You can see that there is a potential that if you were aware enough, if you were aware of this process enough, you could have a, you could set up a, or you would be also aware, it follows that you would also potentially be aware of your own reaction within that particular part of the instant itself, | |
| within that particular part of the eternal now, which is not 12 trillionths of a second, but is in fact some number of those that is keyed on by our awareness of that. | |
| But you could see that you could have a possibility of being aware of yourself being aware, right? | |
| And that's, I'm of the opinion that it is this feedback loop of yourself, of self, being aware of self being aware of itself and so on that enabled Bruce Lee to do the kinds of things that he did and other superior martial artists, right? | |
| As well as people doing miracles and all that kind of stuff, right? | |
| There was this, there's this hymn out there, and I can't remember if it's in Sanskrit or Pali. | |
| It's been a long time. | |
| It's a weird hymn because it's written as though it's a hymn of praise to a god, but there's no gods or anything mentioned, and the whole hymn is all about man discovering that man discovering the eternal now such that he becomes aware that all death is suicide, | |
| that all death originates from local consciousness deciding to die, fundamentally, because it buys into the illusions. | |
| The whole hymn was all about Maya, the illusions of reality and so on, and how they twist your mind. | |
| And basically, it was all about, you know, be pure and you can step outside of the illusions of Maya, right? | |
| If you have your own concept of your own mind in this instant, then the delusions that are created here by the frequencies vibrating at all these attractive levels that get your mind and so on cannot affect you because you're living here. | |
| You're not living out in the future or the past, which is where you have thoughts and visions of these things, right? | |
| And so basically, if you don't objectify reality and simply take it in, then there's an entirely different paradigm in which you operate, okay? | |
| And that all of these kind of things are attempting to objectify reality to slice and dice and reduce and so on and so forth. | |
| And that's not necessary. | |
| They tell you, the gritologists and all these people will tell you that it is necessary, that you must have Cartesian space in order to navigate our common shared reality. | |
| And they're wrong. | |
| There are other operating paradigms. | |
| I know that this is the ontological model that I'm familiar with, but there's undoubtedly other ontological models and other non-ontological models that are also quite effective. | |
| And we'll see what the space aliens bring, right? | |
| Because they're not going to come here as gritologists. | |
| They will come in some variant of this in their understanding. | |
| And they may be here or here or on their way in this second moon. | |
| So we'll see what the fuck happens there. | |
| I'm going to let you guys go. | |
| I've got to go and get some more tea and I'm going to have some toast here. | |
| And I also have to make bread today too. | |
| But anyway, so I'm going to use my eternal now to work with some yeast to produce some food for the future, which will actually be the present instant not yet realized. | |
| So anyway, it gets complex. | |
| As you can see, it's really straightforward. | |
| It's not very complicated. | |
| And you can apply math to all kinds of stuff here. | |
| So one of our old pack guys is a grandson. | |
| We think of him as mostly white. | |
| He's a white guy. | |
| He's an Aryan. | |
| But he acts as though he's living in his grandfather's time quite frequently. | |
| And he's never, I don't think he ever even met this grandfather, but his grandfather was a Sikh, okay? | |
| And he died in this thing in like maybe it was the split with Pakistan in the 50s and 60s, right? | |
| In that period of time, his grandfather passed. | |
| But anyway, so our old guy here thinks of himself in that regard and is seeing our current shared or common shared reality in our current situation with quite a bit of humor about the potential for what's going to come out, okay? | |
| Just because of the nature of Sikhism not having a personification for the deity of any, you know, in another body, right? | |
| So they see God as giant consciousness this way, right? | |
| And so they've got to leg up on a lot of the normies, so to speak, out there. | |
| But anyway, so we're at that point, in my opinion, where soon we will be forced by the intrusion of non-human entities to examine ourselves relative to those entities, | |
| and they'll want to discuss things from this kind of a model, not from grit. | |
| And so if we approach them from a grit viewpoint, I don't even think that they would talk to us from a grit viewpoint. | |
| You know, our Sikh friend is always saying that, you know, when they come here, they won't come here until the dogs are ready to speak, right? | |
| Us guys. | |
| So I think he's quite correct. | |
| Until we are operating as though we understand reality, why should they fuck with us, right? | |
| Why should they deal with us if we're still stuck in the grit? | |
| And I don't believe that the, in fact, it's from an ontological viewpoint, from an ontological understanding of reality, you see how they came up with this idea of the prime directive for Star Trek, right? | |
| Don't fuck with them guys, because that's an inherent law of universe here. | |
| If we're humans and we go cruising around and we find something that an alien life form that's sentient, but not aware and is living with bazillions of normies on a planet and not able to haul their own ass out of the mud, it's not our job to haul their ass out of the mud. | |
| We can monitor them and go to speak to them when they do get out of the mud, but as long as they're in the mud, they're not going to see us effectively, and we would cause them problems by trying to make them get out of the mud to meet our demands. | |
| So as an ontological viewpoint kind of a thing, you know, you recognize your own limitations and your own impact with your own karma in terms of your own set of desires. | |
| So I really resent all these stupid humans that are out there saying, oh, the Pleiadians are here to help us. | |
| Well, fuck them Pleiadians, right? | |
| It's not their role. | |
| It's not their job. | |
| They can go back and, you know, stick their hoosie up there. | |
| What's it? | |
| Because we don't want them. | |
| We cannot have them take us into this understanding, right? | |
| You cannot be taken kicking and screaming into that understanding. | |
| This is true education. | |
| You have to discover it yourself and then start modeling it yourself and seeing how it maps and then start using it in order that you can have that. | |
| No one can give you this understanding. | |
| You've got to find it yourself. | |
| You've got to learn to live in the present instant, the eternal now, in order to recognize that it exists and all of the other stuff along with it. | |
| So in my opinion, Stephen Greer, any of these people that says, oh, they're happy aliens, they're here to help us. | |
| Well, fuck them. | |
| No, they're here for their own purposes. | |
| Understand that first, right? | |
| They're here for their own purposes. | |
| If they can sell it to you that they're aiding you, that does not mean that it is factual. | |
| It just means that you were deluded enough to buy that information. | |
| And you should have said, thank you very much, piss off. | |
| If you piss, piss off, you know, because we're going to do it ourselves. | |
| We have to. | |
| It is the nature of this universe, and it is the challenge ahead of us that we all have to go through this kind of rigamaro to get back to an understanding that allows us to really see, to appreciate the reality that is coming in, as well as the reality that we're assisting and manifesting. | |
| okay and so i'm going to shut it off here i'm going to go get my toast and another another cup of tea but but let me give you a uh okay so there's this stuff shin shin soitsu um Shin Shin Soitsu Do. | |
| Okay, I'll write it down here. | |
| Okay, so shenshin soy tzu doh. | |
| I studied Shin Shin Soitsu Aikido for over 40 years. | |
| Okay. | |
| The only reason I'm still studying it even now. | |
| So that is also known as Japanese yoga. | |
| One of the key elements of Japanese yoga is to get yourself to live in this instant where you will have the ability to perceive, to see what is shaping up for you, right? | |
| What the universe is trying to tell you. | |
| Because universe constantly, because big consciousness is, we are in fact a subset of big consciousness that sees itself as isolated. | |
| We're not actually isolated. | |
| Our body does not exist. | |
| We've never moved one millimeter. | |
| We've always been, if this is big consciousness, we're just a little tiny blip right here that sees itself as isolated. | |
| But we've never moved. | |
| We're always still in consciousness. | |
| And the only thing that allows us to see ourselves as being isolated and to think we're moving and think we're getting into a jet or think we're driving a car or petting a dog or taking a piss or eating food, any of that, the only thing that allows that to occur is this level of the base operating system that helps us do our manifest shared reality. | |
| Okay, so none of that actually physically occurs. | |
| There is no physical space in universe. | |
| Once you understand this, all kinds of shit makes a lot of sense. | |
| Anyway, though, so that is how we actually are relative to big consciousness and our common manifest shared reality. | |
| If you study Shinshin Soitsu Do, Japanese Aikido, and read the book, or Japanese yoga, and you read the book Japanese Yoga, there's a Kindle version even, it gives you exercises and stuff to bring you into the present instant and to help you open your eyes to what universe is trying to tell you. | |
| So universe is constantly, because we're still stuck in big consciousness, telling little consciousness shit, right? | |
| It kind of like leaks through as the waves go through the big consciousness. | |
| We get the hints of them. | |
| And so there's lots of us out here. | |
| Okay, and so one can easily see that as thoughts and energies flow through ultimate consciousness, affecting each and every one of us here, that we are all connected at that level. | |
| And so psychicness is like, eh, it's no big deal. | |
| It's just an inherent part of our reality because it's just consciousness leaking out information to other consciousness that deceives itself into believing it's isolated from bigger consciousness. | |
| And if you go do Shinshin Soitsu Do or Shinshin Soitsu Aikido, you will learn techniques that allow you to better see and better understand when universe is talking to you. | |
| That's all. | |
| But it is worthwhile doing that. | |
| All of these disciplines, and there's many of them, okay? | |
| So there are many different flavors. | |
| Whatever flavor suits you and your personality and your manifestation within our eternal now, go with that one, right? | |
| I'm just, this one suited me. | |
| You know, maybe it's only for bald guys. | |
| I don't know. | |
| Anyway, though, I'm going to go have toast. | |
| You guys take care and contemplate how big consciousness is going to kick your brick. | |
| Oh, I know. | |
| I wasn't going to say. | |
| Okay, so this is a weird part. | |
| All right, so universe talks to us constantly, right? | |
| And it wanted me to remember this to tell you this, okay? | |
| So there was this thread on X the other day that was all about knights in the Middle Ages stabbing and fighting and getting their swords and shit and fighting snails in all these Middle Ages drawings. | |
| And you'll see a lot of these images of knights fighting snails in the very wide margin of some of these Middle Ages manuscripts where they would frequently, you know, the monks had nothing to do. | |
| They'd draw little pictures around all the words, that sort of thing that they thought illustrated it or whatever. | |
| Anyway, so those images of the knights fighting the snails come from the Lombard Jews of the Middle Ages. | |
| The Lombard Jews were originally out of Venice. | |
| They were a money lending family. | |
| They got really, really rich. | |
| They were hated. | |
| They were hated throughout all of Europe. | |
| They were one of the reasons that the Jews were kicked out of all these Middle Ages towns was because of their usurous processes would eventually get the local monarchy, you know, the local duke or whoever the fuck it was, in debt to the point that his lands and stuff were being threatened by them under seizure for the debt. | |
| And so he would have to do something. | |
| And their practices were usurous, right? | |
| They would have 20, 30, 40, 50, 70% interest. | |
| Anyway, so they were represented by the snail. | |
| Well, one of the reasons that they were represented by the snail was that the Christians of the northern Europe, Poland, Germany, Denmark, even down so far as Holland, had this thing there where they talked about the Jews poisoning the wells in order to create the plagues of the Middle Ages. | |
| That poison was through mollusks, okay, through poisonous whelk and cone snails that were drug up of the coast of northern Europe, and then they put them into the wells and toxic poisons were released and people died. | |
| You know, it was estimated that one-third of all working-age males died in the Black Death period in Europe, and it was isolated, okay? | |
| So you could have one village that everybody got really sick and died, and like less than a mile away, nobody got sick and died. | |
| Okay, it was not an airborne disease. | |
| It was not respiratory, it was poisoning. | |
| In any event, though, so the Lombard Jews got shit for this, and they were labeled for better part of 100 years after that with the image of the snail. | |
| And even now, you get really get a lot of shit for casting Jews as snails, okay, in some areas. | |
| It's considered to be anti-Semitic to even bring up an image of a snail to these people. | |
| Anyway, though, so universe showed us this thread in X the other day, and coincidentally, I think this, yeah, this is yesterday. | |
| My mind's a little time-looped because I've had some emergency drives in to see my wife and then coming back very late at night and no sleep and stuff. | |
| Anyway, so anyway, on the same day that the snails show up in X, we have Fildo, Fildo Godluski, the guy who's blocked me on X, who he's a flat earther and all of these kind of things, something reputed to be, you know, something of a grifter. | |
| Anyway, he talks about closing on his third house in Italy and going over to Europe to see it and going to Paris and almost dying in his mind because he almost died, and then he associated in his mind almost dying with eating escargot, which of course are snails. | |
| And so both of those showing up in the same day. | |
| That's the kind of stuff of universe talking to us. | |
| And of course, now it's our part of the process to decide what the fuck the universe wants us to do with these damn snails. |