The mornings are better for this than when going to sleep at night, because the brain isn't filled with recent thoughts and memories that can interfere with the intuitive impressions that rise up from the subconscious.
The imagination is far more creative than you give it credit.
I had a strange dream a few years ago where everything was black, and then, as though I had just opened my eyes, I saw a large lioness bearing down on me where I lay on the ground between what looked like two stone pillars. Then it went black again, and it was over. My impression was that I was...
I just found this. Go down to where it talks about Stonehenge. According to the article, Stonehenge lines up perfectly with the North Pole when it would have been in the Hudson's Bay area, where Hapgood said it was approx. 11,000 BC. It does not line up with anything significant today...
Yes helz_belz, we're talking about a geological shift, not just a magnetic one. Charles Hapgood was the main proponent of this theory, and I rely on him for the basic hypothesis. The wikipedia article you linked to barely scratches the surface of the subject and (typical of wiki) discredits it...
I should add that a pole shift eventually sorts itself out, just like a spinning top will reright itself after being nudged off balance. I believe that this is what the ancient scientists were aware of and were looking for. Once the poles had rerighted themselves, they knew that things were...
A pole 'reversal' will conceivably keep alignments the same while the poles themselves switch. A pole 'shift' is different, in that the poles wander (as you state below) out of their normal position, causing the earth's spin to change its axis of rotation. Such a change will cause a change in...
They weren't 'studying' the stars, they were keeping measure of the alignments so that during the ongoing earth changes they would be able to tell if the earth was shifting and in what way. There was no pole reversal, per se. The poles shifted only slightly, but it was enough to be quite...
They created a sensory illusion that caused some spooky feelings in the test subjects, and based on that, they came up with the theory that time-delayed sensory stimuli are the cause of ghosts. Right. That's not science. That's a bad excuse for using their funding to build a ********* machine.
So now you're saying that the objective world is just a philosophical concept?
In message #6 you said that memory is physical:
You have things completely backwards, John!
You're welcome. Everything is relative, to some degree. Finding concrete answers to anything is dependent on a consensus agreement, and little more. The only things that are truly esoteric are the things that are never absolute. The more you think about it, the more you realize this includes...
I kind of got off track with details. The main point I want to make is that these elite groups have as much influence over what beliefs come out of the New Age as they do over anything else. They essentially dictate what beliefs will be adopted, because they also control the media, which is the...
It's interesting how people's level of understanding of a word or phrase starts these silly battles.
The Order of the Illuminati was a real secret society that started up in 1776 in Bavaria, the same year that the USA was founded by Freemasons, where the Illuminati had their founding members...
The subject of reincarnation is itself esoteric, so why wouldn't these other subjects be as valid?
Nothing can really distinguish the difference between a PL memory and a clairvoyant moment. Even if you were to come up with physical proof that your memories are of a real person who once lived...