Pocket Watch Inscriptions

We really have a dream
Sometimes I am amazed at the information that was available to us for years and years, and how to fight first with our lives before we find information and things suddenly fall into place. . . I wondered for a while very long to give people messages clairvoyant and then I tell them they have choices. Often my messages about their choices and the results of each, and at the same time I can give an overview of the possible choices they make. Why is it that I became aware of their options? Why do I get information on their final decision? Is that really free will, or is it fate? I have often thought that the images of choice that come are like a slideshow and the person can choose which slide they want to live. In a way I can move into the future and say which image they choose to live. And how does stuff like reflexology, homeopathy and iridology work, where the whole body and all organs are supposed to be represented into the foot of the cornea? And did you know that ear acupuncture is based on the premise that the human body is represented in the ear? Check out my blog for an example purple. And there were other puzzles as well – for example, why is it always a particular stimulus you back to a particular experience? For example, why is it that every time I've used pumpkin, I think about an argument between me and my mother happened 38 years ago? I can even I remember the room where we were at the time. Where can I keep this information, and why I can still access it at any time, but especially when I've used pumpkin? Is it stored in my brain, or do I use my brain to get a kind of library somewhere? So if I ask you to write your name in the air with your left elbow, you will be able to do so, even if you've never before. How do you know how? I just read a very interesting book called The Holographic Universe by Michael Talbot explains much these issues. The book says that the whole universe is a holographic image, and we live image. What is a holographic image? I'll keep this simple. Take any object you want to photograph. Take a laser light source and splitting the light into two separate beams. Beam bounces off the object and is reflected away from the object. The beam collides with the other reflected beam. The result is saved a special piece of film, called holographic film. To the naked eye the result looks like concentric circles that you get when you throw two stones in a pond. But another burst of light through the holographic film, and you get a three-dimensional image of the object. This image is so real you can walk around it, but when you try to touch it, there is nothing, just air. Now, for what is even more remarkable. Cut the smaller piece of holographic film and the light on it, and what do you get? A three-dimensional image of the object – exactly the same once you use the entire film. Apparently, the entire universe is composed of such a holographic image. This could explain things like reflexology, homeopathy and acupuncture – the holograph together that we call "body" is represented in any other part of the same body. You say, but a body can be affected? Sure. I suspect that we can not reach through our bodies, because at some point we stopped believing that we can do. Why do I say this? The same book reports the case of the Sufi mystic Hazrat Inayat Khan, who died in 1927. (He taught that blind adherence to any book made all the empty religion of the spirit, regardless of its external nature.) Legend that sometimes emanated so much light that people can actually read by him. Many religions represent their saints as people with halos of light above their heads. Maybe we just forgot that we are beings of light, and we have chosen to become dense in every sense of the word. Michael Talbot's book also describes an experiment where a person has been placed in a hypnotic trance and said that he would be unable to see her daughter when he wakes up. Indeed, when he woke from the trance, he could not see his daughter who was just in front of him. However, he could read the inscription on a pocket watch which was held behind his "invisible" girl. The hypnotic state has taken away the belief that the person was too strong to see through, and therefore he could not see through the person. But how can we explain the choices people have? We often see how people arrive at a crisis point in their lives, and suddenly they change their lives. The book says that the universe actually consists of a large number of holographic images, and we can choose to jump from one to another – like being in a scene in a movie, then choosing to be in another scene in a much more happy movie. If a particular stimulus (visual, smell or touch) back a vivid memory, it seems that our brain access holographic memory outside of ourselves each time. This would also explain why, for example the memory of the first house you ever lived in is not in your consciousness, but when I ask you to remember that the house, the "memory flooding back" and you can access details of the house. And how do you know write your name with your elbow or recognize the face of your parent or child of very old photographs? Your brain has taken a holographic image information or expertise, and information stored in a memory bank. No matter what angle you access to information, because your brain recognizes the wave and then refines the wave until you can access details of any way you want. At a certain level deep I always knew that the messages I receive as a way are true. I have often questioned, and not because of a lack of faith but because of curiosity. Now that curiosity is not free and I am getting very interesting answers. I never thought that the answers are not in holographic images. Carl Jung said: "Who looks outside, dreams. Who looks inside, awakes. "It makes more sense for me every day. Meditation and" look inside "provides fascinating answers. About the Author
Elsabe Smit is the author of the soul-touching collection of short stories, A Tapestry of Life and of the blog http://www.mypurpleblog.com , Spiritual interpretations of everyday life.
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