In the News

This anthological book includes such noted authors as: Ken Blanchard, Mark Victor Hansen, Les Brown, Dorothy M. Neddermeyer, et al. Read more...



Feature Article

How To Keep Your Resolutions and Achieve Your Goals - The New Year has begun.  Many people have already broken their New Year’s resolutions.  Surveys reveal that 25% of people will break their New Year’s resolution within the first week of making it.  Are you among the 25%? 

Feature Article Archive






Blog Info



Subscribe to our blog Subscribe to our RSS feed

Health Blogs TopBlogging Health Directory

Feature Article

What The Bleep Do We Know?—The Movie—An Analysis
11/05

What is reality? Is it what we see in front of us? Where do we come from? What is our role in reality? These basic questions seem simple, however, some startling first premises are presented by what appear to be educated authorities (identified at the end of the movie), premises based upon undisputed, if bizarre sounding, scientific research. One is that quantum physics has determined that “no thing” exists, in that when looked at closely, atoms disappear into clouds of possibility. The second is that our experience is brain experience, not experience of the “out there” but something of its own creation. These two facts present us with the notion that reality is not what it seems. If not, then what is it? Could we be living an unreality? It is suspicious that people keep having the same types of relationships, same jobs, the same problems. Are we creatures of habit and have allowed ourselves to fall into the illusion that we have no control over our lives?

A rock seems real and solid, but only when we actually encounter it. Before it is encountered, it is more of a possibility than a rock solid fact. Reality comes into being when it is observed, but not before. Thus, we have some options as we begin to observe and create reality. Research with brain scans shows that the brain can not distinguish, it behaves in the same way, when it is actually looking at something or when it is imagining that same something. Actually seeing and using memory to imagine seeing are both the same and indistinguishable to the brain. So, do we see with our brains or with our eyes?

The brain processes 400 billion bits of information every second. Most of it is discarded. The brain is very selective in which information will reach consciousness. It selects only about 2000 bits to bring into awareness, selected with an agenda. We become aware of only a tiny miniscule of the information surrounding us. The brain processes information that it cannot bring into awareness. Our beliefs have something to do with this selectivity, we can bring into awareness only that which we believe is possible to exist in reality.

The story is told, said to be true, that the Caribbean natives could not see Columbus’ ships off shore, because they had never encountered such things. It took awhile for the Caribbean chief to finally see what was causing the strange waves. Once the chief could see the ships, he could help his people see them. It is as if we live in our own hologram, rather than in the external world itself. We live in a virtual reality governed by our beliefs. The brain matches the information coming to it with patterns it remembers and its conclusions become our reality. One physicist says, “There is no ‘out there’ out there separate from what we experience ‘in here.’”

So there are choice points concerning how a life might go.

Physicists are working to come up with a reasonable explanation for all this. Most of reality is empty space. Matter takes up little. Why is it; that time seems to flow forward? That is, it seems we can remember the past, but not the future. We can affect the future, but, it seems, not the past. Why is that? Quantum physics shows that these assumptions are false. We can affect the past and know the future. Time is simultaneous—past, present and future.

Electrons are going in and out of existence all the time. The same goes for the nucleus, which we once thought was more real. What are “things” anyway? It seems that they are made up more of possibilities, ideas, information, concepts, thoughts, than actual things. When you are not looking, there are waves of possibility. When you are looking, there are particles of experience. Quantum physics has shown that particles can be in two different places simultaneously, or in two different states of being simultaneously.

It is only when an observation is made that these possibilities collapse into a single, observed experience. Everyone is constantly “collapsing” reality by their observation of it, constantly creating the reality they experience. Heroes consciously choose the reality they want to experience. Everything that exists is actually possible movements in consciousness, and we each choose, moment to moment, one of those possibilities to experience. Our tendency is to think that reality exists already out there, independent of our experience of it. Instead of thinking of things, think in terms of possibilities. It takes a lot of creative thinking to make sense of it.

Physics knows what the observer does in terms of creating reality, but we have not been able to discover WHO this observer is. We have all had the experience of being an observer, yet anyone who looks in the brain, or elsewhere, no one has ever observed an observer—the observer being that “it” that can collapse quantum possibilities. Is the observer the spirit “inside—the ghost in the machine?”

When 4000 people converged on Washington DC and meditated, the crime rate went down. Is people’s consciousness affecting the world we see? The answer is: Yes. We create the reality we experience.

Photographs of water molecules taken by Dr. Masuro Emoto, water before and after blessings were said over it, were shown. The molecule of the blessed water was more symmetrical and beautiful than the plain water. On other bottles of water, he pasted on printed words, such as love, thank you, hate, etc. and you can see that the water molecules look more beautiful when words of positive emotions were pasted on their bottles. Although the mechanism by which this non-material influence operates is unknown, Dr. Emoto claims it is the intent that is the driving force in the effect. Ninety per cent of our body is water, so it “makes one wonder what our thoughts could do to us.” The use of Kinesilogy has proven this--Kinesilogy is a diagnosis of physical ailments that may be obtained from the subconscious level by naming and conversing with the ailment through obtaining and using information from the position, movement, and tension of parts of the body, especially from the nerves, muscles, tendons, and joints.

Thoughts can affect the body. Most people don’t consistently create their effects because they don’t really believe it is really possible. Positive thinking usually means that we have optimism covering a much greater amount of negative thinking. We become stuck in the sameness of reality because we give it too much power, but if consciousness can change reality, we can ask how we can make it better. If in our old thinking, we can change nothing because reality is already there, then we can do nothing, but if reality is waiting for us to observe it, then we can set an agenda for improvement.

Reality comes down to our experience. What are thoughts made of? Do thoughts have a substance that can affect things? There are so many worlds, worlds of our thoughts, of our actions, the world of our bodies, of the atoms. There are so many different worlds of possibilities, levels of truth. The most fundamental truth, affirmed by science and mystics, is the underlying unity. You and I are literally one. One, one, one….

One man speaks of how he creates his day every morning. He says that he often has so much on his plate that it takes him awhile to settle down into his meditative process where he creates his day. He says that when he creates his day, he encounters little things during the day that he knows are a response to his creative intentions. It gives him the reinforcement, the incentive, the confidence, to continue with his creative efforts. He believes he is shaping his brain to become more receptive and responsive to these efforts.

“If we accept the idea that we create our experience,” he says, “and experience is our reality is our life, then I have this little pact with myself as I go about creating my day, and I say, OK, I’m taking this time to create my day and I’m infecting the quantum field with this intention, If the observer is watching me as I do this, and there is a spiritual aspect to myself, then show me you’re watching me the whole time that I’m doing this. There is a spiritual aspect to myself then show me a sign that you are paying attention to what I’m creating and throw something in my path that shows me a sign that you are aware of me, something that relates to what I’m working to create but in an unexpected way, so I’ll be surprised by my ability to create, but in such a way that I will have no doubt that it came from you.” [not exact quote]

In addictions, we have a wonderful opportunity to observe the interplay between our potential in consciousness and how we play out that potential during the day in our physical, three dimensional world. Addiction is the feeling of a chemical rush passing through the body with its glands, ductless glands, spinal fluid, etc. It requires only a single thought to create an arousal that will release chemicals into the body.

Metaphysically, we are one with God, but over the ages, with the advent of religions, we were convinced that we are separate from God. That God is a remote judging god, who dishes out punishments for mistakes and missteps. That is not what God is. Our consciousness is not fully aware enough to be able to comprehend God. Science has grown to the point that it is capable of explaining Jesus’ interpretation of the mustard seed and the kingdom of heaven, and it is only the science of quantum physics that can do that. We have such profound new concepts in science yet such backwater concepts of God. When you begin to question the images or caricatures of God, we become suspected of being an atheist or subverting the social order. There needs to be more emphasis placed upon expanding our imagination when we conceive of God. God is greater than the greatest of human weaknesses and the greatest of human skills. To believe we are in control of creation is arrogance. How can we encourage one another to expand our vision of God?

When the brain thinks a thought, there is an electric storm over its entirety. No one sees a thought, but does see the brain activity. Brain neurons have many connectors and they are networked throughout the brain to other neurons. The brain learns by associative memory, patterns of networking making its concepts. The brain tends to respond to events the way it has in the past, as it cannot distinguish between what it sees and what it remembers, as it does both through the same, patterned neural firing. How we respond emotionally when we experience an event, the chemistry of the emotion fixes upon the brain the pattern of firing, the pattern of experience. Our concepts are built up gradually, and each of us develops different conceptual patterns, so one person may associate the emotion of love with the fear of abandonment while another person may associate love with the pleasures of eating. Our emotions to current events are remembered, carried over and repeated the next time we encounter those events. We begin to make up a story for ourselves about the outside world, what it is, how it works, and how we can engage it. Nerve cells that fire together wire together. Habits of experience become “hard-wired.” The thoughts and feelings we have on a daily basis become a physical aspect of the brain. Yet the brain is plastic, ever changing. When we don’t respond automatically, but instead pay attention to our responses, interrupt a thought process with its associated emotional component, it tends to disrupt the neural firing, loosening those connections. When we do so, we are no longer the emotional, body-mind person that is responding automatically to the environment.

Emotions are neither good nor bad, but are designed to create chemical effects to help bond long-term memories. Emotions are holographically imprinted chemicals. The most sophisticated pharmacy is in the brain, the hypothalamus, which assembles chemical concoctions that match the emotions we experience. These chemicals called peptides, are small chains of various amino acids. The hypothalamus assembles these short chains into conglomerates known as europeptides or neurohormones, each different combination matching a unique emotional nuance. When the brain interprets an event using a particular emotional pattern, the hypothalamus assembles the corresponding neuropeptide and very soon that mood chemical is traveling through the body where it communicates with various organs, potentially reaching every cell in the body. Every cell has thousands of receptors, places where the cell is receptive to the outside world. When a peptide connects with a receptor on a cell, it communicates with the cell, sending its special message.

Most of us operate as if today were yesterday, often in either an emotionally disconnected manner or in an emotionally over-reactive manner. When a peptide is connected to a cell, its communications begin to change the structure of the nucleus of the cell. Each cell has consciousness if we define consciousness as the point of view of an observer. The cell is the smallest unit of consciousness in the body.

An addiction is something we cannot stop. We bring to ourselves situations that will fulfill the biochemical cravings of the cells of our body by creating situations that will meet our needs [meanwhile, the visuals show a woman “accidentally” bumping into a waiter, having food spilled on her dress, “accidentally” stopping the overeating she was engaged in].

The addict will always need a little bit more to get a rush or high of what they’re looking for chemically. If you can’t control your emotional state, it means you are addicted to it. This can play out in relationships, where we can confuse being in love with the anticipation of the enjoyment of the chemical states we will experience in that relationship. Addiction to certain chemicals/emotional patterns could be behind having the same story play out in our intimate relationships, over and over again, like obsessions.

We are our emotions, as they motivate the cells to take in things and to move out and relate to other cells. Emotions are not bad, nor good, but they are the life force expressing itself, our biochemical story. We have emotional responses to everything we experience. The problem is that the emotional patterns repeat themselves in a positive feedback loop. We can become obsessive as we search for or interpret experiences in such as way as to feed these patterns. Can you have a Polish wedding without a polka? That’s the metaphorical question the bandleader asks at the wedding, expressing how our obsessions affect our experience.

As our “Dante,” Amanda confronts herself in the mirror, looking at what appears to her as her too fat legs, she is reminded that our minds create our bodies. Candace Pert explains how cells develop addictions. If a given receptor for a given chemical is over stimulated with that chemical, the cell will begin to desensitize itself such that a given amount of the chemical will produce less of a response in the cell. The attitude we adopt is equivalent to the chemicals attaching to the cells. When we’ve consistently adopted that attitude, then as the cell divides, its offspring cells will have even more receptor sites for that chemical and less receptor sites for other chemicals, including nutrients, vitamins, minerals or the chemicals that help the cell expel waste products or toxins. Aging is the result of losing elasticity, ability to assimilate, digest, etc. the body becomes less flexible, less constructive proteins. It matters less over time what we eat, and more important that we are in the right mental framework for our cells to continue to evolve healthy appetites and abilities to absorb the nutrients in what we do eat. In effect, the cells begin to evolve to be responsive to only one type of chemical, of attitude, or emotion. Our habitual mental attitude has a lot to do with the quality of subsequent generations of our body’s cells.

So what are we to do about this? It’s time for a new paradigm. Life is more expansive than we think it is. There’s a bigger story. We need to realize that there are other dreams. That is our first step out of the box. Too much of clinical opinion gives people mental or physical labels of malfunction, and we need to instead look at it as bad choices and help people make better choices. There’s nothing wrong with the people, it’s their choices, based upon faulty information and emotional trauma; that is what prompts people to behave the way they do.

People need to seek inspiration. Inspiration is required to develop motivation to seek and live out answers to questions like the purpose of life, the mission of one’s particular life, where does the soul go after death? People can begin to experiment with new ideas, and watch as old ideas fall away, over time. As we experiment with new ideas, thinking new ideas, we are literally rewiring the brain, creating new neural networks, ultimately changing us from the inside out. If I change my mind, will I change my choices? If I change my choices, will my life change? Why can’t I change? What am I addicted to? What will I lose that I’m chemically attached to and what person, place or time or event that I’m chemically attached to that I don’t want to lose because I don’t want to experience a chemical withdrawal from it? Is the earth the only planet that is steeped in religious subjugation, responding to the expectations of the rewards and punishments based upon judgments of good or bad. This doesn’t mean one is in favor of depravity, but to act consciously, there are things that will help evolve me and things that will not help evolve me.

God—a placeholder name for the transcendent, the sublime. I can have an experience that ‘God Is’ without being able to know what or who God is. God can be seen as “All That Is.” However you wish to imagine it, you have to love that God more than you love the addictions. In the long run, the real concern will not be how am I treating my body, but how am I treating my mind and body?

People need to learn how powerful their mind is, and that it can help better ourselves, even to help us transcend ourselves, so that we might come to a higher level of consciousness where we could understand ourselves even better and live even better with each other.

Understanding that we are interconnected and acting accordingly seems to be the best definition of spirituality. Our purpose here is to develop our gifts of intentionality, to become effective creators. We are here to infiltrate space with ideas and mansions of thought, to make something of this life, to acknowledge the place we have, the ability to make choices, when we create that shift, we are enlightened. Our soul knows its sole purpose in this life is to create emotional and spiritual growth.

Quantum mechanics allows for the intangible reality of freedom. It is the physics of possibilities, it opens up the question of who chooses among these possibilities what events will we experience. We need to open our minds without the interference of any addictions that inhibit considering possibilities. We need to manifest reality in our bodies, in new ways. One day we will all be avatars. Welcome to the kingdom of heaven.

How we can tell if any of this is true? If we pay attention, then we can become the scientist of our lives. We can create a new paradigm and see if we change our lives. Don’t take it at face value, experiment and see if it is true.


Back to top

Google







Thoughts to Ponder

When you know that what you're doing is right, nothing will be able to stop you. When you are absolutely convinced of the true value of your efforts, you'll have the courage and the persistence to see them through. To believe in what you're doing is not just important. It is everything.

Anything less cannot possibly succeed. For any accomplishments you reach while living a lie will ultimately be of no value.

It is not always easy to live true to your highest values, true to your authentic self, true to what you know is right. Yet it is always your best choice.

When you deny what you know is right in order to follow the expediency of the moment, the benefits you gain are trivial and fleeting. Choose instead to live each moment true to the highest values you know.

Then, who you become will be the fulfillment of who you truly are. Why would you ever want to be anything less? —Ralph Marston

Thoughts to Ponder... Archive

Did You Know...? Archive



The Daily Motivator

National Association to PROTECT Children - www.protect.org

K. Aimee Web Designs

The Daily Motivator