Last shot of the day on a film set, also the last name of the author of this blog. Martin - Latin singular, those soldiers who work for Mars, God of War. A smith. In this lifetime of words, music and film. AKA "The Afterlife Expert" (Coast to Coast AM) If you want to reach me, I can be found on FB, LinkedIn, or Gmail under MartiniProds (my youtube channel)
Buddhism and the Flipside
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Miscellaneous
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Saturday
Interview on Z Talk Radio talking "Flipside"
Friday
Appearing tonight on Z Talk Radio talking "Flipside"
#36- Rich Martin-FlipSide: Afterlife Here's last night's interview. Enjoy. #36- Rich Martin-FlipSide: Afterlife
Allen Warren has me on his Z talk radio show tonight on Warrenxchangeradio at www.ztalkradio.com
Funny thing, we spoke for 3 hours a few weeks ago, and then he emailed me to tell me that somehow the show had disappeared.
"Oh well," I said, "someone on the "Flipside" probably didn't like it."
I was joking, of course. Like they've got so little to do on the "Flipside" that they'll take the time to hover around and listen to me on the radio.
Be that as it may, he found it - somewhere - and now it lives again. So tonight at 6 pm Pacific Time, it will be on Z talk radio. Not sure how long it's going to be, and I'd tune in to listen to myself talk, but then I can do that any old time.
Here's from his Facebook page with links:
It's Finally Here! Our Show with Guest Rich Martini! Author and award winning filmmaker Richard Martini has written and/or directed 9 indie films. A former free lance journalist for Variety, Inc.Com, Premiere and other magazines, a graduate of the Masters of Professional Writing Program at USC, FlipSide: A Tourist's Guide to the Afterlife is his debut non-fiction book on a topic that's been haunting him since the death of a soul mate.
Tonight at 6 pM Pacific/9 PM Eastern Only on ztalkradio.com !!!
So tune in if you'd like to hear the latest from the "Flipside." (Or just go to Z Talk Radio and look for Alan Warren's Show)
Thursday
Wanda Syke's Ghost and Dolphin Consciousness
Wanda Sykes Sees Ghost from The Blaze.com
Comedian Wanda Sykes appeared on “The Ellen DeGeneres Show” on Wednesday, where she revealed an apparent encounter that she claims to have had with a ghost while staying at a historic hotel in Virginia.
“I don’t want people to think I’m crazy, but it happened,” she told host Ellen DeGeneres.
Sykes said that she returned to her room at the Jefferson Hotel in Richmond, Virginia, after a show one night, and suddenly felt that something wasn’t quite right.
“I just had a sense that somebody else is in this room and I was like looking around,” she said, admitting that she had a few drinks. “I just had to make sure that it wasn’t the alcohol, but I was like, ‘No, something is in the room,’ and I kind of looked out of the corner of my eye and it was this woman — it was an old black woman, right, and she just was looking at me.”
Sykes added, “I’m pretty sure she was a slave, because don’t nobody wear stuff like that anymore.”
The comedian said she didn’t feel like the ghost would hurt her, and said that it seemed as though she was more surprised than anything else to see Sykes inside of such a nice hotel room.
The comedian joked that she told the ghost that “things turned out pretty good,” with DeGeneres and the audience erupting in laughter.
“And I know you’re really probably just blown away to see me — this black woman — in this big hotel room,” Sykes apparently told the ghost, going on to quip about what she did next. ”I got the remote control. ‘If this is good, wait until you see who the president is. This is going to scare the hell out of you.’”
She said the woman stayed and watched her for a little while before disappearing.
“And I said, ‘Why don’t you go scare white people. That’s what I would do if I were you,’” Sykes joked.
Wanda saw a Civil War era ghost in a hotel room. She said the woman was "dressed like a slave." So that means she saw her clearly enough, long enough to form an opinion about how she was dressed. She said the ghost didn't seem upset, or emotional, but had a look on her face as if to say "well, look at you." Wanda then riffs into a hilarious take on that - thanking the ghost for suffering as a slave, and then offering to turn on CNN so the ghost can see the President.
Couple of observations. Wanda couldn't know what the ghost was thinking when she looked at her. The ghost of course, is outside of time - in fact calling her a ghost does her a disservice - let's just call her "a person no longer on the planet." This person no longer on the planet may have had any number of things on her mind. One could be: "Oh, look, it's you Wanda, don't you remember when you used to live back in these days and we were friends? Or you were someone that I knew back then?" That's one possibility. Or, "Wanda! I can't believe you don't recognize me. I'm your great great great grandmother - in your family tree!" Or just "What the heck are you doing in my room dressed like that?"
As noted here in other posts, there are many accounts from people who remember previous lifetimes where they weren't of the same race, color, creed or gender that they are now. And they don't just remember a "day" in that lifetime - in some cases people remember the entire life, including the death, and remember the experience of leaving the body and "going home" back to their "soul group" where they hang out with their loved ones and plot their return to the planet. (For more info on that topic, click on "Flipside" or "It's a Wonderful Afterlife" for plenty of those accounts - or even "Flipside the Documentary" available as a DVD or on Gaiam TV.
Book, DVD, Audio |
But what's also amazing about this clip is how "normal" it is. Wanda saw a ghost, it didn't frighten her, she wasn't "spooked." In fact she gave the person who used to be on the planet respect and acknowledged her presence.
And then Ellen told a story about seeing a man in a house she used to live in, and then tossed it over to her mother who also saw the same man at a different time in that house.
So we have a verification of a "person who used to be on the planet" right in this clip. Ellen saw the man, and then later her mother saw the same man.
So the question is - instead of running screaming into the night - how can we show compassion for this man or "people who used to be on the planet?" Would it be to do what Wanda did, and acknowledge their presence and perhaps suggest "look around yourself person who used to be on the planet, there's a light in the distance. If you go towards that light, go through that light, all your friends and loved ones are waiting for you to return so that you can figure out a way to get back here, or go and do whatever it is that you're supposed to do. Don't be afraid - you've done a great job of hanging around the planet, so why not go and have some fun back home?"
It's the fastest, easiest way to talk a person who is not longer on the planet into leaving your residence - and if they really insist that they've got to stick around, then just say "I appreciate that you want to stick around here, and that's fine by me, but please don't wake up, scare, or otherwise intimidate my guests or me. You're welcome, but you have a choice to stay or go." Worse thing that can happen is they take you up on the suggestion and head home.
Meanwhile....
This month's National Geographic article on "Dolphin Intelligence" by J Foer caught my eye:
"Bolton presses her palms together over her head, the signal to innovate, and then puts her fists together, the sign for “tandem.” With those two gestures, she has instructed the dolphins to show her a behavior she hasn’t seen during this session and to do it in unison.This month's National Geographic article on "Dolphin Intelligence" by J Foer caught my eye:
Photographs by Brian Skerry |
Hector and Han disappear beneath the surface. With them is a comparative psychologist named Stan Kuczaj, wearing a wet suit and snorkel gear and carrying a large underwater video camera with hydrophones. He records several seconds of audible chirping between Hector and Han, then his camera captures them both slowly rolling over in unison and flapping their tails three times simultaneously.
Above the surface Bolton presses her thumbs and middle fingers together, telling the dolphins to keep up this cooperative innovation. And they do. The 400-pound animals sink down, exchange a few more high-pitched whistles, and then simultaneously blow bubbles together. Then they pirouette side by side. Then they tail walk. After eight nearly perfectly synchronized sequences, the session ends.
There are two possible explanations of this remarkable behavior. Either one dolphin is mimicking the other so quickly and precisely that the apparent coordination is only an illusion. Or it’s not an illusion at all: When they whistle back and forth beneath the surface, they’re literally discussing a plan."
and then later in the article:
"The last common ancestor of humans and chimps lived some six million years ago. By comparison cetaceans such as dolphins split off from the rest of the mammal lineage about 55 million years ago, and they and primates haven’t shared an ancestor for 95 million years."
So dolphin have been on their own evolutionary track for 55 million years... while humans have been on their own track for about 6 million. So logic tells us that evolution would probably have done some nifty tricks in terms of these denizens of the deep over all those years.
But what the article above says, is that an instructor used sign language to ask these dolphin to do a series of tricks in unison - but the choice of the tricks and what they would do was up to them. And then they performed those stunts in the order that they devised.
In other words, they consciously chose what tricks to perform for this human.
They communicated with each other - in some fashion - on what those tricks would be.
Hello. Why so crabby? |
Now by logic, extend that to the planet. All animals, all creatures are sentient. They have their own way of communication, as we have ours. Ours in by no means superior to theirs - in fact in this case it's proven that theirs is far superior to ours.
There's plenty of folklore of dolphin coming to the aid of humans. Just search youtube for videos of dolphin approaching humans and trying to communicate with them, steering their boats to safety, or asking humans for help.
In my own experience, I saw a school of dolphin surface on the Santa Monica beach, about 20 yards off shore, jumping and swimming. As a joke I yelled "Hey, Dan Marino! (former Miami Dolphin). Over here!" And one of their group turned and started swimming towards me. I mean jumping out of the water, flying through the air in my direction, aiming at me as if to say "What? You called? You need help? You were speaking to me?" I was afraid that I somehow had influenced them to screw up their path and shouted "No, sorry, I was just kidding!" and the Dolphin turned and rejoined his group. It was funny, but startling.
Not far from here. "Hey! Dan Marino!" |
So what do these two stories have in common? We experience life in a 5 dimensional world. Well, 2 to be sure, 3 for entertainment, and the rest are about our senses. But other animals on this planet don't experience this world the way we do. Bees, for example, see ultraviolet light. Dolphin obviously can communicate in ways we don't understand. Birds, cats, dogs... cows.
And we can't experience the world the way a person who is no longer on the planet experiences it. But we can appreciate it. We can honor it. We can talk about it without fear of being dunked, hanged or burnt at the stake.
So let's talk about it, shall we?
Tuesday
Convicted killer claims victim "forgave" him from the afterlife
This is disturbing, I know.
An attorney approached me saying that "all of her clients" had similar accounts of victims coming to them to say versions of "I'm okay, and I can help you."
I'm so sorry for the victims and their families to hear this with no context. I'm sorry that this is not public knowledge or that people have never discussed this in public. But it's a chapter in "It's a Wonderful Afterlife: Further Adventures in the Flipside" Volume 2, and it's EXACTLY what the victims of second degree murderers have said to the people who killed them, and told their attorney about it.
Needless to say, they had no way to share this information with anyone - and this guy chose this moment to share it on the stand.
I would venture that he signed up for this lifetime, and signed up for the journey to prison he will experience - but it's an unusual way to hear verification of one of the chapters in my book or that people don't really die no matter what happens to them. My sincere condolences to the victim's families.
"Convicted killer: Victims aren't as mad as you'd think" by Alison Grande
Convicted killer Joe McEnroe detailed how he killed the Anderson family in Carnation in 2007. He explained how he shot Wayne and Judy Anderson, hid their bodies and waited for the rest of the family. “The air was smokey and smelled of blood and death, “ said McEnroe on Thursday.
By Alison Grande
KIRO - Seattle
SEATTLE — Thursday convicted killer Joe McEnroe had his last chance to convince the jury to spare him from the death penalty. The same jury that convicted him of murdering his girlfriend's family on Christmas Eve 2007, will decide if he will be sentenced to life in prison or the death penalty.
McEnroe told the jury today that they victims visited him from the afterlife and "aren't as mad as you'd think."
"They said they don't blame [me]. I tried to apologize to them. It's like, look, I'm sorry for what happened," said McEnroe Thursday.
He said the victims want him to live and do good. McEnroe says he wants to help other men in prison.
"In your mind you've convinced yourself Judy Anderson is not as mad as what you might think about the murder of her two grandchildren?" asked Sr. Deputy Prosecuting Attorney Scott O'Toole.
"Yes," said McEnroe.
"This is what you've been told by them" O'Toole questioned.
"Yes sir," McEnroe responded.
Prosecutors are convinced McEnroe and Michele Anderson were motivated by greed. Investigators say Michele Anderson was upset her parents were going to start charging her for utilities in the mobile home she lived in with McEnroe on her parents Carnation property. Detectives say the pair targeted six unsuspecting victims as they gathered on Christmas Eve. Wayne and Judy were shot first, their bodies hidden outside, the house cleaned. When Michele Anderson's brother Scott Anderson, his wife Erica and two young children - Olivia 5, and Nathan, 3, arrived - they were murdered too.
"The plan was Michele Anderson would get all that money and all that property." stated O'Toole.
"Yes," said McEnroe. "And you would live happily ever after." added O'Toole. “Yes, that was the plan she sold me on," McEnroe answered.
Defense attorneys got to question McEnroe one final time. "Joe, how often do you think about killing the Andersons?" asked defense attorney Bill Prestia.
McEnroe let out a loud cry, stamped his foot and answered, "It's in my mind all the time."
Prestia asked McEnroe about a statement he made on Tuesday, " You said 'Look just kill me, I don't care.' So do you care? Why don't you just accept execution?"
“I have to make - If I just die then that's an act of further destructiveness," McEnroe said. He says he wants to help other men in prison.
"Joe, do you feel bad for killing these people?" asked Prestia.
"Words cannot express how awful this is -- how awful I feel," answered McEnroe.
McEnroe wouldn't promise he would not kill again. McEnroe said if someone was attacked in the jail he would try other things first, but if he had to he would kill. He said he would try not to let someone talk him in to killing again. But he couldn't promise it wouldn't happen, because he never thought it would have happened in the first place.
The defense will call more witnesses next week. The penalty phase will likely be in the hands of the jury in early May.
Michele Anderson's trial is scheduled for the fall.
- See more at: http://www.wsbtv.com/news/news/national/convicted-killer-says-victims-came-him-afterlife/nkw4N/#sthash.mr1e8p91.dpuf
An attorney approached me saying that "all of her clients" had similar accounts of victims coming to them to say versions of "I'm okay, and I can help you."
I'm so sorry for the victims and their families to hear this with no context. I'm sorry that this is not public knowledge or that people have never discussed this in public. But it's a chapter in "It's a Wonderful Afterlife: Further Adventures in the Flipside" Volume 2, and it's EXACTLY what the victims of second degree murderers have said to the people who killed them, and told their attorney about it.
Needless to say, they had no way to share this information with anyone - and this guy chose this moment to share it on the stand.
I would venture that he signed up for this lifetime, and signed up for the journey to prison he will experience - but it's an unusual way to hear verification of one of the chapters in my book or that people don't really die no matter what happens to them. My sincere condolences to the victim's families.
Convicted killer Joe McEnroe detailed how he killed the Anderson family in Carnation in 2007. He explained how he shot Wayne and Judy Anderson, hid their bodies and waited for the rest of the family. “The air was smokey and smelled of blood and death, “ said McEnroe on Thursday. Photo from the KIRO TV website. |
"Convicted killer: Victims aren't as mad as you'd think" by Alison Grande
Convicted killer Joe McEnroe detailed how he killed the Anderson family in Carnation in 2007. He explained how he shot Wayne and Judy Anderson, hid their bodies and waited for the rest of the family. “The air was smokey and smelled of blood and death, “ said McEnroe on Thursday.
By Alison Grande
KIRO - Seattle
SEATTLE — Thursday convicted killer Joe McEnroe had his last chance to convince the jury to spare him from the death penalty. The same jury that convicted him of murdering his girlfriend's family on Christmas Eve 2007, will decide if he will be sentenced to life in prison or the death penalty.
McEnroe told the jury today that they victims visited him from the afterlife and "aren't as mad as you'd think."
"They said they don't blame [me]. I tried to apologize to them. It's like, look, I'm sorry for what happened," said McEnroe Thursday.
He said the victims want him to live and do good. McEnroe says he wants to help other men in prison.
"In your mind you've convinced yourself Judy Anderson is not as mad as what you might think about the murder of her two grandchildren?" asked Sr. Deputy Prosecuting Attorney Scott O'Toole.
"Yes," said McEnroe.
"This is what you've been told by them" O'Toole questioned.
"Yes sir," McEnroe responded.
Prosecutors are convinced McEnroe and Michele Anderson were motivated by greed. Investigators say Michele Anderson was upset her parents were going to start charging her for utilities in the mobile home she lived in with McEnroe on her parents Carnation property. Detectives say the pair targeted six unsuspecting victims as they gathered on Christmas Eve. Wayne and Judy were shot first, their bodies hidden outside, the house cleaned. When Michele Anderson's brother Scott Anderson, his wife Erica and two young children - Olivia 5, and Nathan, 3, arrived - they were murdered too.
"The plan was Michele Anderson would get all that money and all that property." stated O'Toole.
"Yes," said McEnroe. "And you would live happily ever after." added O'Toole. “Yes, that was the plan she sold me on," McEnroe answered.
Defense attorneys got to question McEnroe one final time. "Joe, how often do you think about killing the Andersons?" asked defense attorney Bill Prestia.
McEnroe let out a loud cry, stamped his foot and answered, "It's in my mind all the time."
Prestia asked McEnroe about a statement he made on Tuesday, " You said 'Look just kill me, I don't care.' So do you care? Why don't you just accept execution?"
“I have to make - If I just die then that's an act of further destructiveness," McEnroe said. He says he wants to help other men in prison.
"Joe, do you feel bad for killing these people?" asked Prestia.
"Words cannot express how awful this is -- how awful I feel," answered McEnroe.
McEnroe wouldn't promise he would not kill again. McEnroe said if someone was attacked in the jail he would try other things first, but if he had to he would kill. He said he would try not to let someone talk him in to killing again. But he couldn't promise it wouldn't happen, because he never thought it would have happened in the first place.
The defense will call more witnesses next week. The penalty phase will likely be in the hands of the jury in early May.
Michele Anderson's trial is scheduled for the fall.
- See more at: http://www.wsbtv.com/news/news/national/convicted-killer-says-victims-came-him-afterlife/nkw4N/#sthash.mr1e8p91.dpuf
Sunday
Ben Affleck and The Flipside
Rarely do we see how silly "modern science" can be.
"Ben Affleck Asked PBS Not To Reveal Ancestry"
First off, let me say I've met Ben an a few occasions, in Cannes where I introduced him to Chantal Cerruti, who offered to outfit him in a suit. (I was wearing one, and was happy to make the introduction.) And then later in Santa Monica, where our kids shared a pre-school - his were stalked by paparazzi in trees hovering over the playground, mine were bouncing around the chicken coop - but he and his wife couldn't have been nicer people.
Despite playing my way through Boston U via a piano-bar in Charlestown (The Warren Tavern) near his home - other than that proximity, I have no reason to comment on this story, other than... it's nonsense.
Forget for a moment, the illegal posting of private emails by Wikileaks (One thing to reveal criminal behavior on behalf of hidden agendas, and another to post emails of people who happen to work for or be affiliated with a company... mine included - as I worked on their film "Salt.") That's beyond the pale, and for my two cents, its reputation just went into a pail.
But back to Mr. Affleck who is "accused" ("Je Accuse!") of asking a reality TV show to cut out the part where his ancestors owned slaves.
Here's the issue: Harvard's Robert Gates, who hosts the show, claims Ben (or his reps) asked him to delete that part of the show that revealed Ben's relatives owned slaves:
"PBS and Harvard scholar Henry Louis Gates, host of the show that traces the ancestry of well-known guests, said in separate statements that they didn't censor the slave-owner details. Instead, more interesting ancestors of the actor emerged and Gates chose to highlight them in October's segment featuring Affleck, they said in the statements posted on the PBS website..."
(Professor Gates is the professor who was arrested on his porch in that tragic "arrested for being black" incident in Cambridge years ago. Unfortunately, a victim of a centuries old amount of prejudice in the Boston area, where I went to school across the Charles River.)
And then this quote jumped out at me:
"In their email exchange, Gates asks (Sony's Michael) Lynton for advice on how to handle Affleck's request. "Here's my dilemma: confidentially, for the first time, one of our guests has asked us to edit out something about one of his ancestors--the fact that he owned slaves. Now, four or five of our guests this season descend from slave owners, including Ken Burns. We've never had anyone ever try to censor or edit what we found. He's a megastar. What do we do?" Gates wrote on July 22, 2014."
Hello?
"The fact that HE OWNED SLAVES." Now, I imagine he's not referring to Ben Affleck here, because Ben never owned slaves.
But this sentence goes to the heart of why this research into consciousness, into the "Flipside" is so important. For Ben, and for Gates, who is belaboring under the concept that somehow we are our ancestors (genetically or epigenetically.)
There's no evidence that we are our ancestors. We don't have memories of what our ancestors did. Under hypnosis, during a near death experience, or any other event in human history. None. (I'm sorry all those relatives of mine, Irish and Italian who celebrate that fact every year with pasta or beer. It's nice to believe we are them, but we ain't. And it shows)
However we have tons of evidence that people have memories of previous lifetimes that weren't, could not be, were in no relation to their ancestors. Under hypnosis, during near death experiences, and sometimes during a coma, an out of body experience, during an LSD trip - even while being "cleared" during Scientology. People have "memories" of their previous lifetimes. Memories that can be forensically looked up and proven.
How could that be?
I can tell you what scientists say. That it's "cryptomnesia" - or somehow remembering something they saw, or heard on tv, or imagined. Somehow they made up these details - emotions and everything else that goes along with a previous remembrance of a lifetime.
But where are these memories stored? In our DNA? Well, that doesn't make sense, because these memories are of different races - sometimes remembering a lifetime as a slave owner (as in "Flipside") or sometimes a lifetime remembered as an Asian monk (in "Flipside" and "It's a Wonderful Afterlife.")
What people report under deep hypnosis is that these memories are not stored in our DNA, but travel with us in the form of energetic "hard drives" - they're described in various accounts as "fractals" or some other mode of transport that retain all of our memories from previous lifetimes. And that when we need to access them - moments of clarity, apotheosis, or in moments of fear, or nearly dying - we access them.
Could they be part of the Jungian "pool" of consciousness, as one scientist has suggested to me? Well that doesn't make a lick of sense either, because people who remember these past lives, remember the death scene, remember leaving the body, and when asked where they'd like to "go" they inevitably say "HOME." As all the 26 people I've filmed under deep hypnosis say. And then, they go "home" - where they claim they meet their loved ones, hang out with spirit guides, and generally plot their next lifetime.
(I began "Flipside" as a documentary about Michael Newton's work as a psychologist where over 7000 people said the same things under deep hypnosis about the afterlife over 30 years prior to his publishing in 1994. I've discovered Dr. Helen Wambach, another psychologist got the same results in her studies in the 1960's. So there's plenty of research to back up these accounts.)
I'm not hypothesizing this detail - it's not a belief or a philosophy - it's what thousands have reported. Consistently. Which is what science requires.
So let's start there.
Ben Affleck should know, should be aware that he is not his ancestors. Any more than the actress who plays Desdemona coming off stage and berating the actor who played Othello for killing her. "It's in the play!"
(This quote, courtesy of the actress Kathy Bates, who said it at the end of last year's "American Horror Story" - which sums up perfectly what these reports of why we choose difficult lives, but there's only forgiveness in the afterlife.)
So if Ben had slave owners in his memories of previous lifetimes - which like I say, occurred in someone interviewed in "Flipside" who saw and felt and experienced what it was like to beat and whip people without any feeling for them - and seeing and feeling and experiencing the horror of that experience.
And then being told by his spirit guides that he had "transferred that anger to himself" and was still working on beating himself up over his past life behaviors, but that he's "doing better now." (The person is a hypnotherapist, who has healed countless people in his work; Paul Aurand, former President of the Newton Institute).
Harvard's Gary Schwartz PhD wrote the introduction to "Flipside." (He also got a PhD from Yale and ran one of their medical schools). He's been at the forefront of studying consciousness existing outside the body, so Professor Gates might want to check into his work.
Or perhaps Harvard's Eben Alexander, a neurosurgeon who had a profound between life experience as recounted in "Proof of Heaven" (Proof also mean a scientific argument for, by the way) - who has personally experienced consciousness existing outside the brain. Or perhaps look into the work of UVA's Dr. Bruce Greyson, whose epic work on near death experiences is distilled in the youtube video "Is Consciousness Produced by the Brain" where he demonstrates the many cases where people whose brains are not working, actually work in various cases.
(80 mins that will convince you that consciousness is not confined to the brain. UVA's Dr. Bruce Greyson speaking in Dharamsala, reproduced in "It's a Wonderful Afterlife")
But no, you see, people focus on the idea that somehow Ben's stardom might have been affected by this revelation that someone in his genetic tree owned slaves. And now, here we have the opportunity to prove that's nonsense - that he has no more responsibility for what his genetic forefathers did, than a fruit fly does for being angry that he lives for 24 hours.
Just like people killing each other in Northern Ireland for the fact that their forefathers were of a particular religion. There's no evidence they are their forefathers, but there is evidence that they've reincarnated on both sides of the fence.
Just like people killing each other in the Middle East. There's DNA evidence that shows Palestinians and Israelis are nearly identical in their DNA, much more so than those outside their group. And there's no evidence that people had previously lifetimes in their genetic tree - unless they chose to do so. And there's plenty of evidence of people reincarnating on "opposite sides of the fence."
Just like slaves and their slave owners. There's no evidence that people remembered lifetimes as slaves (unless that was a choice they made in a previous lifetime) nor is there any evidence that people were slave owners. However there is evidence that a boy in Ohio who is white, remembers a lifetime where he was a young girl who died in a fire in Chicago (who was black.)
Here's his story.
"It's in the data. Data does not lie. We only lie to ourselves about the data." (said no one but me)
What the research in "Flipside" demonstrates, (and now in "It's a Wonderful Afterlife") over and over again is that we choose our parents each time out. We choose our lifetime each time we decide to come here. Yes, we can choose to be a slave owner, yes, we can choose to be a slave - and we have our own private, personal reasons for making that choice, and none of us can judge another for their choice - because we can't be in their shoes.
And in this case, Ben chose to be here on the planet, and I applaud him for it. But he should take this opportunity to look into the research - the real research about who he is, about why he chose to be on the planet. He'll find it if he looks for it, if he's open to it. To examine why he chose this particular life, this particular path.
And that my friends, is my two cents for the day.
"Ben Affleck Asked PBS Not To Reveal Ancestry"
(AP Photo/Cliff Owen, File |
Despite playing my way through Boston U via a piano-bar in Charlestown (The Warren Tavern) near his home - other than that proximity, I have no reason to comment on this story, other than... it's nonsense.
She agrees with me. Or at least I hope so. Taken on the set of my film "My Bollywood Bride" |
But back to Mr. Affleck who is "accused" ("Je Accuse!") of asking a reality TV show to cut out the part where his ancestors owned slaves.
Here's the issue: Harvard's Robert Gates, who hosts the show, claims Ben (or his reps) asked him to delete that part of the show that revealed Ben's relatives owned slaves:
"PBS and Harvard scholar Henry Louis Gates, host of the show that traces the ancestry of well-known guests, said in separate statements that they didn't censor the slave-owner details. Instead, more interesting ancestors of the actor emerged and Gates chose to highlight them in October's segment featuring Affleck, they said in the statements posted on the PBS website..."
(Professor Gates is the professor who was arrested on his porch in that tragic "arrested for being black" incident in Cambridge years ago. Unfortunately, a victim of a centuries old amount of prejudice in the Boston area, where I went to school across the Charles River.)
And then this quote jumped out at me:
"In their email exchange, Gates asks (Sony's Michael) Lynton for advice on how to handle Affleck's request. "Here's my dilemma: confidentially, for the first time, one of our guests has asked us to edit out something about one of his ancestors--the fact that he owned slaves. Now, four or five of our guests this season descend from slave owners, including Ken Burns. We've never had anyone ever try to censor or edit what we found. He's a megastar. What do we do?" Gates wrote on July 22, 2014."
Hello?
"The fact that HE OWNED SLAVES." Now, I imagine he's not referring to Ben Affleck here, because Ben never owned slaves.
Includes an account of someone who did own slaves... in a previous life |
There's no evidence that we are our ancestors. We don't have memories of what our ancestors did. Under hypnosis, during a near death experience, or any other event in human history. None. (I'm sorry all those relatives of mine, Irish and Italian who celebrate that fact every year with pasta or beer. It's nice to believe we are them, but we ain't. And it shows)
However we have tons of evidence that people have memories of previous lifetimes that weren't, could not be, were in no relation to their ancestors. Under hypnosis, during near death experiences, and sometimes during a coma, an out of body experience, during an LSD trip - even while being "cleared" during Scientology. People have "memories" of their previous lifetimes. Memories that can be forensically looked up and proven.
How could that be?
I can tell you what scientists say. That it's "cryptomnesia" - or somehow remembering something they saw, or heard on tv, or imagined. Somehow they made up these details - emotions and everything else that goes along with a previous remembrance of a lifetime.
Hypnotherapists in Iowa watching "Flipside" on DVD. Available on Amazon, or Gaiam TV. Nice screening room. |
What people report under deep hypnosis is that these memories are not stored in our DNA, but travel with us in the form of energetic "hard drives" - they're described in various accounts as "fractals" or some other mode of transport that retain all of our memories from previous lifetimes. And that when we need to access them - moments of clarity, apotheosis, or in moments of fear, or nearly dying - we access them.
Could they be part of the Jungian "pool" of consciousness, as one scientist has suggested to me? Well that doesn't make a lick of sense either, because people who remember these past lives, remember the death scene, remember leaving the body, and when asked where they'd like to "go" they inevitably say "HOME." As all the 26 people I've filmed under deep hypnosis say. And then, they go "home" - where they claim they meet their loved ones, hang out with spirit guides, and generally plot their next lifetime.
(I began "Flipside" as a documentary about Michael Newton's work as a psychologist where over 7000 people said the same things under deep hypnosis about the afterlife over 30 years prior to his publishing in 1994. I've discovered Dr. Helen Wambach, another psychologist got the same results in her studies in the 1960's. So there's plenty of research to back up these accounts.)
I'm not hypothesizing this detail - it's not a belief or a philosophy - it's what thousands have reported. Consistently. Which is what science requires.
So let's start there.
Ben Affleck should know, should be aware that he is not his ancestors. Any more than the actress who plays Desdemona coming off stage and berating the actor who played Othello for killing her. "It's in the play!"
(This quote, courtesy of the actress Kathy Bates, who said it at the end of last year's "American Horror Story" - which sums up perfectly what these reports of why we choose difficult lives, but there's only forgiveness in the afterlife.)
Kathy Bates in her "Freak Show" costume |
And then being told by his spirit guides that he had "transferred that anger to himself" and was still working on beating himself up over his past life behaviors, but that he's "doing better now." (The person is a hypnotherapist, who has healed countless people in his work; Paul Aurand, former President of the Newton Institute).
Gary Schwartz PhD, author of many books on consciousness, "Sacred Promise" included. |
Harvard's own Dr. Alexander wrote about his consciousness existing beyond his body. |
Or perhaps Harvard's Eben Alexander, a neurosurgeon who had a profound between life experience as recounted in "Proof of Heaven" (Proof also mean a scientific argument for, by the way) - who has personally experienced consciousness existing outside the brain. Or perhaps look into the work of UVA's Dr. Bruce Greyson, whose epic work on near death experiences is distilled in the youtube video "Is Consciousness Produced by the Brain" where he demonstrates the many cases where people whose brains are not working, actually work in various cases.
The book by Dr. Greyson, Drs Kelly, interviewed in "It's a Wonderful Afterlife" |
(80 mins that will convince you that consciousness is not confined to the brain. UVA's Dr. Bruce Greyson speaking in Dharamsala, reproduced in "It's a Wonderful Afterlife")
But no, you see, people focus on the idea that somehow Ben's stardom might have been affected by this revelation that someone in his genetic tree owned slaves. And now, here we have the opportunity to prove that's nonsense - that he has no more responsibility for what his genetic forefathers did, than a fruit fly does for being angry that he lives for 24 hours.
Just like people killing each other in Northern Ireland for the fact that their forefathers were of a particular religion. There's no evidence they are their forefathers, but there is evidence that they've reincarnated on both sides of the fence.
Just like people killing each other in the Middle East. There's DNA evidence that shows Palestinians and Israelis are nearly identical in their DNA, much more so than those outside their group. And there's no evidence that people had previously lifetimes in their genetic tree - unless they chose to do so. And there's plenty of evidence of people reincarnating on "opposite sides of the fence."
Just like slaves and their slave owners. There's no evidence that people remembered lifetimes as slaves (unless that was a choice they made in a previous lifetime) nor is there any evidence that people were slave owners. However there is evidence that a boy in Ohio who is white, remembers a lifetime where he was a young girl who died in a fire in Chicago (who was black.)
Here's his story.
"It's in the data. Data does not lie. We only lie to ourselves about the data." (said no one but me)
What the research in "Flipside" demonstrates, (and now in "It's a Wonderful Afterlife") over and over again is that we choose our parents each time out. We choose our lifetime each time we decide to come here. Yes, we can choose to be a slave owner, yes, we can choose to be a slave - and we have our own private, personal reasons for making that choice, and none of us can judge another for their choice - because we can't be in their shoes.
And in this case, Ben chose to be here on the planet, and I applaud him for it. But he should take this opportunity to look into the research - the real research about who he is, about why he chose to be on the planet. He'll find it if he looks for it, if he's open to it. To examine why he chose this particular life, this particular path.
Prior to some screening somewhere on the planet. |
And that my friends, is my two cents for the day.