Friday

Memories, Dreams and Reflections



"Our age has shifted all emphasis to the here and now, and thus brought about a daemonization of man and his world. The phenomenon of dictators and all the misery they have wrought springs from the fact that man has been robbed of transcendence by the shortsightedness of the super-intellectuals. Like them, he has fallen a victim to unconsciousness. But man's task is the exact opposite: to become conscious of the contents that press upward from the unconscious. Neither should he persist in his unconsciousness, nor remain identical with the unconscious elements of his being, thus evading his destiny, which is to create more and more consciousness. As far as we can discern, the sole purpose of human existence is to kindle a light in the darkness of mere being. It may even be assumed that just as the unconscious affects us, so the increase in our consciousness affects the unconscious."  Carl Jung "Memories, Dreams and Reflections."

Carl Jung notes that "Man's task is.. to become conscious of the contents that press upward from the unconscious."

He also notes that man's "destiny.. is to create more... consciousness."

Perhaps.

Then on the other hand, perhaps consciousness isn't created solely in the brain, but is experienced by the brain.  That part of experiencing consciousness is reconnecting to who we are - and more importantly - who we once were. 


As I delve into accessing information from the Flipside - the journey I've mapped out for myself in the next book "Hacking the Afterlife" - I find that the more I delve into the idea that consciousness is not only created by the brain - but that it requires access to the "motherboard" - not the idea of a vast "collective unconscious" that Jung suggested - but individual consciousness of each person, that resides back in the mainframe of the computer, and is accessible when we are "outside of our physical bodies" - whatever that implies.

People who've had near death experiences, out of body experiences, under deep hypnosis, sometimes during a drug induced adventure - people are able to "shut off" the filters in the brain that keep us from accessing this information on a daily basis, and allow us to glimpse the nature of things.  That being that each one of us has a vast library of previous experiences, lifetimes to draw from - and that library exists between lives.

But as they say; the veil is thinning.  



As if the mechanical nature of the filters seems to be easing up, or the energetic construction of the filters seems to be adjusting to allow us more access to this point of view, or information.

How can accessing this information improve my life?

That's ultimately the point of understanding the nature of existence - not to realize that "all is relative" and that "I only exist relatively" (even though that appears to be accurate) but finding a way to process this new information about the nature of our existence so it allows us to enjoy and take advantage of what we're experiencing on a day to day basis.

One profound way that it can affect a person is to realize that what appear to be obstacles, setbacks and trauma, may have some genesis in the between lives realm.  Not in terms of "karma" - but in terms of "what kind of puzzle or task can I design for myself that will help me to overcome this issue?" 



If every task, obstacle or steback becomes an "apparent lesson" - then we can see them for what they really are.  Stumbling blocks that allow us to learn lessons by overcoming them.  The dark stone in your path turns out to be the glowing light of understanding once you've accomplished going through it.



What's that got to do with Presidential politics?

Well, imagine for a moment that each person that is running for office represents some part of the human experience.  Vanity, compassion, negativity, wisdom, etc.  And then imagine that whomever is running for office at this particular time is someone who helps people to examine these human characteristics.  Either to fight for their point of view, or to understand through compassion that they need to support someone who is aligned with their own beliefs and life experience.

Hard to imagine that whatever happens on the planet, is part of the learning experience we all go through.  Like classes in college, or a giant university, each one of us learns from setbacks, failures, or learns that working harder brings positive results.  One can only hope that is the case.

My two cents.



Thursday

Flipside, George Martin and El Otro Lado

Flipside in the news, and some thoughts of the passing our loved ones.

I had the great privelege to film and take a hypnotherapy class this past weekend with Scott De Tamble.  If you've read the books, "Flipside" or "It's a Wonderful AfterLife," you'll recognize Scott from his interviews and facilitating between life sessions.

Scott taught a workshop in past life regression, and over the course of three days I heard some fantastic tales of people examining previous lives, examining what it was like the in womb, as well as accessing a "life planning" session.

Image result for scott de tamble
Scott De Tamble in action

One person saw his life planning session as a kind of dissertation.  He remembered being in a "library" scanning records of all his previous lifetimes, and as he looked at the records, which were on some kind of disc, he was able to say "Oh, that's right, I need to work on this aspect of myself and "fill in that hole."  I later asked him about the library - since everyone who mentions them gives a different description of them.

He said it was like sitting in front of a massive cabinet, and as he went through the drawers, he could pull out a file, and perhaps like looking at a piece of microfiche, he'd hold up the life record to see if it was something he could learn from or access to find out what other aspects of his future life he needed to include.

Sometimes we see ourselves in a temple, church or auditorium.

And then, after that he found himself in a giant auditorium, on a stage like place.  He was addressing his "council" although he didn't call them that - there were 12-13 individuals in front of him seated in a semi-circle, who listened to his outline of what his future life was going to be (he's working as a therapist now in California.)  He wasn't aware of the symbolism of the "council" - as reported in the thousands of cases that Michael Newton discusses in his books, or the 25 or so I discuss in mine - so he wasn't aware that 12 is a pretty high number of people to have on a council, as in the past people have said that for each "life lesson learned" a new member sits on their council.

And when they examine who these people on their council are - they learn that each one represents a different quality that the person has learned - like having a scientist show up on your panel doing your dissertation, who represents astrophysics.  Sometimes they represent courage, music, acting - there are many variations of topics that the individual has "earned" over their lifetimes.  I asked if he could recognize any jewelry on them - in a couple of individuals he did.  (This is a topic that Michael Newton discusses in depth in "Destiny of Souls.")  The jewelry apparently represents some aspects of the life lesson learned - and this fellow described a symbol on one of his panel that represented "healing" and "eternity."

Michael Newton

He said when he was done with the dissertation of describing what his next life would be, they peppered him with questions.  I asked if they were hard questions, or if it felt like they were dismissive or combative in any way - like "Why would you do that?"  And he said no, they were all supportive questions, but were about the nature of lessons he was planning to learn.

Another person had a similar experience in remembering her life planning session - and in this case so a giant building with pillars that seemed as tall as skyscrapers, and an individual at the top of the stairs that resembled the Lincoln Memorial in size.  In other words, she was human sized, and the individual asking her questions, or observing her choice of a next lifetime was a large as Lincoln.  And she said the only word she could use to describe this individual was "God" - as if he was either the creator himself, or someone who represented them.  She got a male vibe from his presence, and his questions to her dealt with what her path and journey in this life has been to date.

Pretty amazing stuff.

There's a series of events and lessons that have to occur before anyone can get their certificate, a recorded past life regression, and proof of ten other clients, but this is something that one of the students willed into existence.  She bugged Scott to do a teaching, and this was the result.  All I can say is; the results were amazing.


Brian Wilson and George Martin

We lost George Martin yesterday.  Lost is a relative term - he's not lost, he's just not here. But all of his loved ones and his son Giles will be missing him.  However, as I'm fond of saying, he's off on another adventure, likely mixing another kind of musical event as we speak.  He's just in another soundstage.

But the LA Times had an article about George's visit to LA, when he went to visit Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys.  And the two of them had an amazing conversation.  George asked Brian "Where his music came from" and Brian said "from my chest - it explodes out of my chest, you know?" And then he said "It comes from a higher place.  It's not quite in my brain, but in a higher place." And George said "It comes from your heart."  Brian agreed, and then George remixed a Beach Boy song on the spot, and Brian exclaims "You've made it better!"

Here's the clip:




I asked the musician Deron Johnson where music came from.  He said "It's just under the surface, like water, like a large pool, and we're above it most of the time, but we can dip down into it."  I think that's equally interesting as an answer - that it comes from a higher place, that music is like water in a pool that we swim in.  Both appear to be accurate in terms of the Flipside - just another form of energy.

From that perspective - George is working with two Beatles as we speak, and at some point in the far distant future (knock on wood) the band will be together again.

Finally, some translation news.  

"El Otro Lado" is out in Spanish. (just in time to tell Donald Trump that he chose this lifetime, but next time he may choose to be a Mexican on the other side of the wall.)
 

"El Otro Lado" Guía del Turista para Abrirse Camino en la Otra Vida

by Richard Martini
 
"¿Qué sucede después de que morimos? El autor y premiado cineasta Richard Martini explora inquietantes nuevas  evidencias acerca de la vida después de la muerte, mediante la “vida entre vidas”, donde se informa que regresamos a encontrar a nuestros seres queridos, almas gemelas y maestros espirituales."


Flipside is out in Spanish, and is currently being translated into French and Italian as well.  I hope that people who need to find it do so - and I did this process through Babelcube for that reason alone.  If people are meant to find this information, I'm trying to make sure they can.

Peace out.

Visions of the Flipside

Bosch


Heres a "Tunnel of white light" as heard in a high percentage of NDEs. I've heard variations, ball of light, moving through light, towards and into light. Feelings of unconditional love, infinite wisdom and reconnecting with loved ones. 

Dr Bruce Greyson UVA created the NDE scale, appears in "Its a Wonderful Afterlife." Mario Beauregard Phd, using fmri has proven these events, memories aren't confined to any particular place in the brain, or "god spot." 

He's in the book as well. Science shows these religious experiences arent religious at all, although they do inspire people to realize life isnt confined to this realm. In my research i find no two nde's are identical, yet they all point to the same conclusion. Like the word "home" - no one can define it outside their own experience, yet we can all agree it exists within our own journey. Not based on belief or philosophy but the data. 

Bosch's depiction of hell, on the other hand, is not in the data. 

Great to see in his paintings, but the few accounts I've examined, dissolve under analysis. "So why are you experiencing this?" Or "why did you choose to be here?" allows a person to see choice or free will is involved. This tunnel, on the other hand, is the way "home" according to the 25 I've filmed and thousands of cases I've examined. 

MEANWHILE FROM THE DAILY MAIL ON FEB 25TH, 2016:


The following is a news story about a woman who died for an hour, saw her husband during an NDE and came back. I'm posting it as "further data" - and by data I mean:

I'm referring to the thousands of cases Dr Greyson has examined at UVA, the data from the Aware project (2000 cases over 10 years) even your own brothers experience during an NDE. at some point thousands of cases, examined by scientists becomes "data." And this case is no different than those. Sorry. Its just science. But you'd know that if you read Dr Greyson's chapter in "its a wonderful afterlife." Not belief. Or philosophy. Or a story in the paper. Based on thousands of medical cases.

This story is just like all the other stories. Identical. Dr. Greyson is the person who created the NDE scale back in the 80's. Indeed, the medical establishment considers NDE research science and his articles have been peer reviewed and published. He's considered the "godfather of NDE research." 

His book "Irreducible Mind" is a textbook for many psychiatrists (as he is the head psychiatrist at UVA.) Interviewed him for the book (It's a Wonderful Afterlife). There are other scientists who have studied NDE - the Aware project, where a doctor studied NDEs under clinical conditions (hospitals, ORs, etc). 

As Harvard's Gary Schwartz PhD mentions in the foreword to Flipside - "at some point you have to stop pretending" that these cases are not data. Each and every case has been examined thoroughly that Greyson cites - I recommend his youtube talk "Is consciousness produced by the brain" for further cites.

Just because a person in the UK has the identical experience that other NDE people have - that my own brother had after dying in Fort Benning Georgia - which is also reported in the book - these cases all saying relatively the same thing. And that's how Dr. Greyson was able to make a scale of events for near death experiences. 

I've stayed at Greyson's home, and he's given me a tour of his facilities at UVA. I had a conference meeting with his associates at the Dept of Perceptual Studies - including Drs Jim Tucker, Ed Kelley (PhD from Harvard) when you have thousands of people saying the same things about their experience - the same way people collect data on headaches or acne, at some point subjective reports become "evidence" and "data." 

(I refer also to Mario Beauregard's "Brain Wars" for further cites and medical cases) 

I've documented these cases on film for the past 8 years. so I'm not offering that it's data lightly - but at some point, one has to step back from the insistence that its not data to ask - "why wouldn't we consider it data? At what point or degree would you consider it data, if scientists have gone on record saying that it is data?" 

Some folks will never see these reports as anytime but conjecture (for whatever reason). That's their path. But it's not mine. I've examined thousands of these cases, documented 25 on film and dozens in print - so to me - at the end of the day, since they all say relatively the same thing "I knew it was my wife/son/daughter/best friend because I know what their touch feels like, they answered questions before I could ask them" etc... these reports become what science requires: that they be consistent and replicable.

While this woman may have invented this incident, she didnt invent dying for an hour. The report she gives of seeing her husband is consistent with many NDEs. And as I've done, taking people who've had an NDE and filming them under hypnosis allows them to replicate the event. And as noted in "Its a Wonderful Afterlife" what they report is the same event yet with more clarity. They could dispute the memory of the event, but they do not. 

Doesnt matter what religion they are, what gender or background. They consistently say the same things.

HERE'S THE ARTICLE AS REPORTED FROM THE UK:

'Sonia, it's not your time... just go back to the kids': Bingo worker who 'died' for 56 minutes says she was saved by the spirit of her late husband who told her not to die

  • Sonia Burton, 50, suffered a heart attack and had no pulse for 56 minutes
  • Paramedics refused to give up on her and continued to carry out CPR
  • Mum-of-four said her late husband visited her and said 'it's not your time'
  • Sonia thanked medics who saved her when they were reunited on Tuesday
A bingo worker who had no pulse for almost an hour after suffering a massive heart attack says her late husband visited her and said 'it's not your time'.
Sonia Burton was 'dead' for 56 minutes following her heart attack at the bingo hall in Ashington, Northumberland, but paramedics refused to give up on her.
The mum-of-four said: 'The only thing I remember is my late husband coming to me and saying "it's not your time, Sonia, go back to the children". Then I woke up in hospital.' 
Saved: Sonia, who had no pulse for almost an hour, pictured with her daughters, granddaughter and brother
Saved: Sonia, who had no pulse for almost an hour, pictured with her daughters, granddaughter and brother
Message: Sonia Burton with her late husband John. Sonia said she got a message from John, who died in 2004 following a heart attack aged just 37, while she was being resuscitated 
Message: Sonia Burton with her late husband John. Sonia said she got a message from John, who died in 2004 following a heart attack aged just 37, while she was being resuscitated 
'Every day I think how incredible it is that I'm still here,' she said. 'I don't take anything for granted.'
On the day of her heart attack, Sonia had gone about her daily tasks with daughter Rebecca, 30.
She had been due to start work at Gala Bingo Hall in Ashington at 5.30pm but went in early at 4.45pm to talk to colleagues and have a coffee.
The 50-year-old said: 'I mainly work in the dining area and had been heading out of there when I remember getting a pain in my chest and then collapsing.'
Out cold, Sonia's frantic boss Karen Arkle began trying to resuscitate her as an ambulance was called. 
Within four minutes, paramedic Jason Riches and emergency care assistant Gary French were on the scene, taking over CPR from Karen. 
Sonia described herself as a 'living miracle' as she was reunited with the paramedics who saved her lifeSonia pictured with the people that saved her life - trainee paramedic Rosie Priest (left), and paramedics Stephen Eke (second from left) and Jason Riches (right)
Sonia pictured with the people that saved her life - trainee paramedic Rosie Priest (left), and paramedics Stephen Eke (second from left) and Jason Riches (right)
Sonia described herself as a 'living miracle' as she was reunited with the paramedics who saved her life
They were then backed up by paramedic Stephen Eke and first year student paramedic Rosie Priest.
For the next 56 minutes the team worked to save Sonia as she was transported to Northumbria Specialist Emergency Care Hospital in Cramlington.
It was while they were trying to save her that Sonia said she got a message from late husband John, who died in 2004 following a heart attack aged just 37.
'I spoke to him and he told me that it was not my time and I should go back,' she said. 'To be honest, it felt very comforting.'
By the time they arrived at Cramlington hospital, Sonia was still unconscious but had started breathing. 
She was then transferred to Newcastle's Freeman Hospital, where she underwent lifesaving surgery to have a stent fitted in her heart.
Eight days later she was back home, being cared for by brother, Mark, and her four children, Michael, 31, Megan, 22, Rebecca and 19 year old Thomas.
'It's strange to think I was technically dead for an hour,' added Sonia. 'If it wasn't for the guys being there so quickly and not giving up on me, it would have been a very different story. 
'My mind is a bit forgetful and I'm on a lot of medication but otherwise I'm doing really well - and, at the end of the day, I'm still here.'
Sonia Burton, pictured with her granddaughter Sophie Murray, said it would have been a different story if the medics had given up on her
Sonia Burton, pictured with her granddaughter Sophie Murray, said it would have been a different story if the medics had given up on her
 Sonia Burton, pictured with her family, was 'dead' for 56 minutes following her heart attack at the bingo hall
 Sonia Burton, pictured with her family, was 'dead' for 56 minutes following her heart attack at the bingo hall
Sonia's brother Mark, who she lives with, had been walking the dog when he received the call to say his sister had collapsed.
He said: 'They were working on her when I got there. It was frantic, there was no life in her at all.
'I said 'please don't stop' and, they never did.
'I couldn't be more thankful for everything Stephen, Jason and Gary did for Sonia that day. To see Sonia like she was that day and to see her now is phenomenal, I can't express just what a good job they've done.'
Paramedic Stephen, 43, said: 'Jason and I have over 50 years' experience between us and neither of us have ever seen somebody come back after that length of time.
'We often get a return of a pulse, maybe one out of 10, but usually it's just the adrenaline that's making the heart work again and as soon as that wears off they go back into cardiac arrest.
'It's unbelievable to see how well Sonia's doing now.'
Paramedic Jason, 44, said: 'You go into this job to help people. It's a nice feeling knowing that we were able to make a difference and even better to see what a remarkable recovery she's made.'


Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3418068/Bingo-worker-died-56-minutes-says-saved-late-husband-visited-said-not-time.html#ixzz41Dd8r3qL
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Sunday

Flipside published in India

This just in: 

the Indian version of my book Flipside. Beautifully published by (Prashant Solomon who is a contributing writer on spirituality for "The Times of India") 

"Thinking Tree Publishers." 

Reincarnation, between life stories filmed, transcribed by yours truly, intro'd to the country where the concept evolved. What makes these accounts different is the claim we are fully conscious between lives and we have free will to choose our next life not based on karma, but compassion. 

The desire to learn from or teach lessons to our loved ones, sometimes at their request. 

Book tour to follow in India, can't wait to return to see the Taj, stay at the Taj, while drinking a Taj Mahal.

Flipside in India!!!

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