The brain may be a processor of information, but it’s not a neutral one any more than a computer is neutral when it has been encoded to process information in a particular way. Program a computer to decode information ‘A’ and not information ‘B’ and that’s what it will do. We call this a ‘firewall’ and they are employed in China to prevent the population accessing large swathes of the Internet that the Chinese dictators don’t want people to see. The same can be done with the brain and a central factor in this is what is called brain ‘placidity’. It was believed until relatively recently that once the brain was formed this was how it remained for life. Scientists now know the very opposite is the case. ‘Placidity’ refers to how the brain changes the way information is processed in accordance with the information that it processes (Fig 41 ). All information is delivered in the form of frequency. Every thought, emotion and perceptual state is represented by its own unique frequency and as the brain processes information it arranges its neuron networks to fire (decode) in the sequence those frequencies represent. The brain processes particular frequencies of information, thought, emotion and perceptual states and here you have the reason why different perceptions and behaviour light-up different parts of the brain which are involved in processing those frequencies. Consciousness via perception activates those parts of the brain and the brain does not activate itself. The more the brain becomes dominated by flows of the same information, thought, emotion and perception (frequencies) the more its placidity will solidify the neural networks into a repeating sequence of processing (‘firing’ – decoding ). The only way this can be changed is through other information, thought, emotion and perception representing other frequencies which then, through placidity, change the sequence of processing. Perceptions are represented by frequency waves and create a self-fulfilling conscious and subconscious feedback loop in which we interact with The Field of possibility only within the frequency band that our perceptions represent. In this way our perceptions become our experienced reality. The potential for mass manipulation is limitless when the Cult knows this and works to stop humanity knowing. Perception frequencies impact on the brain through placidity to dictate the way it processes information. In the absence of any change the brain goes on processing information in the same way. Through this sequence solidified perceptions become self-fulfilling prophecies as the brain processes information to match the solidified perceptions and the subsequent neuron-firing sequence which comes from that. We see this in people unable and unwilling to explore another point of view or ways of looking at situations and subjects. They say ‘my mind is made up’ (solidified neuron pathways), ‘I am right’ and ‘the science is settled’ when it blatantly is not.
The term ‘a closed mind’ is most apt. People can break free anytime they make the choice to realise they are entrapped by their own unyielding perceptions that lead their brain to process information in ways that appear to confirm those perceptions (Fig 42 ). Round and round it goes again like a fairground ride apparently moving while going nowhere. This is not helped by the system employed by Internet giants such as YouTube which recommend information based on your past viewing. Hey look at this – something else to confirm what you already think. The very idea that we can form solidified perceptions while being aware of a fraction of 0.005 percent of what exists in the Universe is a fair definition of insanity. Religions go even further and insist that all people need to know can be found between the covers of a single book within a fraction of a fraction of 0.005 percent of what exists in the Universe. As a measurement of crazy, that is world class. It becomes clear why the Cult has always sought to control the information that people see and hear worldwide. Information dictates the way the brain processes information and becomes the person’s sense of reality which, in turn, becomes their experienced reality. There’s a lot more about this to come in relation to current events which look very different from this perspective.
Time? What time?
I understand why people find it so difficult to comprehend that there is no time when ‘time’ is the very foundation of human society. Everything is driven by the perception of ‘time’ – time is running out, look at the time, how time flies and where has the time gone? Yet the only moment within the entirety of Infinite Reality is the NOW. There is nothing else. What we perceive as past, present and future are all happening in the same NOW. I know that sounds incomprehensible to most people, but look at it from this perspective: Where is the ‘present’? In the NOW. Where are you when you think about the ‘past’? In the NOW. Where are you when you think about the ‘future’? In the NOW. Where does the perceived ‘future’ eventually happen? In the NOW. Where did the ‘past’ happen? In the NOW. There is only the NOW (Fig 43 ). As you read this book in what is perceived to be the ‘present’ all your thoughts and memories of the ‘past’ exist in your conscious and subconscious mind in that same ‘present’ as do all the wavefield perceptions that you will experience as the ‘future’. They are all vibrating in the same field of NOW. I see scientists speculating about how the future can affect the present or even the past. Some of their experiments make it seem that way when in fact ‘past’, ‘present’ and ‘future’ affect each other because they are all happenings and connections in the same NOW. ‘Time’ is a decoded construct of holographic reality. Wavefield happenings in the NOW are arranged in a holographic sequence by the brain so that one appears to follow another. The apparent speed that Body-Mind runs this sequence leads to the perception of ‘time’ and our personal mental and emotional state affects how fast or slow ‘time’ appears to pass. When we are doing things we don’t like ‘time’ seems to pass slowly while activities we enjoy make ‘time’ appear to pass quickly – ‘My goodness, where’s the time gone?’ and ‘Time flies when you are enjoying yourself’. Einstein called this ‘relativity’ as in ‘time’ being relative to the observer – the observer or decoder again. He was describing this in terms of the speed and location of the observer relative to what was being observed, but it goes much deeper into the speed at which the observer processes information. A sequence of events (‘time’) comes into existence only when we decode that sequence into experienced reality and the passage of ‘time’ is dictated by perception – one person says ‘time is flying by’ while someone even in the same room will say ‘time is dragging today’.
‘Time’ seems to pass quicker the more information the brain processes and as ever more information is processed today, especially with instant news, social media and the Internet, ‘time’ seems to be speeding up for many people. Studies with soldiers have shown how time is in the mind. Three groups were taken on a march of the same distance but at one point each was told they had been marching for different times even though they had not. One group was told the correct time or miles they had been marching; the second was told they had been marching for less time than they had; and the third was told they had been marching for more time than they had. The fatigue of the three groups matched the time they thought they had been marching when the time/distance involved was the same. A movie on DVD exists in the same NOW and I think everyone could agree with that. We experience the movie, existing in the same NOW, as a sequence of ‘time’ as one scene follows another. Where you are on the DVD will appear to be your ‘present’ while your ‘past’ is the scenes you have already watched and your ‘future’ is the scenes you have yet to watch (Fig 44 ). A DVD in totality in the NOW is still experienced as ‘time’ passing from past through present to future and that’s how we experience the passage of ‘time’ when there is only the NOW. Philosopher Alan Watts described ‘individual’ events as ‘different sections of one continuous happening’. This is a good analogy, as with the DVD, and there is also the symbolism of experiencing a journey along a river as a series of moments in ‘time’ when the whole river exists in the same moment from source to sea. Each perceived ‘moment’ following past ‘moments’ are really ‘different sections of ‘one continuous happening’. Time as we perceive it is quite obviously a human construct in that it involves clock-time which is so ridiculously manufactured that you can pass an invisible line called the International Dateline and instantly be in tomorrow or yesterday (Fig 45 ). People in Australia enter each New Year long before those in the United States and yet if an American in his today calls an Australian in his tomorrow they talk in the same NOW. The speed of ageing is connected to the perception of ‘time’ that doesn’t exist except as a decoded illusion. While the body’s wavefield stability remains the same the body hologram cannot change. Ageing is an interaction between mind and body. There is a sequence in the body blueprint that leads to a cycle from birth to death. After all we wouldn’t want to stay in this one band of frequency forever when there is infinity to explore. The speed of this ‘ageing’ sequence, however, is down to the mind and its perceptions. People think they must age in a certain cycle and period only because almost everyone else does. Once again we have a self-fulfilling prophecy in which ageing is driven by the perception of ageing gleaned from experiencing the ‘norm’ of ageing. This is a quote that captures the time-illusion theme:
Time doesn’t exist, clocks exist. Time is just an agreed upon construct. We have taken distance (one rotation of the Sun), divided it into segments, then given those segments labels. While it has its uses, we have been programmed to live our lives by this construct as if it were real. We have confused our shared construct with something that is tangible and thus have become its slave.
A slave to the Cult ‘gods’ and the manipulated construct of illusory ‘time’; but we don’t have to be. Once we understand how the mind and a perception of ‘time’ interact we can start to control time. Top sportsmen and women already do this without realising. Researchers at the University of London found that those taking part in sports involving fast movement of a ball (tennis, baseball, cricket etc.) are able to slow down time. Their focus during play processes information so fast that its holographic movie sequence runs slower than the general population. The crowd in a tennis match with their heads lurching left and right to follow the ball perceive one speed while the players are experiencing another. This allows them to accurately hit a ball which at ‘spectator’ speed would defeat them. You often hear it said about great footballers that they seem to have more ‘time’ than everyone else. They do through the way they process information. They assess a situation on the pitch (process information) so fast that they can respond quicker than others who process (and so react) slower. Remember the game is happening in the minds of players and therefore it must be mind that decides the outcome. When this is more deeply understood by the world of sport we will see performances of all kinds improve by amazing leaps. The limit of sporting performance – as with life itself – is decided only by the self-imposed perception limits of the mind. There is an altered state that top sports people know well called ‘the Zone’. I experienced it myself as a footballer and it is not confined to sport. I go into the Zone when I am writing and during speaking events. In sport the Zone slows down ‘time’, the sound of the crowd dissipates to silence, and any nerves or worry about the outcome disappear. You access a level of awareness beyond what is called the ‘conscious mind’ which can be full of self-doubt (‘You think too much’). What follows is a calmness and level of focus that is only interested in doing the job and not worrying about what the outcome will be. In these moments come the best performances which self-doubt and emotion can otherwise sabotage.