We saw in a recent post that our physical selves are constantly recreated in every moment. Expanding this paradigm to our mental selves, we find the same thing. Remove enough resistance from the equation, and we can know all there is to know in this moment.
This post draws on elements previously discussed in the following.
All there is to know
We can’t possibly know everything; that would be silly. Let’s scope our ambitions down a little. The human brain is absolutely amazing, but even it can’t handle infinite amounts of information. Besides, even god doesn’t know everything.
Not everything is relevant in every time and place. The useful and relevant bits of information that are applicable to any physical time and place are really quite limited. The difficulty is in recalling what we already “know” and recalling things we didn’t know that we “know.”
Therefore, we’ll let our mantra be to know all there is to know in this moment.
Recreated in this moment
Recall that everything physical is recreated countless times each second. For convenience, let’s call for today each of those recreations, on the order of the Planck time of about 5.39 x 10-44 s, one moment. For the most part, everything is in the same place with the same velocity as it was in the previous moment. Almost everything is uniformly positioned from moment to moment, particularly at low speeds and densities.
The fountain meditation uses this model. It’s an attempt to groove the idea that source energy rushes to recreate our physical selves in every moment. Furthermore, we have control over how the energy flows. We can allow the energy to fill out the form in the most ideal way, or we can restrict the energy in subtle ways producing deformations here and there.
The firehose of consciousness
Our minds are constructed in essentially the same way. Source energy rushes to interact with the physical brain creating the minds we know. Some amount of physical motion happens within the brain from moment to moment which is a byproduct of both physical recreation and mental recreation but also feedback between the two.
The same fountain visualization applies to the mind. Energy can be allowed or restricted somewhat as it makes its way to the brain. We can let everything flow freely, or we can stick our thumb in the stream. Michelangelo’s The Creation of Adam hides this in plain sight but illustrates the point perfectly.
Is god really riding on an awkward mish-match of angel babies and sheets? No, it’s a human brain; look again! Source energy constantly reaches out to us through the human brain.
In the picture, god makes every effort within the constraints of the given reality to reach out and make contact. Adam needs to make only the slightest effort to bridge the gap, but he does not. Practically none of us do. Why not you ask? Because we’re all following the same clueless rules that everyone else follows.
Bridging the gap
First, we’re not completely blocking the communications that source energy sends with each moment. We always have the guidance of our emotions.
Second, everything we experience in our lives is a form of communication. What we experience and observe is a combination of what we’re attracting in our physical bodies but also what our inner beings are attracting. We have manifestations and premanifestations indicating what we have going on vibrationally.
More to the point, however, we can open ourselves up to more specific communication with our inner beings. We can achieve the same level of awareness and communication that all the great channels have achieved. Everyone can know all there is to know, and we can have it in this moment.
We only have to put forward the same amount of effort as it takes to straighten our wrists.
Opening ourselves to all there is to know
The first step to learning anything new is to first admit we don’t already know everything. Meditation is the analogous admission that our personalities don’t already have all the answers. Sitting in quiet meditation is setting the personality aside and waiting for the inner being to finish the connection.
We discussed the process in another post, The Who’s Who of Channeling, but we’ll review it here. Three weeks of daily effective meditation is all it takes. Most of us skip days so that slows things down. None of us are incredibly good at clearing the mind for 15 minutes straight so that also makes it take longer. In reality, the three-week estimate is very optimistic, but it’s worth the slight effort. We frequently work much harder for far less impactful results.
I know all there is to know in this moment
Another side of the allowing coin is to stop disallowing. Get out of the habit of saying, “I don’t know.” Nothing will hold an answer outside your awareness more than, “I don’t know.” Maybe, “I don’t remember,” is a close second particularly once you realize all answers are available to you and they’re only a recall away.
Try more productive sayings like these.
- Let’s find out
- I’ll remember in a second
- I’ll remember as soon as we change the subject
- The answer is on its way
- I know all there is to know in this moment
The middle one, “I’ll remember as soon as we change the subject,” is a fun saying to comment on in the context of the law of attraction. The moment we realize a word or fact isn’t coming to mind, we often get bogged down in the “I can’t remember” or “I don’t know” aspect of the experience.
Change the subject, and the resistance drops. What happens then? Of course, the answer flows.