View Full Version : top of the pyramid???
ninjaboy
03-23-2005, 06:45 PM
For any one who hasn't yet seen what the bleep go see it. like yesterday. It's excelent............and it's all about creating your own reality.
Scott Sonnon
03-23-2005, 06:52 PM
Excellent movie.
I'd say though that it's the entire pyramid in a blink. :wink:
"Don't try to be in the know. Be in the Mystery!" - Favorite quote from the movie by Fred Alan Wolf, Ph.D. in Physics.
Scott Sonnon
03-23-2005, 07:04 PM
Here is an excerpt transcribed from the movie by Dr. Joe Dispenza, DC:
Create My Day
"I wake up in the morning, and I consciously create my day the way I want it to happen. Now, sometimes, because my mind is examining all the things that I need to get done, it takes me a little bit to settle down, and get to the point, of where I'm actually intentionally creating my day. But here's the thing."
"When I create my day, and out of nowhere, little things happen that are so unexplainable, I know that they are the process or the result of my creation. And the more I do that, the more I build a neural net, in my brain, that I accept that that's possible. Gives me the power and the incentive to do it the next day."
"So, if we're consciously designing our destiny, if we're consciously, from a spiritual standpoint, throwing in what the idea that our thoughts can affect our reality or affect our life, because reality equals life. Then, I have this little pact that I have when I create my day."
"I say, I'm taking this time to create my day, and I'm infecting the Quantum Field. Now, if it is in fact, the observer's watching me the whole time that I'm doing this, and there is a spiritual aspect to myself. Then, show me a sign today, that you paid attention to any one of these things that I created, and bring them in a way that I won't expect."
"So, I'm as surprised as the- as the- at my ability to be able to experience these things, and make it so that I have no doubt that its come from you. And so, I live my life, in a sense, all day long, thinking about being a genius, or thinking about being the glory and the power of God, or thinking about being Unconditional Love."
"I'll use living as a genius, for example. And as I do that, during parts of the day, I'll have thoughts that are so amazing, that cause a chill in my physical body, that have come from nowhere. But then, I remember that that thought has an associated energy, that's produced an effect in my physical body."
"Now, that's a subjective experience, but the truth is is that I don't think that unless I was creating my day to have unlimited thought, that that thought would come."
(Dr. Joe Dispenza in What the BLEEP Do We Know!?TM)
http://www.circularstrengthmag.com/forum/images/smiles/smiley_297.gif Righteous.
el chief
03-24-2005, 06:13 AM
Is this movie at the theaters or available for rental?
Aaron Mcgrath
03-24-2005, 06:48 AM
I agree "What the bleep do we know anyway" is a great movie. It opened up so new areas of me to explore. Definitely worth checking out. 8)
ninjaboy
03-24-2005, 07:15 AM
I'ts on dvd right now and they have a study guide that is downloadable for free on their web site in pdf format.
Coach Gostnell
03-29-2005, 09:05 AM
I rented What the Bleep... and watched it yesterday.
It was all food for thought but I especially like Dr. Joe Dispenza and what he had to say.
I wake up in the morning, and I consciously create my day the way I want it to happen. This totally resonates and what a way to deepen personal practice!
Though I wondered about some other things, such as when they talked about the brain lighting up when the eyes see an object, then lighting up the same way when the object is remembered. Believe the phrase was, "The brain can't tell the difference between what it sees and what it remembers." That's maybe oversimplified? because something can tell the difference or we'd be running into closed doors that we remember as open doorways.
Also the business about Native Americans not being able to see Columbus' ships because they'd never seen anything like that before & had no pattern or frame of reference. Well, yes, pattern recognition is a survival technique (plus a great way to find those luscious morels hiding out in the woods looking just like the rest of the forest litter), but surely the people Columbus was "discovering", like anyone living off the land, were very aware of changes & variations in their environment, and even more surely must have seen large tree trunks or whatever tossing about in the sea after a storm.
It's like going into a really crammed second-hand store: You see "all" the stuff, but it's hard to pick out individual objects, and then as you begin to, it starts with the items for which you've already developed a "search image". So perhaps the local folk couldn't quite make out what the heck that was on the horizon, but invisible to them? Don't think so somehow....
Meanwhile, I have a friend who's into Hellinger work, which - briefly & oversimplistically - involves doing "constellations" to detoxify family secrets sometimes going back for generations, and freeing people from old family traumas, allowing love to flow between generations without restriction. (sort of pyschological Softwork :D ). As she gets deeper into it, she alludes to some of the same work being done on the quantum level, but evidently Hellinger's conclusion about all this is that's there's NO free will (at least so my friend understands). Of course, free will/no free will has been a long-standing philosophical argument and I haven't gone into it except from snatched conversations w/ her, but interesting how people use science to reach/confirm what they already choose to believe.
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