As the perceived reality always reflects from the inside out, whatever experiencing right now is indeed your inner world revealed through you and likewise back at you. During the ascension progress, when an individual realizes own creations each symbol becomes significantly replaced as a reminder of something profound. As our blessed Mother Earth, Gaia is adapting herself for the rising consciousness of spirits; the hidden Secrets dimmed humanity’s light since Now, are surfacing one after another.
The secret governments, mind control experiments, area 51, cover-ups, GMO’s, nuclear weapons, Chemtrails, space discoveries and all other governmental secrets frequently erupt to awaken souls furthermore. Certainly, no need to point out fingers or to detail each sub-title, even though, they all carry the dense information regarding the
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Thus, conversely, other thoughts waft you from the past to future just drags you down from the higher vibrations.
Remember, you are a light being inside of a hologram which seems extremely real. Although, the third-dimensional illusion attempts to tempt, hear your soul’s invite to invoke the higher version of yourselves.
Let’s continue observing one interesting symbol consistently appear inside of the matrix game named Star of David. Star of David, commonly recognized as the symbol of the Israeli flag and the Judaism, even though, it is a Star Tetrahedron, derived from the Flower of Life pattern in the sacred geometry.
The human minds effortlessly perceive shapes third dimensional, however, as consciousness adapts further to the fifth dimension, human perception develops the fifth-dimensional sight to conceive the secret forms within symbols. This ability widens when one switches their perspective from victimhood to the Creator, along with their entire understanding of
The Star of David, also known as The Rosa Winkel is a 6 pointed star used today, by Jews and even a handful of Christians as a symbol of their religion. Today it is being used by many of Jewish organizations, schools, and etc. It is also Israel’s official state symbol, located on money and government correspondence. The Star of David today has great meaning and symbolism, but in 1933-1945 Hitler forced Jews to wear The Star of David as badges of shame.
What we see is not the truth, but rather our interpretation and distortion of the things we struggle to perceive, as our imagination fuses with our conception of reality. We conceptualize these omnipotent forces through our uses of symbols – to create an understandable world through abstractions – in order to explain what these forces are. [INTRODUCE CAPRA]
In the Allegory of the cave, Plato stated "what he had seen before was a cheat and an illusion, but that now, being near to reality and turned toward more real things, he saw more truley." It appeals to me because he's basically inferring what if what we are seeing or what we believe are just our figments of our imagination. A lie that we dwell on, because we are blinded from the truth. Plato statement is something we can all relate. For instance children from our younger years our parents disguise parts of reality to prevent them to live a life of fear. Fear of evil and fear from being hurt. But we as grow older we learn, that there is hate and evil in the world. We learn that not every corner has a rainbow glistening in the sky. And for that
Anne Fadiman’s "The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down" Critical Analysis: Understanding Religion and Cultural Conflicts and how it Impacts the Society
Not only is human connection vital to live a happy and joyful life, but it is necessary to create a legacy, and thus live on through others. But in order to do this, one must first overcome their ego and their sense of self. Once all of the “I” thoughts are gone, one can relate, but fully understand, the higher powers as well as other human beings around us. However, it is important to accept that we may never fully understand the driving force of this universe. While it can be experienced, and we can briefly get an idea of what it is, it is impossible to define these concepts in words, because we don’t have a language that transcends what we can understand. And though many recognize that these concepts could never be fully understood by the human brain, determined minds continue to ask questions that will never have an answer, “pushing their minds to the limits of what we can know” (Armstrong,
Men know well that they are acted upon, but they do not know by whom. So they must invent by themselves the idea of these powers with which they feel themselves in connection, and from that, we are able to catch a glimpse of the way by which they are led to represent them under forms that are really foreign to their nature and to transfigure them by thought. (172)
...ze. Furthermore, avoiding one hazard may cause us to fall subject to another. The labyrinth is infinite in size, and we are only aware of a very minute fraction, but contemplating too much on the unlived possibilities can cause us to be unaware of the present. However, to completely ignore these possibilities, and to ?imagine a future as irrecoverable as the past? (575) will leave us just as lost and trapped.
The conscious mind and the unconscious mind both strongly influence how people behave in society. Neither the conscious mind nor the unconscious mind alone will understand the realistic and the truth. As Plato put it, “when any of them look towards the light...the glare will distress him and he will be unable to see the realities of which in his former state, he had seen the shadows..when he is approaching nearer to being and his eye is turned towards more real existence” (868). He argues that if people suddenly coming back to the den from understanding the real objects will not find the truth and justice correctly like human’s eyes can not suddenly accept the light from the dark or the dark from the light, so people have to have an accustomed procession to find the real truth. In other words, people understanding the conscious mind and the unconscious mind helps people to find the reality and truth. In fact, through understanding their conscious mind and unconscious minds, people can take action effectively in society. They can also make decisions more correctly and improve their awareness about their inner
The family and medical staff who attended Vincent, blinded since childhood by thick cataracts, had high hopes that, for the first time in nearly 45 years, he would be able to see following a surgery to remove the cataracts. When the bandages came off, Vincent saw colors, movement and shape. He even saw details and isolated features of objects. What he could not do, to their dismay, was to make sense of what he saw: he could not form coherent perceptions of objects in his world from the parts and features, and he had no sense of space, depth, or distance. (1)
We carry our past with us, the primitive and irrational mind with its inner desires and emotions, and it is only with an enormous psychic effort that we can detach ourselves from this burden. And when masks shatter down like in Sagazan’s transfiguration, there is our shadow to remind us that we are the monsters. In the very end this is like the process of covering and uncovering, a way to adopt a role, to perform a raw character, to paint our self-portrait.
“Consciousness is defined as everything of which we are aware at any given time - our thoughts, feelings, sensations, and perceptions of the external environment. Physiological researchers have returned to the study of consciousness, in examining physiological rhythms, sleep, and altered states of consciousness (changes in awareness produced by sleep, meditation, hypnosis, and drugs)” (Wood, 2011, 169). There are five levels of consciousness; Conscious (sensing, perceiving, and choosing), Preconscious (memories that we can access), Unconscious ( memories that we can not access), Non-conscious ( bodily functions without sensation), and Subconscious ( “inner child,” self image formed in early childhood).
There are many different Visual Perception principles in perception. The main principles are Gestalt. Gestalt is a German word meaning 'form' or 'shape'. Gestalt psychologists formulated a series of principles that describe how t...
In the present day world, many people have lost themselves in chaos of the everyday routine. Moral reconciliation and spiritual reassessment become compulsory in these tempestuous times, however, due to lack of knowledge and experiences, people do not try to connect to the universe and enhance their sense of being. In his essay “The Eyes of the Skin: Architecture and the Senses”, Juhani Pallasmaa provides a critical look at how human bodies and senses are involved with the architectural spaces around them. He critiques the disparity between human senses and their failing to engage with the environment. Similarly, in the essay “The Mind’s Eye: What The Blind See”, neurologist Oliver Sacks talks about what different perceptual disorders reveal about how human brain processes senses. Sacks documents modern-day examples of this phenomena: his essay contains case studies of people who were able to reconstruct their world so they could communicate with others, despite losing one of the senses. Sacks’s and Pallasmaa’s essays illustrate that humans have the potential to use their senses to perceive life through many different channels. It is essential for people; yet they do not explore all possibilities. In order for people to gain satisfaction in life, it is important for them to use all five senses along with their imagination to become more intimate with their minds and inner qualities, embrace cultural and traditional values, and increase their perception of the world.
“Can the future affect the present, and can the present affect the past?”(1) This is the question posed by the philosophical concept of retrocasualty – the product of time travel to the past. Time travel has been a common staple in science fiction writing, so many of its explanations owe their origins to tales of protagonists discovering its often confusing implications. Many people may already have a great understanding of a few hypothesized behaviors of time travel due to popular media, such as Back to the Future, Star Trek, and many other works of fiction. Currently, scientific knowledge is too premature to know if time travel is possible, no less how it behaves, so questions and answers are open for anybody to contemplate. The most famous question of time travel is the one posed by the temporal paradox, in which the time traveler invokes a condition which causes the circumstances that led up to time travel, or the time traveler’s presence, to become impossible. Many theories have attempted to answer this paradox, introducing behaviorally diverse concepts such as merging time lines, multiple dimensions, or a nature of time where everything is predestined. The act of time travel can produce radically different effects, depending on which solution to the temporal paradox is applied.
When we think about religious symbols, many can recount that Christianity is marked by the Cross, and Judaism is represented by the Star of David. But when recalling the symbol that signifies Islam, the crescent moon, with or without a star, seems to denote the religion accurately. However, there is no historical or religious basis for the crescent moon or the star to symbolize Islam. Actually, Muslims don’t believe in symbolism, and therefore do not identify with any particular symbol to represent their religion as a whole. According to the Encyclopedia Britannica, the crescent was used to represent “the worship of Near Eastern goddess Astarte (The Editors of Encyclopedia Britannica, 2014).” For this reason, many have erroneously believed that Muslims worship a moon god, symbolized by the crescent moon. Instead of being a longstanding Muslim tradition, the Byzantine and Ottoman empires were the actual peoples to use the moon shape for their respective reasons. But because the Ottoman Empire adapted the symbol and the Islamic faith, the crescent moon and Muslims become synonymous. It is important to note that Muslims are adamantly against idolatry, and believe that even seemingly harmless symbols can result in transference of worship from Allah to a mere representation of Allah. Therefore, symbols are not recognized within the faith, and instead, artistic representations of Islam, such as calligraphy and the use of geometric shapes in architecture, distinctively characterize the Muslim identity.