Summary
Highlights
The universe is comprised of a very real energetic field, not just a metaphor. Every human cell, made of trillions of atoms, constantly emerges from and collapses back into this field. This continuous renewal process allows for the creation of a 'blueprint' for healing and health, making miracles possible. Our bodies are directly connected to this field.
An experiment from 2022, based on the 1972 computer game Pong, demonstrates this connection. Scientists placed living human neurons in a Petri dish, connected them to a computer running Pong, and observed that the neurons not only learned to play the game but also improved over time. This raises the question of how isolated neurons could possess such knowledge without being part of a human brain.
Conventional science, as exemplified by physicist Brian Greene, often posits that consciousness is solely a product of brain interactions, an interplay of quantum particles. However, the Pong experiment suggests that consciousness and information exist outside the physical body. The neurons act as biological antennae, tuning into a collective field where the memory of Pong (and how to play it) resides due to the vast number of people who have played it.
Scientific research, specifically a peer-reviewed paper from 2018, indicates that DNA behaves as a fractal antenna, capable of interacting with electromagnetic fields across a wide range of frequencies. This implies that DNA in our bodies is constantly tuning into various signals from the energetic field. This suggests that memories, morality, divinity, and the capacity for love and forgiveness are not confined within our physical bodies but exist within this larger field.
The instructions for playing Pong were not in the neurons themselves but accessed from the field by the neurons acting as resonant DNA antennae. Similarly, when learning new skills or languages, like Tibetan or Spanish, a neural network is built over approximately 72 hours, which acts as an antenna. This antenna tunes into the field where the collective memory and knowledge of that task or language reside, allowing individuals to quickly assimilate and utilize that information. This concept also applies to a musician learning a piece of music, tuning into the collective memory of the music and its masters.