★Understanding Time★ Much misunderstanding exists today as - TopicsExpress



          

★Understanding Time★ Much misunderstanding exists today as to the nature of time in higher levels. The following is intended to resolve some of these issues. Time is not a dimension in space. Time does exist in higher levels, it is just different. Time is both objective and subjective. Objectively it is a linear progression of universal change. Subjectively it is the processing rate and a holistically inclusive consciousness of change. The higher your consciousness, the faster time goes by. The lower your consciousness the slower time goes by. When you are happy, time flies. When you are depressed, time stretches on for a seeming forever. Why? Because higher states of consciousness use subtler (lighter and quicker) energy and lower states of consciousness use denser (heavier and slower) energy to process your experiences. Thus, when you are in a higher state you process experiences faster and when you are in a lower state you process experiences slower. Using physical level change (time) as a baseline, which is very dense and slow compared to higher levels, higher states process physical change much quicker than lower states. Thus higher states eat physical time at a faster rate, giving the experience of physical time flying by. Lower states eat physical time at a slower rate, giving the experienceof physical time passing slowly. Also, acceptance of experience speeds processing rate andresistance to experience slows processing rate, acceptance speeds up the experience of time and resistance slows the experience of time. [Collected]
Posted on: Thu, 11 Dec 2014 05:42:00 +0000

Trending Topics



királyok,
------------------------- Modern
Most important event #jesus come back to #earth a sign of #God
Jean Roucas: « La gauche caviar qui tient notre métier pardonne
"[...] Pentru că, spre deosebire de ce crede politicianul român,
Don’t forget to have your unwrapped items or monetary donation
#685 "Recently there is many news about teenage commit suicide
Professor Ian Plimer could not have said it better! If youve read
“We do note, however, that the planned reforms are ambitious and

Recently Viewed Topics




© 2015