5th March 2016
By Brendan D. Murphy
Guest Writer for Wake Up World
“Repeated ignorant or stubborn denial of the existence of certain powers does not keep them from existing—except for us!” — Harold M. Sherman, psychic
Everyone has some level of innate
intuitive capability, a.k.a., Jedi powers, and this has been
demonstrated repeatedly over several decades of experiments by the
parapsychological community through tens of thousands of trials
utilizing thousands of regular people with no known or presupposed
psychic gifts. (That is to say nothing, of course, of those many
successful experiments carried out with people having well-established
reputations for performing “paranormal” feats.) While some people are
born with obvious psychic talents, most of us have to invest time and
effort over the long-term in order to develop them from their latent
state. (Note: this process necessitates activating your multidimensional DNA and kundalini.)
In this article, we will look at
research, guidelines and relevant principles for unblocking and
developing your innate intuitive abilities, a.k.a. your superpowers. Read on, oh Jedi.
Open Your Mind and Eliminate Closed Ones
Have you ever noticed how closed-minded
skeptics (CMS) rarely if ever have any experiences with the siddhis
(psychic faculties) or “the paranormal” in general? Soviet research into
psychokinesis involving Nina Kulagina demonstrated qualitatively that a
skeptic’s mere presence does have an effect on a psychic’s ability to
function properly. Hence, with a CMS (or several) in the room or
otherwise involved in the experiment, a psychic is more likely to
“fail,” thus “proving” the CMS right (at least in his own narrow reality
tunnel). It is merely a case of self-fulfilling prophecy. Thus,
regarding your own psi abilities what you believe is true, to a large
extent—and unfortunately the presence of non-believers nearby or within the experimental setup can be detrimental.
Dr. Valerie Hunt’s research in Infinite Mind showed
a correlation between electromagnetic auric frequencies and the “level”
of consciousness occupied by the individual. Healers, mediums and
mystics showed higher frequencies in their electromagnetic fields than
others not of those categories, illustrating that those possessed of “higher” consciousness
are, in some sense, literally “on a higher frequency.” Those fixated on
or believing solely in “material reality” exhibited lower dominant
frequencies and were bereft of the higher.
In fact, gamma frequencies in the brain
of 40-100 Hertz—the highest of the better known bands of brainwave
frequencies (the higher band being Lambda, reaching up to about 200 Hz
[1])—have been linked to the ability to manifest intention in the world. Gamma states represent the brain in hyperdrive, working at its most intensely. “This oscillation is conducive to creating links across many parts of the brain,”
[2] facilitating an integrated whole-brain state. Paradoxically, the
extreme high and low ends of the brainwave spectrum have the same states
of consciousness associated with them, and different oscillations can
be present at once in different parts of the same brain. [3]
To illustrate, Russian psychokinetic
(PK) psi star Nina Kulagina (1926–1990) —who, under controlled
experimental conditions, could (among other things) separate an egg yoke
from the white from a distance of 6 feet while it floated in a saline
solution using only her intention—exhibited low frequency theta
brainwaves of 4 Hz—normally associated with a deeply relaxed
trance—whilst simultaneously showing extreme physiological
agitation/arousal, including a pulse rate of 240 bpm. These strenuous
efforts left her absolutely exhausted, and temporarily blind on that
particular occasion. [4]
Perhaps all of the above explains why
Kulagina’s PK abilities “worked better in an atmosphere of friendly
mutual trust and belief”—PK, as we know, generally requires intense states of physiological arousal and higher frequency brainwave
activity, all of which drains large reserves of bioenergy. PK is a
higher brain function. Kulagina experienced less stress when working
alone and it was said that her PK ability was mood-dependent (both her
own mood and that of the observers) and expended more energy in a
hostile or skeptical atmosphere [5] (where the local consciousness
fields would have been less coherent). Hostile skeptics have something
of an innate psi- or consciousness-damping effect; they literally
operate at a lower frequency, their mind fields interfering with those
of the test subject (and even the target). The fact that separate minds
interact via measurable electromagnetic fields (and some
not-so-measurable fields) has been proven by Hunt and others, and I
detail much of this research in “The Grand Illusion”.
Negativity causes chaos and/or entropy in the personal and local ambient energy fields, whereas positivity, gratitude,
or love—heart-based emotions—cause coherence, beauty and order—just
look at the instances of saints and yogis whose dead bodies have
remained impervious to decay for weeks, months, and even years! [6] This
is worth considering before any psi endeavour where you intend to act
as a receiver of information. Firstly, open-mindedness is a bare minimum
requirement (confidence and trust in the process is even better).
Additionally, being in a state of peaceful heart-based coherence is
likely to enhance receptive abilities. In combination with deliberate
intention, this has been shown to also be enough to wind and unwind DNA
samples at will in laboratory conditions, with powerful implications for
self-healing possibilities (see “The Grand Illusion”).
In 1942 psychologist and
parapsychologist Gertrude Schmeidler initiated her infamous “sheep-goat”
experiments, designed to test whether belief and open-mindedness would
enhance psi function in contrast to skepticism. Two groups, “sheep” who
believed in or were simply open to psi, and “goats” who did not believe
it could happen for them under test conditions (but were not hostile to
the possibility of it happening to or for other people), were put
through identical standard controlled ESP tests. The outcome indicated
that believers in the possibility of ESP scored better than those who
did not: the disbelievers scored lower, ergo belief is a legitimate
variable mediating psi functions. [7]“A meta-analysis by [psychologist
Tony Lawrence], covering 73 experiments by 37 different researchers,
clearly confirms that subjects who believe in psi obtain, on the
average, higher results than those who do not believe in it.” [8]
American psychic and author Harold Sherman (1898–1987) had noted in the early 1940s that while it is possible to receive thought impressions
from a skeptic, it is extremely difficult for someone of that mindset
to act as receiver. [9] Sherman, who was ahead of his time, explained
that telling yourself with certitude that there is no such thing as psi
is tantamount to instructing your subconscious mind to shut down the psi
faculties so they do not operate for you. [10] In a dream-like reality
such as ours, it pays to be open-minded—especially if you want to be more intuitive.
Meaning, Emotion, Need, Novelty, and Other Factors in Psi
Need, novelty, and emotion have long
been known to play a part in psi phenomena. Carl Jung (1875–1961)—the
originator of the theory of the psychological archetypes—noted with
interest that the English medium Eileen Garrett fared poorly in
parapsychologist J.B. Rhine’s card-guessing experiments because she was
unable to conjure any feelings for Rhine’s “soulless” test-cards.
[11]Much experimentation has also shown that psi effects have a tendency
to start out higher in the initial stages of testing and then drop off
as the participants lose interest and boredom sets in (the “decline
effect”).
Charles Tart actually went so far as
stating that card-guessing experiments are, ironically, “a technique for
extinguishing [psi] in the laboratory,” that is, they bore the subjects
into a decline effect. [12] Rhetorically, Sherman asked how he could
possibly be expected to get excited over five abstract symbols that had
nothing to do with his emotional system or that of the sender (they
lacked meaning/personal significance or relevance). [13]
Biologist and author Lyall Watson notes in Supernature that the most effective telepathic messages generally are bound up in trauma and crisis—and we see plenty of evidence to that effect in “The Grand Illusion”.
He continues to explain that it makes sense biologically, since states
of well-being and pleasure produce no sense of urgency—such information
can be leisurely conveyed by the “normal” channels. However, for alarm
signals to be of real use, they have to travel the fastest way possible.
[14] That “way” is superluminally/nonlocally. Much as Cleve Backster’s
plants could detect the death of bacteria and brine shrimp nearby, our
human telepathic connections must—even if only subliminally—serve a
biological imperative, helping us survive and propagate as a species by
sensing and avoiding danger.
The limbic system, which includes the amygdala and hippocampus, is considered today to be the emotional center in the brain, as well as the seat of our survival instinct.
We might therefore suppose that life-threatening events, usually being
highly emotionally charged, might ignite the temporal lobe and related
structures in the brain into downloading nonlocal psi information from
the vacuum/aether. Dr. Melvin Morse believes humans have a sixth sensory
ability located “within” the right temporal lobe, hippocampus, and
related limbic structures. According to him, this region “interprets
information obtained through communication with an interactive
universe,” and allows for telepathic communication with other people
through their right temporal lobes. “It involves perception of other realities.” He states that we perceive the operation of the right temporal lobe as “intuition.” [15]
In 1889 a committee of psychical
researchers began a five-year project of compiling what they named a
Report on the Census of Hallucinations—the first major research effort
of the English SPR, featuring 410 data collectors. The committee
included Henry and Eleanor Sidgwick, Alice Johnson, archskeptic Frank
Podmore, and the esteemed Frederick Myers. Out of the 17,000 responses,
2,273 people reported having had “hallucinations” (psi experiences).
Tellingly, most occurred in a crisis, usually a death crisis, signifying
the importance of emotion, need, and above all, meaning in
paranormal events. [16] These were some of the earliest scientific
results illustrating nonlocal correlations between well-acquainted
(meaningfully connected) people.
Aside from raw emotion, biological
threats to loved ones (or oneself), and so on, another factor conducive
to psi is simply novelty. Russel Targ and Harold Puthoff in their
scientific remote viewing research in the 1970s found that the more
difficult and challenging a remote viewing
task they devised for test subjects, the more likely the results were
to be good. They too observed a need-serving theme in their RV research
at Stanford (see Chapter 12 of “The Grand Illusion”).
As a result of consistently challenging and interesting tests and
protocols (with the added benefits of feedback and encouragement), they
found that their subjects actually improved their psi
performance over time, in contrast to Rhine’s and others’ results with
card-guessing and other repetitious and dull forms of testing, where
decline effects were often observed.
In Sherman’s view, the absence of a
strong or even an ordinary emotional factor is the greatest handicap in
any psychic endeavour. Since his pioneering long-distance telepathy experiment with Sir Hubert Wilkins decades ago (detailed in Chapter 11 of “The Grand Illusion”),
much data has accumulated indicating that there is a great deal of
truth in this. The stronger the emotional charge, the greater the
likelihood that psi data will penetrate from the “subconscious” to the
conscious mind.
It is well known by occultists that
emotionally charged events are more likely to impress themselves,
inadvertently or otherwise, on the mind of another than are events with
little emotional content. In occult terms, this interaction occurring
beyond the standard space-time realm is occurring via the astral
plane/octave—the home of emotion. The more strongly the plasma-like
astral body/field (or mind-field) can be made to vibrate in response to
emotional content, the more likely the relevant data is to penetrate
through from the subconscious to the conscious level of awareness. When
sleep is involved, the conditions seem to be even more conducive to
accidental telepathic contact, as it is an altered state of
consciousness (theta and delta brainwave states) that opens us up to the
frequencies of the astral or even mental planes while simultaneously eliminating most data/noise from the physical senses.
Undoubtedly, much “paranormal phenomena”
(including poltergeist phenomena, PK, and telepathy) can be linked to
strong emotional content (see limbic system above). There are
indications that what we experience as presentiment or precognition may
be, in some sense, the strong emotional content of a probable “future”
event (which is actually occurring in a parallel universe
in present time, along with all our “past” and “future” lives) then
filtering “back” through time into our subconscious or even conscious
awareness. (See Chapter 12 of “The Grand Illusion” for more.)
Hypnosis
Hypnosis can aid our ability to peer into these “future” events and timelines.
The young actress Irene Muza was in a hypnotic trance when she was
asked if she could see what awaited her in her future. She wrote that
her career would be short and her death would be “terrible,” though she
dared not specify how she would die. The experimenters erased what Muza
had written before bringing her out of the trance so she would not see
it. She therefore had no conscious knowledge of what she had written.
Some months later, however, in 1909, her prediction of a short career
and terrible death was unexpectedly fulfilled when her hairdresser
allowed some drops of an antiseptic lotion made of mineral essences to
fall on a lighted stove, instantly enveloping Muza in flames. Her hair
and clothing set alight, she was severely burned and tragically died in
hospital a few hours later. [17]
Hypnosis has been successfully employed
for psychokinetic purposes as well. Take American Ted Serios, the
“thoughtographer” born in 1918 who could create colour pictures on
unexposed film simply through sheer intention while he stared into the
lens of a Polaroid camera. His talent grew out of a DIY hypnosis
experiment with a friend (a fellow bellhop at the Chicago Conrad Hilton
Hotel) who instructed Serios under hypnosis that he could take photos of
the contents of his mind. And thereafter, so he could—somewhat
erratically, mind you. (Serios was tested extensively under controlled
conditions.) Interestingly, Serios had to work himself virtually into a
state of rage to be effective during these experiments. Notably, Israeli
“paranormalist” Uri Geller has been able to achieve similar feats,
taking photos of himself on high-speed black and white film through a
solid black lens cap. Dr. Chris Humphrey explains this is due to quantum
tunneling: if the quantum
de Broglie probability wave exists on both sides of a barrier, then its
particle (photons in this case) can sometimes be on one side, and
sometimes on the other, without ever passing through the barrier. [18]
PK: Set Your Intent, Let Go, and “Let God”
During his first stay at the Stanford
Research Institute (SRI – now Stanford Research Institute
International), Ingo Swann worked on experiments with physicist Hal
Puthoff, who was making forays into researching psi ability. This
example demonstrates that we can and do interact with matter via our
minds, whether we intend to consciously or not (and even under pressure
and in the presence of skeptics in this case).
On the evening of the 6th of
June 1972, Swann was asked to try to influence a magnetometer located
in the basement which he was duly escorted down to—with one catch: the
magnetometer—inside a quark detector, in actual fact—was buried under
five feet of concrete underneath his feet, and thus invisible to him.
What was visible to the extremely chagrined Swann (who was not
forewarned by Puthoff of the nature of the experiment) was a chart
recorder with its pen slowly tracing out a graceful wavy line. It was
“monitoring the magnetic stability of the magnetometer and had been
doing so for some weeks without any change in the rhythmic
fluctuations,” Swann recalls. “The whole of this contraption was encased
in an aluminum container and insulating copper canister. As well, it
was in a supercooled, hence superconducting shield.” The Josephson
junction inside the detector would detect any variation of magnetic flux
in the supercooled equipment and the effect would show up as a change
in the steady sine wave recording on the chart which they could all see.
Swann started “probing” mentally to see
if he could identify the expensive underground device, and when he
sensed some “metallic differences” he tried to affect them, stating so
as he went along. With all eyes glued on the sine wave, Swann attempted
several times to perturb the well shielded system, to no avail.
Insisting that he could see something, Swann proposed that
sketching it out might assist the process, but when no paper could be
found to draw on, Puthoff suggested he draw directly onto the chart
paper. “So I sketched a this, and then a that: ‘Is this the Josephson
junction?’ I asked. ‘If so, I think I can see it quite well.’”
With that comment, the ink pen gave a tiny jerk, and then stopped momentarily.
Then it lifted up above its previous pattern, and “somewhat above this
it wobbled along for no less than about TEN SECONDS—long enough for two
wavy line intervals to have occurred.” [19]
The point here is that when the distortion in the sine wave took place Swan was not
trying to affect the equipment—he was simply trying to sketch what he
could see with his mind’s eye. In those moments where his volitional
mind was distracted and his goal momentarily suspended, the desired
outcome occurred literally effortlessly. In laboratory tests with PK in
ordinary people (Swann is known to be a gifted psychic, though more in
the realm of remote viewing than PK), effects often fail to appear until the subject has their attention diverted.
[20] This is something that astral traveller Sylvan Muldoon wrote of
some 80 years ago, explaining that charging the mind with desire or
intent creates “stress” for which the mind seeks an outlet or release
via a part of the subconscious he called the cryptoconscious Will: “Then
[it] gets a chance to work on the ‘stress,’ and that which you had
given up trying to attain ‘materializes’!” [21]
Tips for Development
- Open your mind to the possibility that psi can work for you
- Believe in yourself
- Operate in a peaceful state of heart-based coherence for receptive psi (such as receiving a telepathic signal)
- Remove yourself from distractions and hostile or skeptical parties whose chaotic energy fields may negatively influence your own
- Remove energetic blocks, seals and implants that may be impeding your progress.Holographic Kinetics is a great resource for this. See here also.
- Activate your multidimensional DNA (enter “DNA” into the search bar on this site for important info on this). We may only need 144,000 fully activated humans to make it through this transitional period (according to multiple sources).
- Meditate
for psi development (the more the better). If you can participate in a
group of people with a mutual interest in their perceptual development
then all the better. I used to attend a trance mediumship group—not
necessarily because I wanted to “channel,” but it did accelerate my
clairvoyant development. The coherent group energy will heighten and
refine your own through a “quantum additive” effect, accelerating your
development. When I stopped meditating and attending the group my
nascent clairvoyant faculties unfortunately regressed back to square
one.
- For PK, a less passive, more aroused state of heightened emotion may be desirable. If you want to bend spoons or change the weather it might help to get fired up!
- Eliminate psi-negative beliefs at the conscious level by being well informed on the reality of the psi faculties (reading my book “The Grand Illusion” will definitely help you achieve that goal).
- Eliminate subconscious negative (psi-blocking) beliefs through techniques such as Matrix Reimprinting, PSYCH-K, and EFT.
- Try letting go and “getting out of the way.” Sometimes your intention has a way of manifesting when you direct your attention on to something else, or, as some have put it, when you “let go and let God.” Try setting your intention, letting the thought go, and trusting that the deed will be done.
- A slightly different tactic: be grateful in advance that your attempt has already been successful. “All great masters know in advance that the deed has been done.” The aether/vacuum doesn’t “do” linear time. It only “knows” the present moment. Thus, what is true for you in the present is what will continually present itself to you until that truth changes.
- If you want to design experiments or tests for receptive/perceptual psi, find ways to make it novel, interesting, and meaningful to you personally. Avoid boredom at all costs!
- Practice some form of pranayama (yogic breathing) on a daily basis for maximal development of your health and psychic faculties.
- [1] Extraordinary States, www.bethcoleman.net/gamma.html.
- [2] Church, D. The Genie in Your Genes, Energy Psychology Press, 2009, p 99.
- [3] Extraordinary States.
- [4] Watson, L., Supernature, Coronet Books, Hodder Paperbacks Ltd, 1974, p 139–40.
- [5] LaMoth, J.D. & L.F. Maire III (Defence Intelligence Agency), Soviet and Czechoslovakian Parapsychology Research, 1975.
- [6] See Murphy, B.D., “The Grand Illusion : a Synthesis of Science & Spirituality”, Balboa Press, 2013.
- [7] Swann, I., Dr. Gertrude Schmeidler,www.biomindsuperpowers.com/Pages/RealStoryCh9.html
- [8] Who is Mario Varvoglis?www.parapsych.org/members/m_varvoglis.html.
- [9] Wilkins, H. & Harold Sherman, Thoughts Through Space, Hampton Roads, 2004, p xx.
- [10] Wilkins & Sherman, p xxi.
- [11] Jung, C.G., Synchronicity, First Princeton/Bollingen Paperback Edition, 1973, p 18.
- [12] Targ & Puthoff, Mind-Reach, Hampton Roads, 2005, p 11.
- [13] Wilkins & Sherman, p 129.
- [14] Watson, Supernature, p 260.
- [15] Atwater, P.M.H., The Big Book of Near-Death Experiences, Hampton Roads, 2007, p 340.
- [16] Grosso, M., Experiencing the Next World Now, Paraview Pocket Books, 2004, p 27–8.
- [17] C. Wilson, The Occult, Watkins Publishing, 2004, p 127–8.
- [18] Humphrey, C., UFOs, Psi and Spiritual Evolution, Adventures Unlimited Press, 2004.
- [19] Swann, I., The Varian Hall of Physics,www.biomindsuperpowers.com/Pages/RealStoryCh37.html.
- [20] Watson, op. cit., 151–2.
- [21] Muldoon S. and Hereward Carrington, The Projection of the Astral Body. Rider Books, 1992.
- The A=432 Hz Frequency: DNA Tuning and the Bastardization of Music
- The Fundamental Unity of Consciousness, Mysticism and Existence
- Thoughts Through Space: a Pioneering Long-Distance Telepathy Experiment
- Who Thinks Your Thoughts?
- Junk DNA: Our Interdimensional Doorway to Transformation
- The Virtual Aether – “Empty Space” Gets an Upgrade
- New Awareness for a New Earth – Paradigms and Culture Minds
- The Belief Effect in Psychokinesis – Psychics, Skeptics and Science
- Time and Torsion in a Conscious, Holographic Universe
Critically acclaimed author and co-founder of Global Freedom Movement,
Brendan D. Murphy is a leading expositor of the new paradigm of
integrated science and spirituality/sovereignty. He is a passionate
advocate of accelerated conscious evolution through sound-based DNA/kundalini activation and
intentional harnessing of the life-supporting (negentropic) aetheric
forces of consciousness, while also having experience in psychoenergetic
and belief change modalities.
For Brendan, compassionately hacking the
Matrix is more than just sport, it’s a way of life. He lives and
breathes it, taking a stand for truth and beckoning others to join him
on the path of informed, compassionate, and courageous living.
Understanding that the outer world always holographically reflects the
inner, Brendan believes idle research and information absorption is not
enough — we must embody our ideals now and transmute knowledge into
wisdom through willful and gutsy application.
“Enough of the slave species legacy
we’ve been playing out for millennia! It’s time to rediscover
sovereignty, infinite consciousness and our multi-dimensional selves.
Evolution is calling. Will we answer?”
The Grand Illusion
Did you know that modern neuroscience considers the brain as a receiver of consciousness rather than the generator of it?
Brendan D. Murphy’s book “The Grand Illusion : a Synthesis of Science & Spirituality” synthesizes
the paranormal with today’s hard science, breaking through the outmoded
world-view that we are just powerless little “meat computers”. Here,
new and expansive vistas of possibility are laid bare, and the forces
and energies produced by our consciousness that act on the world around
us are blown open for your understanding.
Get ready for an introduction to the
mysterious “fifth force” known to science – a “carrier wave” of
consciousness that can travel at speeds far exceeding light. With the
knowledge that we are incredible and immortal spiritual beings
temporarily inhabiting a dream-like, multidimensional, holographic
reality, we can indeed begin to turn life on this planet – which, for
many, is a virtual nightmare – into The Grand Illusion.
Are you ready to meet yourself? “The Grand Illusion: a Synthesis of Science & Spirituality” is available at BrendanDMurphy.net and Amazon/The Grand Illusion.