09-08-2013, 05:07 PM
(09-08-2013, 04:38 PM)Adonai One Wrote: Ra seems to have been very intentionally vague as not to abridge our freewill as we approach our evolution in this regard. I've attempted to channel answers myself in regards to what I've perceived as 4th-density past lives and all I have come to deduce is that evolution in this regard varies from species to species.
What is very clear to me is that the "veiling" is dependent on biology of the brain. How the brain evolves to unveil itself is not yet known to me.
And brains do seem to exist in 4th-density life:
Quote:61.13 Questioner: OK, then I will ask this one. Could you tell us the purpose of the frontal lobes of the brain and the conditions necessary for their activation?
Ra: I am Ra. The frontal lobes of the brain will, shall we say, have much more use in fourth density.
The primary mental/emotive condition of this large area of the so-called brain is joy or love in its creative sense. Thus, the energies which we have discussed in relationship to the pyramids — all of the healing, the learning, the building, and the energizing — are to be found in this area. This is the area tapped by the adept. This is the area which, working through the trunk and root of mind, makes contact with intelligent energy and through this gateway, intelligent infinity.
Are there any queries before we leave this instrument?
So the whole human form is not thrown out. It will likely split but evolution is not thrown out of the window.
Quote:Your DNA is not a blueprint. Day by day, week by week, your genes are in a conversation with your surroundings. Your neighbors, your family, your feelings of loneliness: They don’t just get under your skin, they get into the control rooms of your cells. Inside the new social science of genetics.http://www.psmag.com/health/the-social-l...nes-64616/
Robinson, however, suspected that environment could spin the dials on “big sectors of genes, right across the genome”—and that an individual’s social environment might exert a particularly powerful effect. Who you hung out with and how they behaved, in short, could dramatically affect which of your genes spoke up and which stayed quiet—and thus change who you were.