09-17-2014, 09:59 PM
(09-17-2014, 06:43 AM)andreazzi Wrote: As usual, another question arises: Would time in the metaphysical be constant just as space is for us around here? I mean, time in time/space is more rigid with a constant progression towards some kind of ascension into higher planes until the reincarnation process is again established?
Anyway, thanks a lot for your sharing and sorry for the delay!
It may surprise you to learn that the transition from space/time to time/space is not like a light switch. It is not a binary situation where you are either in space/time or you are in time/space. There is a gradual continuum of expression which slowly fades from space into time. Every subtle plane has a slightly different ratio of space to time.
What does this actually mean?
It means that there *is* a flow of time in the subtle planes, however, it is "looser" than the current of time you find yourself in the physical realm. The higher the subtle plane, the closer you are to pure time/space. The lower the plane, the closer you are to pure space/time. So just as there are "time periods" in the physical, there are also time periods in the lower astral. From the lower astral you can travel to different time periods in the physical, from the middle astral, you can travel to different time periods in the lower astral. The higher the plane, the more unhinged it is from the current of time of the lower plane.
From the seventh density, or pure violet ray (which is pure time/space), all time may be seen to be occurring simultaneously.
The more you lean in the direction of time, the less grasp or control you have on a specific point in space. The more you lean towards space, the less control you have over the flow of time.
Pure time/space is violet ray. And pure space/time is red ray. All the colors in between are possessed of varying ratios of space to time. The lower vibrational "outer planes" lean more toward space/time, whereas the higher vibrational "inner planes" lean more in the direction time/space.
Attachment to form necessitates the perception of relative change (and time is simply a measure of change).