01-27-2016, 12:50 AM
I like to look at realities, and timelines more specifically, as simply experiences existing in the universal mind. These experiences are all the choices that may exist. In this infinite field of experience, you are standing at a specific place. Many roads (timelines) of experience sprawl out before you, and behind you. You choose which roads you travel down. Sometimes we are limited by our lack of perception of the roads available to us. Not everybody travels down the same road. Some of the roads are well disguised. However around sixth density the roads all start to merge together, so the end path is more or less fixed and predestined, but the timeline you take there is not.
I think what initially disturbs people about infinite parallel realities is their attachment to being a unique personality in time and space. If there are an infinity of "you's" are you still unique? I would say yes, since there are no truly redundant realities as every reality is slightly different. But even if that is not enough to assuage someone's insecurity, we are the one infinite creator and we are exploring all experiences. What could possibly be more unique than that? I look at personalities as kind of a "frequency" or "flavor" of consciousness. There may be other versions of yourself, but they are of a similar "frequency". As you proceed away from your version of reality, the frequency gradually changes until the point where you would no longer identify the frequency as your personality anymore.
As we create our realities from a spirit level, we automatically are pulled into realities that reflect our energy imbalances since what we experience just reflects who we are, what we think about, and what we believe. The process is deceptively natural and the illusion that this is "just how things are" in this reality is easy to believe in, which serves to cement our consciousness in a seemingly solid and stable reality. But I think as we become more developed, and especially as we move into higher densities, we will begin to see that events/timelines are just like rooms you move in and out of, and the importance is placed more on what general type (we might even say "ray") of experiences you choose to focus on, than the specifics of who, what, where, and why.
It is funny also how you can think of experience in different ways, like: are you moving into experiences, or are experiences moving into you? This question helped me to understand that consciousness doesn't move anywhere, ever, it just changes focus. Location is part of the overall illusion, albeit a convincing one.
I think what initially disturbs people about infinite parallel realities is their attachment to being a unique personality in time and space. If there are an infinity of "you's" are you still unique? I would say yes, since there are no truly redundant realities as every reality is slightly different. But even if that is not enough to assuage someone's insecurity, we are the one infinite creator and we are exploring all experiences. What could possibly be more unique than that? I look at personalities as kind of a "frequency" or "flavor" of consciousness. There may be other versions of yourself, but they are of a similar "frequency". As you proceed away from your version of reality, the frequency gradually changes until the point where you would no longer identify the frequency as your personality anymore.
As we create our realities from a spirit level, we automatically are pulled into realities that reflect our energy imbalances since what we experience just reflects who we are, what we think about, and what we believe. The process is deceptively natural and the illusion that this is "just how things are" in this reality is easy to believe in, which serves to cement our consciousness in a seemingly solid and stable reality. But I think as we become more developed, and especially as we move into higher densities, we will begin to see that events/timelines are just like rooms you move in and out of, and the importance is placed more on what general type (we might even say "ray") of experiences you choose to focus on, than the specifics of who, what, where, and why.
It is funny also how you can think of experience in different ways, like: are you moving into experiences, or are experiences moving into you? This question helped me to understand that consciousness doesn't move anywhere, ever, it just changes focus. Location is part of the overall illusion, albeit a convincing one.