Join
Suzanne Taylor for the Evolver Intensives online video course,
“Doorways to Another Reality: Peering Into Inner and Outer Mysteries.”
This course explores the implications that come from the mounting
evidence that other intelligences are interacting with the human race —
through spiritual experiences, crop circles, and alien encounters —
signaling a paradigm shift of massive proportions. For this 4-session
live, interactive course, Suzanne will be joined by 4 remarkable guests:
the respected crop circle authority, Andy Thomas; Klaus Dona, who will
look at the staggering examples of highly advance technologies in our
prehistory; psychic researcher remote viewing pioneer Stephan Schwartz,
will explore space, time and consciousness; and astronaut Edgar Mitchell
will share his insights into UFOs and paranormal phenomena. Each of
them holds knowledge that could radically transform the world and lead
us to embracing the new paradigm that awaits us. It starts on June 9.
I
know for sure we’re not alone in the universe. I happen to have been
privileged enough to be in on the fact that we’ve been visited on this
planet. It’s been well covered up by our governments for sixty years
now. I think we’re headed for real disclosure. Some serious
organizations are moving in that direction. –Astronaut EdgarMitchell,
the 6th man to walk on the moon
We
love our science fiction, but we titter when we talk about UFOs. What
never gets discussed is how valuable it would be if extraterrestrials
turned out to be the real deal. If we had our heads on straight, instead
of raising our eyebrows we would be investigating reports of sightings.
In
1952, the Robertson Panel was convened by the government to look into
the very active buzz that was going on about UFO sightings. Ignorant
about the cause and anxious not to alarm the populace who would be
fearful if the government acknowledged they didn’t know what was going
on, it set official government policy to use the media to ridicule and
debunk all such possibilities. It’s time for that policy to be
reconsidered.
Establishing
the reality of an intelligence that’s at least comparable to ours would
be the biggest news since Copernicus and Galileo. In their time, when
it was established that Earth wasn’t the center of the solar system,
humanity was situated to evolve away from a worldview in which our
planet dominated the universe. In that humbling new reality, the old
social order no longer could hold, and, in less than lordly light, kings
gave way to democracies.
After
honest appraisal of crop circle data it is impossible to maintain the
rationalistic world-view on which modern science and education are
founded. One is led into unfamiliar channels of thought, which point
away from structured theories and hard-and-fast beliefs towards a more
mystical view of reality and, eventually, towards the greater mysteries
of divinity and the living universe. –Ralph Noyes, The Crop Circle
Enigma: Grounding the Phenomenon in Science, Culture and Metaphysics
With
problems being global now, it’s time for another new take on who we are
and what we’re doing here. It’s imperative to get past the worldview of
scientific materialism, which supports an “us or them” mentality in
which whoever has the most toys wins and we resort to war to resolve
conflicts. In relating to other intelligent life we would be one
humanity, and the lid would be off the smallness in which we gun for one
another.
If
we were to discover extra-terrestrial life, it would show that we are
not intellectually unique in the galaxy. Man has a tendency to think
he’s very special. We consider ourselves morally, culturally, and
intellectually unique. But if we were to find a signal from another
starsystem, another thinking being, we would know that none of that is
true. A connection with intelligence would be the first bridging across
four billion years of independent life in evolution. It would be the end
of Earth’s cultural isolation in a galaxy and a universe surely
containing millions of other civilizations. It would be without doubt
the greatest discovery in the history of humankind. –Paul Horowitz,
Project Director, Search for Extra-Terrestrial Intelligence (SETI)
It
is reasonable to think that we can arrive at this awareness via the
crop circle phenomenon. Scientific studies written up in peer reviewed
science journals tell us that something beyond what’s in our reality
grid is delivering the circles to us. While what makes the glyphs
remains a mystery, just knowing something is watching us and signaling
us is enough. It’s that they are, not who they are that’s important.
A
great power has arisen, directing thoughts and perception in a certain
direction towards a more complete and satisfactory view of reality than
the modern conventions of materialism have previously allowed. Gently,
subtly, with no disturbance or panic, we are being guided across a
watershed, from one worldview to another. And this is in no way
arbitrary, but a purposeful process, in accordance with the interests of
eternal nature and the necessities of the present. We now can see
something of what the ancients meant when they spoke of revelation.
–John Michell, The Traveler’s Guide to Sacred England
Finding
out we aren’t alone would be a huge deal. And, if that were
established, there could be more. If we are being visited, the
technology possessed by “the other” would be more advanced than ours,
and what they would be capable of perhaps could help us solve the
environmental problems that threaten our very survival.
Why
would our visitors be making crop circles instead of delivering things
that would be helpful to us? If sending circles is their hello, they
could be awaiting an aha from us, where we get it that they exist. Then
we would invite them in.
People
hate being conned, which militates against accepting something as
mind-blowing as the crop circles could be. What can subsume that concern
is an appreciation for the realm of mystery. In fact, being open to
what we don’t know is good for us. It keeps us dreaming, which is a
state in which amazing things can find their way into our reality grid.
Here’s
what Brian Swimme, a mathematical cosmologist specializing in the
evolutionary dynamics of the universe, says about that idea:
Albert
Einstein once remarked that for the human there is no more powerful
feeling than that of “the mysterious.” In fact, he was convinced this
was the cradle for all works of science, art, and religion. One might
ask: “What is the opposite of a feeling for the mysterious?” It would be
the sense that one is in possession of a system that explains all the
phenomena in the universe. For such a person, the universe becomes
something we don’t need to pay attention to. No real surprises are
possible, but only the working out of a logical mechanism through time.
When a feeling for the mysterious is lost, one becomes vulnerable to the
various fundamentalisms plaguing our planet, each possessing passionate
certainty that it has all the answers while thinking that every other
set of beliefs is just superstition.
In
moments of stress and breakdown, there is a powerful drive in us to
acquire answers and explanations. Certainly, in our own time, when we
are dismantling ecosystems around the planet and deconstructing the
stable climate upon which our civilization is based, we feel a deep need
to know what is real and what is good and how to proceed. This need can
be so great that we are liable to latch onto a simplistic
pseudo-explanation to quell the feelings of fear and doom surfacing in
us.
The
existence of crop circles eases us out of some of the prior certainties
we might have had. We find ourselves considering new ideas about the
nature of our universe. We begin to imagine that things might be
different than we thought. We might begin to release ourselves from some
of the tired explanations imprinted in our minds by the media. But,
most important of all, we might begin to feel stunned by the simple fact
that here we are in the midst of this overwhelming mystery, the
universe.
Image by Kecko, courtesy of Creative Commons license.
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