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[Free 1st Half] Forgetting stuff a lot? - Timelines shifting

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Manage episode 479911731 series 2567969
Content provided by Inelia Benz. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Inelia Benz or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

Recently, I was talking to one of my students about the amount of things that slip our minds. And how much content or context is forgotten on a daily basis.

At first this was simply funny, a thing to 0bserve (no I did not misspell the word. I used a zero instead of an O to illustrate an exercise I teach in the iBenz Method).

Then, I noticed how widespread this problem was. I became curious and started looking in more detail at the mechanics behind this phenomenon.

One of the things that was common is that when a person forgot something, it was completely gone. It was not one of those situations where you go get something from the kitchen, for example, and by the time you get to the kitchen you forgot what it was. You know you wanted something from the kitchen, but you don’t remember what. No. Not like that.

The situation is closer to, you sitting in the living room, then look down at your hands and see an apple half eaten. You don’t remember going to the kitchen, getting the apple or eating it. Or, in more severe cases, you are hungry one second, then not hungry the next second but have no idea why. Another person watching you would have seen you get up, go to the kitchen, grab an apple, bring it back, eat it, get up again, throw away the core, wash your hands, come back to the livingroom and sit down again.

In other words, when we forget something, we can be aware that we forgot something, or completely unaware that we forgot it.

What has been happening recently, in the past few months, is that people seem to forget things utterly and completely. Like they never happened.

As I looked at the mechanics and energy lines around this phenomenon I realized something important. I remembered what this can be a sign of.

This phenomenon happens when people are changing timelines and/or skipping in and out of timelines or the “larger Earth”.

On one of our Sunday gatherings at the Olympic Peninsula, another student mentioned how she had heard of the Earth getting bigger recently. It made me giggle because this phenomenon, of the earth changing size (a field, the length of a road, a continent, an ocean, a city) is something Larry and I experience every time we leave the house. The Earth itself is not changing size, of course. But our perception of how much of it we see and remember does change.

During one of our long drives, a time we like to listen to podcasts, we heard a man explain about how he had been taught by a CIA agent that if he didn’t want to have missing time while meeting aliens, or sasquatch, he needed to sing a song in his head during the experience. You know, hum a little tune while the experience is happening. I tried it on one of our trips that will take us 14 hours although the GPS says it is supposed to be 6 hrs, and this time it took us the 6 hours it is supposed to to get to our destination.

The mechanics behind that phenomenon, why it took us the GPS time instead of the double time it usually takes, was that as I sang, and whatever that does to the perceptions and brain functions, the perceptions and experience of the larger Earth didn’t make it through.

How about that.

This is such a fascinating topic that I thought I would share with you and I am very interested to see if you too have been forgetting stuff. Wait, you won’t remember! But you might be seeing how other people forget stuff 🙂

See you on the Wisdom Seeker hour at DrivingToTheRez.com

The discussion doesn’t stop here—listen to the full podcast episode for unfiltered insights from Inelia and our panelists.

This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.drivingtotherez.com/subscribe

  continue reading

273 episodes

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iconShare
 
Manage episode 479911731 series 2567969
Content provided by Inelia Benz. All podcast content including episodes, graphics, and podcast descriptions are uploaded and provided directly by Inelia Benz or their podcast platform partner. If you believe someone is using your copyrighted work without your permission, you can follow the process outlined here https://staging.podcastplayer.com/legal.

Recently, I was talking to one of my students about the amount of things that slip our minds. And how much content or context is forgotten on a daily basis.

At first this was simply funny, a thing to 0bserve (no I did not misspell the word. I used a zero instead of an O to illustrate an exercise I teach in the iBenz Method).

Then, I noticed how widespread this problem was. I became curious and started looking in more detail at the mechanics behind this phenomenon.

One of the things that was common is that when a person forgot something, it was completely gone. It was not one of those situations where you go get something from the kitchen, for example, and by the time you get to the kitchen you forgot what it was. You know you wanted something from the kitchen, but you don’t remember what. No. Not like that.

The situation is closer to, you sitting in the living room, then look down at your hands and see an apple half eaten. You don’t remember going to the kitchen, getting the apple or eating it. Or, in more severe cases, you are hungry one second, then not hungry the next second but have no idea why. Another person watching you would have seen you get up, go to the kitchen, grab an apple, bring it back, eat it, get up again, throw away the core, wash your hands, come back to the livingroom and sit down again.

In other words, when we forget something, we can be aware that we forgot something, or completely unaware that we forgot it.

What has been happening recently, in the past few months, is that people seem to forget things utterly and completely. Like they never happened.

As I looked at the mechanics and energy lines around this phenomenon I realized something important. I remembered what this can be a sign of.

This phenomenon happens when people are changing timelines and/or skipping in and out of timelines or the “larger Earth”.

On one of our Sunday gatherings at the Olympic Peninsula, another student mentioned how she had heard of the Earth getting bigger recently. It made me giggle because this phenomenon, of the earth changing size (a field, the length of a road, a continent, an ocean, a city) is something Larry and I experience every time we leave the house. The Earth itself is not changing size, of course. But our perception of how much of it we see and remember does change.

During one of our long drives, a time we like to listen to podcasts, we heard a man explain about how he had been taught by a CIA agent that if he didn’t want to have missing time while meeting aliens, or sasquatch, he needed to sing a song in his head during the experience. You know, hum a little tune while the experience is happening. I tried it on one of our trips that will take us 14 hours although the GPS says it is supposed to be 6 hrs, and this time it took us the 6 hours it is supposed to to get to our destination.

The mechanics behind that phenomenon, why it took us the GPS time instead of the double time it usually takes, was that as I sang, and whatever that does to the perceptions and brain functions, the perceptions and experience of the larger Earth didn’t make it through.

How about that.

This is such a fascinating topic that I thought I would share with you and I am very interested to see if you too have been forgetting stuff. Wait, you won’t remember! But you might be seeing how other people forget stuff 🙂

See you on the Wisdom Seeker hour at DrivingToTheRez.com

The discussion doesn’t stop here—listen to the full podcast episode for unfiltered insights from Inelia and our panelists.

This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.drivingtotherez.com/subscribe

  continue reading

273 episodes

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