I’ve been watching near death experience interviews and noticed a pattern in many of the interviews. Its often mentioned by the individual experiencing the NDE whether relayed by a guide, an angel or relative, how important our thoughts, feelings and intention are in creating our reality. One woman who accidentally overdosed was found unconscious amid the trash in an alley way. She also brought back a message from the afterlife. The message was to tell people about how our thoughts and intention shape the experience we have in this life. She also referenced the work of Neville Goddard.

Neville Goddard was a British-Barbadian, born in the West Indies in 1905. He was a writer, speaker and mystic. In one of Goddard’s presentations he says “The world is not resisting you. It is responding to you. Every event, every person, every so-called coincidence is shaped by the inner tones of your being. So if you walk through life assuming lack, you will experience lack.

It must first be constructed in the mind, in the imagination, before it takes form in the material world. You are not waiting for money to come to you, you are birthing it into existence through the assumption that it is already yours. Doubt is the only thing that can disrupt this process.” We’ve heard this before in many different ways from various authors influenced by Goddard’s work such as Wayne Dyer.

Is the fabric of our reality, a pliable substrate for our conscious minds to interface with? In the book Time Storms by Jenny Randles published in 2001, she writes “In essence matter was found to comprise a flux- a myriad of energy fields whose complex interactions created what to our eyes often appear as particles.
Nevertheless, this discovery proved that at a fundamental level all reality was immaterial and not rock-solid. The hard logical universe that behaved like ping-pong balls bouncing off a bat was in truth a sea of invisible radiation energy in the form of waves.” I quote Randles as a reminder of how our intention can be measured in water. Past guest Konstantin Korotkov explained how he measured orgone energy, or etheric energy. The subtle energy fields of thought, intention and emotion have a measurable impact on the unseen realms and according to Neville Goddard can ultimately manifest in the visible realm.

Many of us have been plagued with worrying about the future. Another distraction from the present state of awareness, from being in the here and now, the object of meditation. Recall the work of past guest Jerry Marzinsky who worked with schizophrenics and revealed the voices aren’t hallucinations but actual entities feeding off the patient’s negative emotional state.  I suspect the human adversary, such as the etheric parasite Marzinsky mentions or the composite corporate media narrative would benefit having people to be pining about something in the past and or worried about future events.

If you’re preoccupied with the past and future you’re suffering according to past guest Dr. Paul Dobransky. As listeners know, learning how to exercise the ability to be in the moment is the object of meditative teachings. Psychedelic drugs can temporarily place the user in the moment where it becomes obvious how the undisciplined mind will drift into the future or past. Goddard points out the value of the mind being present in the moment and this is where the miracle of creation begins and there’s more to it as you’ll hear. Its a challenging spiritual exercise and discipline if mastered in my opinion would dispel low level anxiety and possibly etheric parasites.

Here’s another quote by Jenny Randles, “To see anything requires photons of light sent to activate our senses. But something has to cause these photons to be emitted. This means, in effect knocking on the quantum door with a beam of energy and getting the photons to respond. If we don’t knock o nthe door, the photons stay hidden. So in order to see anything, or indeed to experience reality we have to do something that actually helps force that reality into being. We change what can be witnessed by the very act of seeking to observe it. Ludicrous as this concept seems, it is established. Seeing is not so much the cause of believing as believing is, in fact of seeing. One of the first to set this bizarre prospect into mathematical rules was the German physicist Werner Heisenberg in 1926. He defined the rules of quantum reality. Later he formulated his uncertainty principle.” The reality substrate seems to be a pliable medium for our conscious minds to project intention and emotion into.