If you see your brain as operating from left to right, conditionally, then intuitive thinking is taking the fastest route, with the advantage of following multiple paths at the same time (this is similar to quantum mechanics – that’s also how a brain works). Regular thinking, on the other hand, follows one path but with more sidesteps, like walking along the branches of a tree.
With intuition, you can make many observations quickly about different subjects simultaneously, while regular thinking focuses on going into specifics about a single subject.
Why Most Psychiatric Diseases Have to Be Self‑Taught
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Learning goes blazing fast. When you touch a hot stove and burn your hand, you instantly remember it. The same happens with emotional learning: when somebody shuts you down – for instance, every time you try to say something – you get into trouble.
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These problems won’t be visible immediately, but only over longer periods of time. If I don’t speak out for several years, then after 10 or 20 years I may fall into a depression or a psychosis because of something from my youth. When I hit that low point, nobody can see that I am shutting myself down on the inside.
Why Most Psychiatric Diseases Are Self-Taught
You touch a hot stove and burn your hand. The next time, you are extra careful.
But learning also works like this: you want to say something, and you get shut down by your parents. Now you learn that every time you want to speak out, you silence yourself. This also has a negative impact on you. You don’t burn your hand, but you build up tension in your body.
So a lot of learning is hidden. You can’t see when somebody shuts themselves down.
Are you a scientist? Nice. I want to lure you a little bit into the creation camp, because I know all the good things are there.
Math is a language you build on top of reality. Biology is too. I can imagine that if you studied biology, you see it everywhere. You think in biological terms. You solve problems based on those principles.
Religion is like that. Just like math, it’s a layer on top of reality. You can argue that numbers, for instance, don’t really exist. We could easily live without them (yes, we really could). Religion is like that too — but better.
When you learn to think multidimensionally, you can literally see your thoughts, visually. For me, my thoughts often present themselves in a dancing form. So I have an additional visual layer on top of reality, like AR glasses. I see baseline reality — as far as baseline reality exists, of course — and the layer on top.
This is a lot of fun. In fact, it’s so much fun that we decided backstage that we are going to reveal this little secret: that thoughts are, in fact, physical things, and that you can build a very fast physical world on top of our own world when you…
Well, I won’t reveal everything, of course.
How Things Fall In and Out of Consciousness
A few years ago, only a few people noticed how bad smartphones are.
Now, we are in a wave – in a couple of years, for the majority of people, the relationship they have with their phone will change dramatically.
Why? Because it’s falling into the collective consciousness. Collective consciousness means something that most people think about and make decisions about.
If something isn’t in your consciousness, you would never think about it and never make a decision about it.
You don’t see it because you don’t identify it as a problem.
Weird, right? A few years ago I never thought about animal rights. Now, I do. It’s like collective, socially acceptable knowledge. A few years ago nobody thought about climate…
What is Hard to Understand for Scientifically-Oriented People
Religion is something people think a lot about in the back of their minds. It’s something like that – it’s about the source of everything: consciousness, thinking about thinking, thinking about all your feelings.
Be careful that you don’t mistake it for ADD. Thinking about thinking is what I do 24/7.
Connection is the key that always works.
I use this vehicle to moderate everything that happens inside my body.
I basically do everything differently than they do in Buddhism, which I consider dangerous.
You are your whole, big body. A thought is a small thing within you. You have many thoughts—so many small balls inside you.
Within you, there are also all types of feelings. Feelings are also smaller things within you.
If you add all thoughts, feelings, organs, and food, you have you. But what “you” are is still indescribable in some way.
Now, the hard part:
You have to be careful to distance yourself from a single thought or feeling.
Take the time to visit all thoughts or feelings from time to time. They are things living in you.
It isn’t as bad as you think. You have matured.
Bestaat het verleden nog?
Het verleden is al gebeurd. Het bestaat dus niet meer. Maar het bestaat nog wel in onze herinneringen. We dragen dus letterlijk het verleden met ons mee.
Het verleden bestaat dus nog steeds, maar in een andere energievorm.
Bestaat de toekomst?
De toekomst is nog niet gebeurd. Maar omdat veel mensen al een beetje nadenken over de toekomst, bestaat het ook weer een beetje wel — maar dan in een andere vorm.
Waarom nadenken over het verleden anders is dan over de toekomst
Gedachten over het verleden en de toekomst gebeuren niet op dezelfde plek in je hoofd. Sterker nog: al je gedachten zitten op een andere plek in je hoofd.
Nadenken over het verleden is anders dan nadenken over de toekomst, omdat het verleden op één manier is gebeurd. Je kunt natuurlijk wel een buitenbochtje pakken en denken: “Had ik dit of dat anders kunnen doen?”
Als je over de toekomst nadenkt, is alles nog mogelijk. We hebben geen idee wat er over één seconde gebeurt. Je kunt wel zeggen: de kans op kop of munt is 50%, maar er kan ook een meteoriet inslaan. Dat kun je dus helemaal niet weten.
Gaat er informatie verloren in ons heelal?
Ja, als ik iets roep en niemand luistert, is er informatie verloren gegaan.
Does the past still exist?
The past has already happened. So it no longer exists. But it does still exist in our memories. We literally carry the past with us.
So the past still exists, but in a different form of energy.
Does the future exist?
The future has not happened yet. But because many people already think a little about the future, it also exists a little bit — but again in a different form.
Why thinking about the past is different from thinking about the future
Thoughts about the past and the future do not happen in the same place in your head. In fact, all your thoughts sit in a different place in your head.
Thinking about the past is different from thinking about the future, because the past happened in one particular way. Of course, you can take a mental detour and think: “Could I have done this or that differently?”
When you think about the future, everything is still possible. We have no idea what will happen one second from now. You can say the chance of heads or tails is 50%, but a meteorite could also strike. So you simply cannot know.
Is information lost in our universe?
Yes, if I shout something and nobody listens, then information has been lost.
How to learn to think multidimensionally
Thinking multidimensionally is hard for most people. You get stuck in one branch of the tree fast.
The first thing you have to understand about this universe is that it’s multidimensional in every way possible. This means: it’s unimaginable how differently I look at the world compared to you. Everybody is on their own island.
The first thing you therefore have to build in is something like religion. I don’t care what you believe in. I’m not religious myself. But you need something like religion, because you need some common ground. It’s very easy to live on different planets while being on the same planet, especially when everybody is stuck in their own subculture or mobile phone.
How to stack dimensions
Your body is a 3D object. So to go to 4D, you have to add one dimension. You can do that in a lot of ways.
For instance:
You count your thoughts (1 extra dimension), and within that you add categories (another extra dimension).
5D means you become simultaneously the 3D object (your whole body) and the extra dimension you added. This is non-duality: you are both things at the same time.
You can also do it like this: you start a thought at your throat. Now you point that energy toward a specific thought in yourself. The energy — the line in between — is 7D.
8D means putting one axis in the stillness, and making one axis the moving part.
Or: you mark yourself and your consciousness as the thing squeezed in between two things. You can also add sound. This is a very neat shortcut.
For me, somewhere in 10D, thinking becomes like an art form. It’s unimaginable how beautiful my inner world is. It’s like practicing and constant shaving.
At the higher axes, the inside of your body and your thoughts sync. For me that feels like I am in a cathedral where sunlight shines in from outside. It’s a very religious experience.
The process of thinking multidimensionally is explained very well in the Bible.
Again: I am not religious. This is the last time I excuse myself.
The Bible is about the process of creation, which is deeply interwoven with our universe.
For instance:
1 In the beginning G created the heavens and the earth.
2 Now the earth was formless and empty, darkness was over the surface of the deep, and the Spirit of G was hovering over the waters.
This means: you have a starting point, and you create 3D first. You move up (heaven) and down (earth). That’s how the drawing starts. Multidimensional. There can’t be a start of a universe without time, for instance.
Why you have to be a little careful with multidimensional thinking
It’s very tempting to use dimensions to distance yourself from what you feel. For example, when you add the dimension “observer”: I observe my feelings from a distance and I don’t identify with them. Don’t do that. Don’t distance yourself too much from your feelings.
When adding dimensions, this is very important though.
Let’s say that I start every thought, every sequence of thinking, or every action with “I am worthless.” Then this becomes the underlying tone of every thought and everything I do. It’s very important that you identify that dimension and work on removing it from yourself.
Dimensions like “I am worthless” have something very annoying in them: because you think you are worthless, you start to behave in a worthless way, and you actually become “worthless.” You behave that way because you believe you are.
It’s very dangerous to have too narrow a view of reality.
Narrow means that one thing is always just that one thing.
For instance: everyone who is distracted all day and dreamy is said to have ADD.