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Blog #168--We Are Miniature Suns

  • Jack Tuttle
  • May 30, 2016
  • 4 min read

Humans like to believe we are separate and different than the rest of Nature. We claim an almighty creator put us here as special overseers for the rest of the vast universe. We should therefore learn how to control the forces that limit other life forms, making us invincible. In our minds, it’s just a matter of time before theologians and scientists show us the way.

People have been experiencing similar thoughts since our humble beginnings, but we still haven’t discovered the secret that would unlock that potential. We don’t know precisely what triggered the formation of the universe, and we haven’t been able to prove conclusively there is an eternal afterlife awaiting us. In fact, we have yet to realize there is an explanation we have, up to now, fought desperately to deny: maybe we’ve been wrong all this time and need a new approach to the problem.

When I had an explosion of awareness in 1978, I learned that every solar system, planet and life form in the universe was created by the exact same process (that is, assuming our perception of reality isn’t an illusion). As I described in my book “It’s a Secret, So Pass It On: a Toolbox For Life,” we are all miniature suns, with relatively the same balance of positive and negative charges. We may not look like suns, but we are all offspring of our sun, a continuation of the chain reaction that created our solar system, galaxy and universe. The main difference is that we exist in a colder environment than the sun at the center of our solar system, so our fire burns internally and is normally invisible to us externally.

Human eyesight is extremely limited. Despite the desire of many of us to disbelieve anything we can’t see, our visual range is far less than many other life forms on Earth. I may not have credibility when sharing my conclusions, but others have continued to study how Nature works since 1978, and each discovery has served to reinforce what I learned back then. One of the latest to cross my desk was an article by Sayer Ji called “Biophotons: the Human Body Emits, Communicates with, and is Made from Light,” published by GreenMedInfo on 6/25/2013.

A statement beginning the article is an eye-opener:

“Increasingly science agrees with the poetry of direct human experience: we are more than the atoms and molecules that make up our bodies, but beings of light as well. Biophotons are emitted by the human body, can be released through mental intention, and may modulate fundamental processes within cell-to-cell communication and DNA.”

Most of those who have studied science are aware that our sun emits photons or energy packets that, once they experience the friction of Earth’s atmosphere, provide us with light and warmth, without which we could not survive. Recent studies have revealed that our bodies release ultra-weak photon emissions called biophotons, which are 1000 times less visible than the human eye can perceive. But they can be identified with advanced technology.

The science described by Ji is far too advanced for this article. But a brief list of its conclusions can aid our understanding of what scientists are beginning to discover about us:

1. Biophotons are used as communication devices by many life forms. The energy transfer is much faster than a normal chemical process. Our eyes and even our DNA are sources of these biophoton emissions. A 2010 study demonstrated that these emissions can travel along nerve tissue within the body.

2. Some parts of our bodies demonstrate stronger biophoton emissions than others, and they can fluctuate depending on the time of day. For instance, photon counts throughout the body are lower in the morning than the afternoon. The chest and abdomen produce the lowest at all times. The head and upper extremities produce the most, and these levels increase throughout the day. The highest emissions seem to occur on the front part of the right leg, the forehead and palms. The middle palm area shows a larger amount of emissions during autumn and winter.

3. Those who meditate frequently have a lower level of emissions than those who do not meditate. An herb called rhodiola is said to also reduce emissions after taking it for one week.

4. Human skin cells can trap energy and information from ultraviolet light. More biophotons are emitted from people with a skin condition called xeroderma pigmentosum than people with healthy skin, suggesting they have less ability to store these ultra-weak emissions. A few scientists are beginning to realize the body’s ability to exchange energy and information with the sun.

5. Some scientists believe we can learn to create spontaneous healing through direct intention. They say hypnosis, stigmata phenomena and the placebo effect are the result of this process as well. Of course, they say “direct intention” must occur at the “right time,” when the two parties are synchronized with each other and to the earth’s constant changes in magnetic energy. In other words, these things are possible, but not whenever we want them to occur. To me, this disproves direct intention, but I doubt scientists are ready to conclude that.

The value of scientific research lies in its ability to prove or disprove the hypotheses we sometimes hear in our minds that make us wonder about ourselves and our true origins. Little by little, we are finding out what we really are. Some are no doubt scared of this possibility since they have held to falsehoods passed down generation after generation. But pain and fear are caused by our disbelief, not the truth.

We are light. We are one with our creator.

http://dreamtime3.wix.com/jacktuttlebook

Comments and questions can be directed to dreamtime@insight-books.com.


 
 
 

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