Beyond doubt
June 17, 2009
I have a great friend who consistently says, when he’s taking part in a workshop, that he doesn’t get anything. Of course it’s not true. I’ve proved to him many times that he gets information faster than his brain has time to process it, and faster than the people around him, but he continues to doubt his ability and wonders why other people seem to be better at knowing things than himself.
He is not alone in his doubting.
All of us have an ability to detect information through a wide variety of senses, far more than the traditional 5 senses we were taught about at school (long years ago!). And we have an ability to process that information without having to ‘think about it’.
Whenever we are asked to think about something, we begin a mental process of visiting various places in our consciousness to get an answer or to construct an understanding.Yet there is a simpler, more immediate way to access information – and that is to use our knowing.
My use here of the term ‘knowing’ is the ability to capture or retrieve information from a source, at the moment it is required, and to render it in such a way that it provides an understanding, without having to consciously process the information as a thought or series of thoughts.
It’s common practice in my workshops and teleclasses to have people just ‘know’ what to say without having to spend time analysing a question. They stay focused in the energy of whatever we are working on and they stay in the present, so that information flow is easily available to the whole group. Referring back to the past does have a noticeable effect upon the group energetic – it takes the focus away from being in the present.
This is a big marker in our evolution – of knowing what is true at this very moment rather than relying upon historical thought perspectives.
We can sense and know so much about the Cosmos without ever having to step a foot outside our front door or switch on a computer or read a book. Everything is available and open to us. It’s our orientation to the information that makes our perspectives unique, and it’s our sharing of those perspectives that provides the foundation for a shared reality that works for all of us.
The difficulty for my friend, and others like him, is to accept that our special abilities are real and trustworthy – and that the information we receive contains a wealth of compiled material that needs hyper-speed processing.
The greater our shift to owning our hyper-speed processing then more information becomes conscious and instantly available. And with a greater range of information being consciously considered and shared, then our awareness and understanding radically evolves.
Very soon now, my friend will be consciously operating in the realm of hyper-speed processing, and he will realise that he’s been doing it all his life. Clearly beyond doubt!