A (42:27)
It's a wave of potential. In fact, it could still be set so that it's going to continue to age and wear down and corrode right over x amount of time. Because we could set that to known variables and known mathematical constants and physics constants that would determine how much, you know, oxidation is going to happen to something like this over the next 50 or 100 years. But if nobody's observing it on the headset, it's literally not there. It's only there the moment you observe it. What does that say? I mean, when you think about that, it's like, wait a minute. So I'm literally recreating, moment by moment, the universe around me. Yes, you literally are. It's not material. The universe is not material. It is mental. Back to principle number one. And you have to break your mental thinking to ascribe always wanting to come back to some materiality because it's not material. And that's fundamentally one of the challenges I think everybody faces. Right. So when we start thinking of that sense, though, we think we're born into this world of materiality. And then we have mythos that we all learn about, because this is the story of campfires, you know, people telling word of mouth stories for generations upon generations upon generations of the stars looking up at the stars at night around a campfire and telling the story of what all those stars mean. And we have something called the Deacon of astrology. So we have the 12 zodiac signs. Yes, but in addition to the 12 zodiac signs, we have another 36 in the northern hemisphere constellations. And those constellations were all outlined by Ptolemy and they are like Orion. Orion's not currently part of the zodiac, at least not widely recognized. I believe it eventually will be. But as far as you know, Ophiuchus is another one. Right. Ophiuchus is exactly opposite Orion, the Snake bear. We can start looking at all of these. And just in the month of Taurus, for example, which we're now in. Right. Taurus is Orion, Auriga and Eridanus. Those are the three constellations that ascribe to the Taurus constellation that are these Deacon. And it breaks the year into ten day segments. Right. So this is the Atlantean calendar and the early Egyptian calendar too. It's on the Dendera stele. So when you think in that sense, it's like, okay, well what are the mythologies? What's the mythos that's associated with all of these star systems? It goes back to the beginning of time. We can go back as far as the oldest books known to man. The Epic of Gilgamesh. Right, but the Epic of Gilgamesh tells a story of Enki, right? It tells a story of Enkidu and of course Gilgamesh himself. And Gilgamesh is supposed to be the constellation Orion, right? So he's a hero, but he's a boastful hero. He has to take on several Labors in the Epic of Gilgamesh. And one of the Labors, he has to fight the Hydra. And it doesn't get counted to his benefit for completing his Labors because he had the help of his best friend, Enkidu, right? Enkidu is this guy who helped him fight. And so the gods said, no, no, no, you have to do more Labors now because you kind of cheated on this one. You didn't perform this on your own. And killing the Hydra was a very, very difficult task. So at least he survived. But as we look at these stories, there's like a thread of all of these that's also from the twelve Labors of Hercules. Exact same story, right? And then we can start seeing the coincidence rather of all these stories intermeshing together, like Orion and Artemis and Jason and the Argonauts and Perseus and Andromeda. So there's actually four mythos stories that are archetypes for us, right in the night sky. And those four are the 12 labors of Hercules, the story of Orion and Artemis, the story of Perseus and Andromeda, and the story of the Jason and the Argonauts. All of the constellations all have their roots in these stories. So all 48 of the 48 Ptolemaic constellations have the roots in these stories. And we think that these stories, unlike our material world, are fake. That's why we call them myth. And actually the material world is real. And what I'm now telling you is the opposite is more true because we are living out these exact stories. We are literally living out these stories on a real time basis. And we don't even realize we're living out these stories. And I could give you so many examples of how I realized that I was like living out some of these stories. And so some of the stories that we hear about and read about, it's kind of like at the end of a dream, not only can you sometimes become lucid, but maybe right before you become fully lucid, or maybe while you're lucid, things get start getting weird in the dream, like, all of a sudden, like, something happens where it doesn't quite match what you would have thought would have been normal. Oh, wait, pandemic. Good example, right? Which is like, what the heck was that? You know, it's like we're all sitting there, head spinning, still like, what was that? Wait, politics. What is that? Like, what is going on? Nothing is operating the way you would normally expect it to. You know, like Will Smith smacking, right? Chris Rock is like, what? What was that? You know, it's like we could go like, like, what the f. Moments on so many different things. And the truth is that the mythos has a story behind it that each of us in some way, shape or form are basically ascribing a reference toward in our own life, whether we know it or not. And those mythos stories pervade all. So it all comes back to the same original story of Osiris and Isis, which is also a story of, you could say of Rama and Sita. In the Ramayana story, by the way, Rama was the Orion constellation. Sita is Sirius, right? It's the same as Shiva and Shakti. It's the same. So it's a story of mankind's evolution and learning how to transcend the duality and learn how to turn the difficult experiences of life into the gold of soul evolution and to attain the philosopher's stone. And the tame of philosopher's stone is the realization that you control your own reality and that every experience you have is gold. Nothing that you experienced in this life, even down to one second of what decision you made. It's like in the movie the Matrix when the oracle says to Neo, oh, you want to sit down on the park bench? And Neo's like, no, I prefer to stand. And it's like, oh, okay, fine. So then he stands there, but she's like, looking up to him. And then finally he sits down. He says, I decided to sit down now. And then he looks at her, he says, but you already knew that I was going to decide to sit down, didn't you? And she's like, I wouldn't be much of an oracle if I did it. And that's exactly what we're living. We're now in the opportunity, we have the opportunity to rewrite the script of our lives, literally rewrite the story, rewrite the Ramayana. I just rewrote the whole Ramayana in Chatgpt, where Rama, who's supposed to kill Ravana, who basically took captive his wife Sita, right? Who didn't feel worthy to be queen and kind of wanted to escape anyway. Allowed herself to be seduced and the whole rest of the story she's, you know, in, in a terrible place because she, yes, she gets saved and they get to cross the Rama bridge and all that stuff and be able to get her back. But when she becomes queen, there's all these questions about her worthiness to be queen. The questions that she had about asked around her about her worthiness to be queen were more about how she perceived herself and her own self worthiness. That was the issue and that's why I was projecting all around her. So I rewrote the story that Ravana was just a shadow of Rama and they actually became friends and that Sita realized her self worth, realized that being worthy is not the result of an accomplishment or other people's perspective or other people's perspective. But importantly not a result of something she was going to accomplish. Because we all get this mentality of like, okay, if so and so has done enough, then they're going to be good enough and they deserve to be in the position that they're now in. No, worthiness is actually a birthright.