Chasing Phantoms - Carissa Conti-pages

Page 52 of 241

Page 52 of 241
Chasing Phantoms - Carissa Conti-pages

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42 children start out being able to see spirits and auras, and over time, lose that ability. We get squelched down and stifled, discouraged and pushed into a box that locks us into a set way of seeing and viewing reality. When we dream however, our assemblage point naturally shifts slightly, enabling some of the strange nocturnal experiences that many people experience. A Toltec warrior, through the help of a nagual (similar to a shaman) practices being able to shift their assemblage point at will — while they are awake — to be able to access those other realms that are not normally available to us. There’s one catch though, as noted by author Carlos Castaneda — when shifting back into the normal assemblage point position, the memories of everything that was done, said or experienced while in the altered assemblage point position state is forgotten! Only when shifting the assemblage point back again can those memories be accessed. And then it becomes a situation of “How could I have forgotten everything I did the last time I was ‘here’!” Carlos experienced that amnesia split compartmentalized mind thing to me. So possibly another aspect of what’s happening when an abductee is taken during alien/MILABs encounters involves a natural shifting of the assemblage point. If abductors are taking targets to bases or locations that are straddling different densities or realms, putting the abductee into an altered state of awareness and consciousness, then those targets may very well experience a natural shifting of their assemblage point, which would further help to compartmentalize their memories and experiences. I tend to actually think this may be a big part of what’s happening, and my boyfriend Tom, a lifelong abductee, remembers experiencing this as a young child. At the start of his abductions he would be confused as to what was happening, but as soon as things would begin kicking in, all the previous memories would come flooding back to the surface, leaving him with the feeling of “I can’t believe that I forgot!” Each and every time this would happen. Kind of like that other reality is put on hold while he was back in “the real world.” It’s identical to what Carlos Castaneda describes when remembering his Carlos Castaneda describes when his compartmentalized experiences while in his various assemblage point positions. Chasing Phantoms i and mentions it in several of his books. Does this sound familiar? Sounds very much like the whole remembering