Nexus - 1704 - New Times Magazine-pages

Page 41 of 96

Page 41 of 96
Nexus - 1704 - New Times Magazine-pages

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TO INFINITY AND BEYOND TRANSCENDING OUR LIMITATIONS INFINITY BEYOND AND TRANSCENDING LIMITATIONS OUR The Universe is at once infinitely large and infinitely small, is organised according to a holographic fractal scalar arrangement, and may well consist of black holes even at the subatomic level. Exploring the Nature of Reality ave you ever wondered about the structure of reality? Where did it come from? How did it get here? And how did it self-organise to result in my observing it? These are fundamental enquiries that most people have asked themselves at some point in life. They might have thought of these questions in many different ways, perhaps not exactly as stated above, but most people have wondered about the source of existence, about a beginning and an end or an eternal continuous dynamic. From an early age, these questions felt to me as most worthy of investigation, and in a certain way my earlier adventures in the various sports industries became tools that I could use to investigate the reality | am in, my interaction with it, and my capacity to modify it or at least push it to the extreme. And to the extremes | pushed it: whether it was skiing, climbing or deep-sea diving, my tendency was to see how far | could push the edge of the structure of reality by my intent and capacity to overcome physical limitations. It was a test of mind over matter, and in every case | felt that a resonance field could be established with the structure of reality— what athletes typically call "the zone"— where, as best I can describe it, | felt a flow, a type of harmony with all the various dynamics I was encountering in these extreme situations. Whether it was the forces involved, such as gravitational, or the sensations of the material world feeding back information to my body and my body responding to it—such as the fine edge of my ski slicing through an icy surface, or the sensations as the tips of my fingers conformed to sharp crystals while I climbed a thousand-foot rock face—these moments of hig communion with nature taught me that there must be a fundamental relationship. I eventually came to describe this as a feedback in the structure of space-time which included this sense of complete integration within the wheelworks of nature that | was experiencing as well as the self- organising properties of the material world which | could clearly observe everywhere in the natural environment where highly organised and complex systems can be found. Yet there was more. My early interest in exploring the more mystical side of our experience led me to investigate the internal world of meditation, a world that is in complete reference to the event of consciousness, of a deep and fundamental self-discovery and exploration of the observer experiencing this reality. Therefore, it was both an external exploration, in which | could push the boundary of my influence on the external world (what one could call the material world), as well as an exploration of how far | could push the boundary of the internal world to identify the source of the observation. And to my great surprise, the two seemed to feed back on themselves. For instance, in those states of "the zone" during peak experiences in sporting events, nature seemed to be speaking to me beyond the receptor sites of my by Nassim Haramein © 2010 The Resonance Project Foundation Post Office Box 764 Holualoa, HI 96725, USA Email: info@theresonanceproject.org Website: http://www.theresonanceproject.org Email: JUNE - JULY 2010 NEXUS ° 41 by Nassim Haramein © 2010 www.nexusmagazine.com