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A World of E-motion

Updated: 2 days ago


All existence, including every material detail, from the most mundane to the most inspired, from the tiniest particle to the furthest reaches of the universe, arises out of an emotional state.



We will be embarking on a journey full of many twists and turns to uncover the physics of our emotions, an existential secret hiding in plain sight, that when brought to the surface from the deepest recesses of our heart can change the course of our lives. 


E-motion or “energy in motion” is sensory data that gives us information about what exists. Everything around us and everything within us, in its most basic form, is made of this information. 



The physical carriers of sensory data are energy phenomena, including light and audio waves, and chemical and electrochemical stimuli. As we interpret this sensory data we receive information about the external world, as well as information about our internal experiences of the world. 


In this way, existence and experience are fundamentally interdependent. After all, how could anything meaningfully exist without some kind of experience of it?

Since all experience emerges from our sensations, we can see how sensations are as fundamental as existence itself.


In every moment we experience an aspect of an infinite spectrum of possible sensory experiences, with the primary state being the center of that spectrum, the foundation for all existence, a feeling of immense connection that we call love. 


Love is not a passive state, or something that happens to us, but is the act of creation itself. 


We see this on display everywhere throughout the natural world. Plants optimize their use of the full spectrum of light by reflecting green, the center of the spectrum, while absorbing the shorter and longer wavelengths on either side, allowing for efficient and balanced growth. 



This process provides a harmonious connection with the full spectrum of energy available, allowing plants to nurture themselves, as well as the other plants, organisms, animals, and humans that rely on them.


We experience the array of energy that surrounds us as light, color, form, sound, and every event that has ever occurred within it. And we experience it in excitement, fear, grief, compassion, fury, peace, and every sensation that has ever been felt within it. 


In its most fundamental form our material world is constructed out of the ways we interpret sensory data. It very literally emerges out of our sensations and emotions.

The ways we interpret sensory stimuli and how much of it we can actually perceive is unique to each of us, which is why two people can have vastly different experiences of the same event. 


We will be exploring all kinds of sensory anomalies, from out-of-body experiences to autistic and sudden savants with extrasensory perception, and how these perceptions could be related to our emotional connections with others, as well as to our level of emotional intelligence.



The Telepathy Tapes, a podcast released in 2024, follows the patients of Dr. Diane Hennessy Powell, a neuroscientist who has been studying telepathic abilities in nonspeaking autistics for decades. 


I came across Powell’s work when I was researching cases of sudden savants, rare accounts where a person who has had a near-death experience suddenly acquires new skills and sensory abilities.


It was then that I began reading about the innate extrasensory abilities of autistic savants, and had my first ah-ha moment about the connections between our emotions and how we experience the world around us.  


In most cases, telepathic abilities have been discovered by the mothers of savants as they go about their daily lives. It appears that the depth of their emotional connection is a major contributing factor in the emergence of extrasensory communication. 


The deeper we look, the more we find emotional connection and emotional intelligence to be front and center in everything we experience, both mentally and physically. 

We will discover how emotional intelligence is not just a description of how we relate to humans and other aspects of our physical environment, but is something much bigger and more profound than the confines of our material world.


People who have had near-death experiences report having more intense sensory experiences than everyday life, seeing colors and hearing sounds that don’t exist in our material world. They even experience humor and quirky emotional expressions during their encounters. Emotions are intensified, as well as the ability to perceive the thoughts and emotions of others. 


Thousands of stories similar to this one have been shared all over social media:



The emotions felt during a near-death experience are so profound that people become inspired to completely change the course of their lives.


We all have moments when we question the nature of our existence. It could be an overwhelming feeling of déjà vu, a dramatic coincidence, a sense of something strange and unexplainable, or a brush with death.


Most of us shake it off and go about our daily lives, if not right away, eventually, once again treating the world around us as ordinary and explainable. But every now and then something happens that is so bewildering that it stops us in our tracks, and forever transforms our life.


After a series of unexplainable experiences surrounding my dad's illness and subsequent death, I began my search for clues, delving first into the frontiers of physics and neuroscience, eventually opening myself up to the deeper mysteries found within psychology, philosophy, and metaphysics.



We’ll begin our investigations with the basics of what our physical world is made out of, and see how the pieces of our puzzling universe begin to fall into place.

References

Lee Nichol, The Essential David Bohm, First published November 21, 2002, Page 152.

Telepathy Tapes podcast, Episode 5. Albert Einstein, Living Philosophies , First published 1931.


 
 

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