Jon Rappoport's Blog
by Jon Rappoport
May 13, 2015
For those who want to examine a rigorous presentation of the
paranormal, based on a long history of laboratory experiments, I
recommend Dean Radin’s classic, The Conscious Universe: The Scientific Truth of Psychic Phenomena. (HarperCollins, 1997)
This article is not about that.
It’s about a taboo.
On the one side, we have people who denigrate the possibility of the
paranormal. On the other side, we have people who, ungrounded in the
physical world, try to stage what amounts to a paranormal escape
operation, only to fall back into their increasingly chaotic
circumstances.
In the middle are persons who have genuinely experienced the
paranormal, know it, feel no obsession to shout it from the rooftops,
and go on with their lives.
With the rapid decay of organized religion throughout the 20th
century, huge numbers of people felt a need to attach themselves to new
and old ideologies proclaiming The Extraordinary was at hand.
Assertions of paranormal import accompanied this faux revolution.
At the same time, 20th-century life was shaping up in a world of
National Security States, and was all about citizen behaviorism,
repression, operant conditioning, and various forms of mind
control—aimed at curtailing the freedom to experience whatever might lie
beyond the prescriptions and slogans of governments.
What exists outside a psychic prison defined by rabid consumerism,
limited and false science, and pressure from peers to accept idealized
and cartoonish middle-class imagery without question, without deviation?
What is paranormal?
Is it, in childhood, an ecstatic hour’s walk through a park on a
summer afternoon, when every leaf, flower, and cloud is irresistible?
When space itself is so present that every shred and iota of anxiety or
confusion disappears?
Is it the foreshadowing moment when you know what a person is going
to say next, how he is going to say it, how he is going to move, how he
is going to look as he says it?
Is it the sudden realization that the entire realm and round of
emotions you have been experiencing has vanished, leaving in its place
an escalating joy that can’t be contained?
Is it in standing at a window, late at night, looking out at a city,
possessed of a vision of what you most profoundly want to do for the
rest of your life, realizing that you will, in fact, do it?
Is it in standing in a room, where a researcher is showing you a pack
of photos, one of which a person, in another room, six miles away, has
just tried to send you, telepathically—and knowing beyond a shadow of a
doubt which photo it is?
Is it in getting out of bed in the morning and becoming aware that you, non-material you, exist forever?
Is it in watching a cat walk away from you, across a carpet, sending him a silent message to roll over, and watching him do it?
Is it in the easy and majestic silence you feel, after sitting on the floor and breathing in and out for a half-hour?
Is it in your child’s face?
The truth is, paranormal experiences are everywhere, and people have
them. The experiences exceed the ordinary boundaries material reality.
They tend to lead to a new view about life, and they certainly go
beyond societal tenets about what one is supposed to know and feel.
And yes, the waters are muddied by people who feel compelled to chime
in and report experiences they only wish they had, hoping for badges of
honor. But no matter.
In certain respects, this is, in fact a prison planet. Through
upbringing, education, peer pressure, training, indoctrination,
propaganda, citizens are expected to maintain “normal status.”
Steady-state normal.
No leaking of fuel, no blowing of gaskets.
Functional.
People condition themselves with the goal of fitting in.
It’s a grand stage play, and one picks a role and lives it out.
But one day something happens, and if you admit it, everything has changed.
What then? Do you continue to obey and subscribe to the taboo?
Or confess that the true normal is paranormal?
Do you tighten your grip on the card that identifies you as a citizen of the realm? Or do you drop it in a waste basket?
Do you cling to the old? Or do you opt for possibilities wider than
you previously imagined and shove in all your chips on a new life?
The taboo against the non-ordinary is as old as the hills. In many
cases, the establishment was a State religion, and the priest-class
labeled paranormal experiences heretical witchery. Why? Because, of
course, free consciousness, unburdened of church doctrine, was a threat
to priestly power.
Modern science, with ridicule as its primary method, attacks the
paranormal because it cuts too close to home. It tends to expose what
science cannot explain.
For example: freedom.
Nowhere in the lexicon of conventional physics is there room for such
a concept. The predetermined and inexorable flow of tiny particles is
assumed to be everywhere at all times, even in the composition of the
brain…and therefore, all thought and feeling and action, which stem from
the brain, are predetermined and inexorable as well.
No choice. No freedom.
The absurdity of this notion is plain to anyone who can think.
If the brain and the body are just another collection of sub-atomic
particles, then the capacity to make a free and independent choice about
anything is null and void—unless the entity doing the choosing, YOU, is
beyond those particles, beyond matter and energy.
When I say paranormal experience is everywhere, this is what I mean. Freedom exists. Freedom is paranormal. It always was.
It takes a severely limited state of affairs not to recognize it.
It takes a long, long history of repressive societies not to recognize it.
It takes a considerable amount of indoctrination and mind control not to recognize it.
The notion that various key political documents established freedom
is extremely short-sighted. Heroic though the efforts were, they only
uncovered what was already there in a natural state.
That natural state is anything but normal. It speaks of the human
ability to move out of the chain of cause and effect and make choices.
Changing lives, changing futures.
For most people, most of the time, the sense of their own freedom is a
rather dull given. There is nothing thrilling about it. They choose A
or B within a grossly limited context.
This fact is, in itself, an indication that a monitor has been placed on their own experience, on their own emotions.
If, however, this cover is blown, a transformation occurs; and then
they know, in an entirely different way, that freedom is, and is
supposed to be, the most natural kind of ecstasy in the world.
Paranormal.
Jon Rappoport
Almost EVERYTHING we have been told (and are still being told) are lies . . . the sooner that humanity admits that it has been duped, the sooner something gets done about it . . .
Saturday, May 16, 2015
The taboo against paranormal experience is a taboo against freedom
Labels:
consciousness,
spirituality
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Sheeple
The Black Sheep tries to warn its friends with the truth it has seen, unfortunately herd mentality kicks in for the Sheeple, and they run in fear from the black sheep and keep to the safety of their flock.
Having tried to no avail to awaken his peers, the Black Sheep have no other choice but to unite with each other and escape the impending doom.
What color Sheep are you?
.
100627
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