Saturday 29 August 2020

Awakening in the Dream: Contact with the Divine

 

Little did I know that within a few years, my lucid-dreaming research would plunge me into a world that seems completely supernatural by most people’s standards. I would eventually come into direct contact with angelic, human-looking extraterrestrial beings who helped me completely reenvision science and spirit into a new and greater unified whole. The beings also helped me to identify a huge wealth of new evidence and proof that would help me make the case. I would learn that these people initially reach out to you through dreams, synchronicities, and visionary experiences. They proved over and over again that they could predict the future as easily as if they were reading a book. And they would soon pass along the greatest message of all: namely that we are right on the threshold of a spectacular mass evolutionary event many have called Ascension. I have uncovered far more than enough scientific evidence to make a very compelling case for this, as I have presented in my previous books. For those of us who “do the homework” and prepare ourselves for this fascinating global transformation, our everyday lives will become indistinguishable from a lucid dream. The awesome popularity of superhero films may be another way in which our mass, collective subconscious mind is preparing us for what may be coming — far sooner than we would have ever believed possible. We may well find ourselves awakening within the dream we were once so convinced was reality.


I only know David Wilcock from watching Ancient Aliens — and I do watch Ancient Aliens; all the time — but even so, I didn’t know if I was really interested in reading his latest book, Awakening in the Dream, when I saw it was available on NetGalley. I like Ancient Aliens for what I think of as excellent storytelling, its global sense of adventure (every episode is history, culture, and geography combined), and the fact that it always leaves me thinking, “It’s not like I actually believe the ‘ancient astronaut theory’, but it’s sure cool to think about…” So what would a book by one of the show’s contributors actually have to offer me? Turns out: quite a bit. Wilcock starts with personal stories about his childhood and college years, and mirroring a post I once wrote here myself, his experiences with synchronicities (which I have always found meaningful) and lucid dreaming (which I for some reason shied away from) led him to read many of the same books as I had at about the same age — but whereas my reading eventually spooked me into dropping the metaphysical line of research, Wilcock got to work, developed his gifts, and has made a career out of connecting the dots between disparate sources of scientific and philosophical thought. As for this book: I really liked all of the personal bits, got a bit bored by the Pyramid Timeline/Law of One information, and the overall message — that the world is an illusion made for us to work on karma, and it might be coming to an endpoint — really resonated with me. This book wouldn’t be of interest to everyone, but it was for me. (Note: I read an ARC through NetGalley and passages quoted may not be in their final forms.)


The combination of these two quakes completely and utterly destroyed the China Lake black-ops megabase. But the media never said a word about it. Various insiders suggested that nefarious covert aerosol spraying operations were being run out of the facility and poisoning our skies. On the very next day, July 6, 2019, the notorious Jeffrey Epstein was indicted and arrested. I wrote a huge article about all this on July 7. I do not see the timing of these three major events as an accident. I believe this was the work of an alliance that had formed within the government, military, and intelligence communities around the world. Earthquake weapons were used to take out a mission-critical base for the Deep State, and then Jeffrey Epstein, a criminal who could expose the ugliest secrets of this secret organization, was arrested. This was a major combined attack that could lead up to massive arrests of Deep State / Illuminati / New World Order / Cabal operatives which my own source has been predicting since at least 1999.


Wilcock is apparently in contact with various insiders and whistleblowers (including those "who have security clearances that in some cases are thirty-five levels of 'need to know' above the president of the United States") who want information about the Deep State and the Secret Space Program to become common knowledge. So, although my mind is not very open to conspiracy theories about chemtrails and the Illuminati, lizard people or 9/11 truthers, they’re in here. On the other hand, I am not against Wilcock’s explanations for crop circles, Bigfoot, and the Loch Ness Monster; maybe I’d just rather think on undiscovered wonders of nature than contemplate mundane human evil (or maybe cryptozoology is simply low stakes woowoo). But when Dave asked me what I was reading, and I tried to explain Wilcock’s ideas about karma being the engine driving our reality, and our ultimate fates, he got pretty excited: this is exactly what he believes to be true and he liked having his intuitive beliefs backed up by someone else’s research (naturally, I didn’t tell Dave that Wilcock’s proof comes from conversations with spectral aliens while in a trance state). Overall, though, this book has a lovely message:


The Ascension teachings are almost absurdly simple. According to the Law of One, if you want to graduate into your new life as an angelic being, all you have to do is Just Be Nice. Dr. Scott Mandelker and I would always joke about this at our conferences. Look at your thoughts about yourself and others. If those thoughts are even slightly over 50 percent oriented toward love, patience, forgiveness, and kindness — what the Law of One calls “service to others” — you are cleared for takeoff. If more than 50 percent of your thoughts and actions are geared toward negative emotions such as manipulation, control, jealousy, anger, rage, and fear, then you have some work to do…but there’s still time to change the road you’re on.


I understand that David Wilcock was one of the main drivers behind the idea that the end of the world as we know it would coincide with the end of the Mayan calendar in 2012, but apparently, when December 21st (coincidentally, my Dave’s birthday; not that there are coincidences) came and went without apocalypse, proof then arose that we had been given a brief reprieve; the end will now come some time between 2029 and 2031, and those who have worked out their karmic debts on this plane will be elevated to the next (where life will be about a hundred times better than here). And while it feels cultish to accept anyone's firm prediction of an impending rapture, what decent-living person wouldn’t root for the end of human suffering? It’s not that I really believe this is going to happen, but it’s sure cool to think about...