consciousness

Don’t take it personally: A lesson in compassion, reality and consciousness

January 1, 2010
Thumbnail image for Don’t take it personally: A lesson in compassion, reality and consciousness

We all experience the world around us differently. With our five senses (sight, hearing, taste, smell, and touch) we process an enormous flow of information that is constantly reaching us; day and night. The only way our brain can handle this is to filter it. This is the reality we experience. Our experience is not the real reality but a filtered one. We are living in our own world.

Read the full article →

Darwin’s Natural Selection and the Map of Consciousness

September 9, 2009
Thumbnail image for Darwin’s Natural Selection and the Map of Consciousness

Is there a relation between the map of consciousness (how conscious or unconscious people are) and all the good or bad things that can happen? Is this just like natural selection, survival of the fittest; giving the more conscious people an edge, a real advantage in life?

Read the full article →

Why I believe the lack of compassion is the root of all evil

September 4, 2009
Thumbnail image for Why I believe the lack of compassion is the root of all evil

If there is a root of all evil, I believe it must be seeing others (or other groups) as inferior. Not being able to have compassion for one another and others point of view, not being able to put ourselves in someone else’s shoes: Looking at situations from a different perspective.

Read the full article →

Power vs. Force Review

July 26, 2009

Not only can David Hawkins get the level of consciousness from the test person, but he can get it from any other person (including people who lived long ago) organization, religion or country on this planet. Power vs. Force is the result of many years of research and thousands of tests, resulting in David Hawkins Map of Consciousness.

Read the full article →

Review of Making Time by Steve Taylor

May 20, 2009

Have you ever wondered why time seems to speed up as we are getting older? Or why time slows down when we are bored or sitting in the dentist chair? And why time seems to expand when we are experiencing new situations in our life, like traveling to a part of the world we have never been before? Steve Taylor gives an answer to these questions in this fascination book.

Read the full article →