Invisibility Made Real
If
you could pick a superpower to have, would you pick invisibility? We’ve
all had moments in our life when we wished we could render ourselves
invisible. For me, there was the time I was speeding along on a
long-deserted stretch of highway and suddenly realized how fast I was
going just as I spotted a police car lurking behind a bush. “I’m
invisible. I’m invisible,” was my immediate mantra. But alas, I was not
and the speeding ticket cost me a small fortune.
I have met a few individuals
over the years who claim to have perfected the art of psychic
invisibility. One such individual was able to walk right past former
President Jimmy Carter’s Secret Service detail in 1979 when former
Egyptian President Anwar al Sadat took Carter on a personal tour of the
Great Pyramid. The area around the Giza Pyramid had been sealed off for
the private visit, but my friend really wanted to see the pyramid. He
claims he simply assumed an energetic air of invisibility and walked
right past everyone with camera in-hand until he was inches from Carter.
Carter, assuming he had security clearance as the official
photographer, asked him to get some good pictures for him. My friend
chatted it up with Carter and consequently was allowed to join the group
inside the pyramid. He has the pictures to prove it. Unbelievable, but
true.
I marveled at his chutzpah, or rather
his remarkable invisibility talent. He was not a professional
photographer, but an Australian soldier on leave at the time who always
wanted to see the Great Pyramid and only had a day to accomplish it
before returning to active duty. But as timing would have it, he
couldn’t get near the Pyramid in the conventional way that day due to
the tightened presidential security. He found another way instead to
have his wish fulfilled. Psychic invisibility.
I often wonder just how he did it. I
can’t imagine anyone just waltzing past the Secret Service. Some people
by nature just seem to be able to blend naturally into the scenery and
remain unnoticed, but in my friend’s case, what he did was intentional.
This ability is taught in advanced Yoga trainings known as
“siddhis” (supernormal states) or “attainments.” It takes practice and
is not easily learned.
Psychic invisibility requires a kind of
single-minded clarity of thought in order to manifest the effect, either
by summoning and manipulating large amounts of psychic energy to
envelop the object or person that you wish to turn invisible, or to send
clear telepathic signals out to influence those nearby.
One can attain the art of invisibility by being either “unseeable” or “unable to be seen.” We see objects
when the visual cortex receives light through the eyes and arranges it
into identifiable images in our brain. If light is bent around an
object, it becomes “unseeable” because the eye cannot receive the light
that is bounced off the target. The military uses this kind of “cloaking technology” to hide tanks and infantry on the ground. Mastering “unseeability” is a lot trickier than rendering someone “unable to be seen.”
To accomplish “unseeability,” one has to
surround themselves with a dense field of psychic energy that is tuned
to “astral colors” that are so incomprehensible to the untrained mind
that the brain assumes it has received “bad data” from the eye. It then
becomes one’s “blind spot.”
One can also create a kinetic barrier,
that becomes one’s psychic armor, where you make yourself invulnerable
to physical harm. Another friend, who knew how to do this, told me he
was on vacation, out walking alone in Sydney, Australia when he found
himself in what he immediately perceived as a bad area of town.
Nightfall was quickly upon him when two threatening men came up behind
him. Thinking fast, he said he became “the essence of a rattle snake,”
spun around and hissed at them in a coiled position before shrouding
himself in invisibility. The two men took off running like they had seen
a shape-shifting wild creature. My friend used psychic invisibility to
transmit a message to the other men’s brains, much like a hypnotic
suggestion, that “There is nothing here to see, but a dangerous snake.”
It obviously worked.
Some individuals are also able to create
a kind of telekinetic/electrokinetic bubble around the target that
warps light so that no reflected light from the invisible person reaches
the eye of the viewer. Cameras and/or motion detectors might pick it
up, but it is invisible to the viewer. The viewer’s brain might identify
that something is not right, or even feel someone is there, and
instinctively move away from the spot. They may even try and convince
themselves that nothing is there, even though their senses tell them
differently.
I am always amazed and in awe of what we
are capable of affecting when we allow ourselves to think outside the
box. Or, this case, the invisible box.
If you like this article, please subscribe to my free weekly blog on this website. Thank you and have a wonderful day.Dr. Kathy Forti is a clinical psychologist, inventor of the Trinfinity8 technology, and author of the book, Fractals of God. amazon.com/author/k
No comments:
Post a Comment