Book Review on The Source Field Investigations
After spending some time reading books by the Theosophists, a group who figured out their theories about how the world works through empirical evidence derived through individual and shared experiences through meditation and adepts, I went to the library on the behest of a friend to pick up David Wilcock’s book, “The Source Field Investigations.” This book comes to some strikingly similar conclusions, but bases its empirical evidence on reports from scientists, journalists, and many documented anecdotal stories in between.
The book starts out discussing the “energetic body” which is a term that Theosophists call the “etheric double.” Scientists monitoring the energy that surrounds a DNA molecule have measured this. They found that if they moved the actual DNA molecule away, the energy pattern of the DNA molecule remains for a short time, then fades away. Essentially, this energy pattern can be a sort of ‘record’ of where the physical body was (and where it may be in the future).
Wilcock sums up this idea that we live in a place called space-time, but there is another place called time-space. Within these two planes, time is space in the other, and vice versa. This means that if you walk across a room in time-space, then, you move, say, 4 hours into the future in space-time. Wilcock goes through a number of experiments and phenomenon that use this model as an explanation for just about every imaginable paranormal phenomenon out there, and also ties it into the fact that we each have the latent ability to go between the two through our own minds and technology that has already been invented.
For example, he discusses that the physical manifestations of objects moving between these realms is that some of their matter moves from one place to the other. For example, he cites experiments where they would weigh a lead weight, drop it to the ground, and weigh it again. After hitting the ground, the weight would actually lose some mass, which slowly came back in about 20 minutes or so! He proposes that some of the atoms in this weight approach the speed of light and shift over into time-space until eventually returning here to space-time. Another example is if you synchronize two watches, then fly one on an airplane and keep the other on the ground, when you get them together again, the one on the plane is running behind the one on the ground. It therefore experienced “missing time.” This is like when people report ‘missing time’ when someone feels like they were somewhere for 15 minutes, but were actually gone for several hours or days. This is the result of passing over into time-space. This is also Wilcock’s explanation for levitation, UFO phenomenon, poltergeists, walking through walls, the formation of the pyramids, crop circles, and time travel.
Vortexes seem to do a good job of this phenomenon, which explains strange occurrences in tornadoes, where bananas are embedded into telephones poles, and chickens show up in sealed bottles. Somehow, the vortex puts the chicken partially into time-space and it can easily pass through solid objects. Eventually, the items rematerialize in the physical plane. This is how a piece of straw can pass through a concrete wall and become embedded. Wilcock cites that salmon swimming upstream do a vortex dance to create antigravity so they can get up insurmountable waterfalls, and some have witnessed rocks doing this. Also, many UFOs are cylindrical and have vortex technology in the middle. Wilcock cites many 19th and 20th century inventors who displayed such technology, and many who had it taken from them by various government agencies (one was even given an
Isralei peace price after the Israeli army stole his device). In most cases of the various inventions, clocks stopping and missing time seems to be a big part of it, in addition to weird stuff like one inventor pointing his device at a gun, and the police officer couldn’t move the gun no matter how hard he pulled while everyone’s watch stopped, as if the gun was stuck in place in space-time.
Technology aside, Wilcock explains that the Earth and the universe are able to create portals. This explains places like the Bermuda Triangle and the Devil’s Triangle. Apparently, there are many hotspots that form a geometric pattern around the Earth. He gets a lot into numbers and geometry. It gets really deep when he analyzes the numbers involved in the many solar system cycles, galaxy cycles, and universe cycles, and comes back to 2012 as a major cycle shift where we are heading to a time where (again), humans understand how to harness this power that the universe provides. Much of this might be star-driven, as the ancients understood. So, the golden age is a byproduct of where we are in the cycle. Spots on earth have higher levels of ‘coherence’ to make these phenomenon happen at some times versus others, just as certain people have higher levels of ‘coherence’ than others.
He goes on to talk about a book from the 1930’s or so where a guy visits Tibetan monks who, using meditation, are able to move large stone blocks from the bottom of a hill to the top of it. This could explain how the pyramids were made, and also why the stones fit together so nicely, because they become spongey when partially in time-space and are able to fit together (like the straw getting stuck in the concrete). He talks about other monks who sit in a cave for years meditating then come out and make an impression in the concrete outside the cave with their bare hands, as if it were wet cement. The anecdotal stories abound, I’m sure you’ve heard them outside of this book, but Wilcock says they are all based on the ability to manipulate space-time and time-space.
He also goes into why the ancients might want to create pyramids, and cites several stories from the Russians who made PVC pyramids and found they had unbelievable healing powers for various rats who were experimented upon heavily. Also, they went into re-generating organs from holograms, and other experiments where they shot electrical current into wheat seeds and the genome reverted to a more virulent ancient strain of wheat that harvested faster than the new strains. Probably good for gluten-intolerant people is my guess. Another oddity was the spontaneous formation of life in sterilized test tubes, and how Darwin only got evolution ‘partially correct’ in that we are not a byproduct of entropy, but rather, a byproduct of some creative consciousness.
He gets into the some kids in a Chinese program and how they move stuff with their minds and whatnot. Also, there is discussion about something I believe strongly, that is, we could solve Fukushima just by a large number of people with a strong concerted effort and adept in this skill to meditate and make the half-life of the radioactive elements quicken. Of course this sounds absurd to many, but the pineal gland, held dear by most every major religion of history, might somehow have the link to let us ‘see’ time-space, allowing us to manipulate between them.
Overall, the book is an awesome read for anyone wanting to get a more solid case history of physical scientists and inventors like our good friend Nikola Tesla over the years coming across abnormal results and then digging deeper into these phenomenon. It goes beyond those who have reached these realms through personal meditation and shows cases where these things have reached the physical reality. Also, it nicely ties together a bunch of weird oddities that can now more easily be explained by some sort of cohesive theory. Great book, I’d highly recommend.
The book starts out discussing the “energetic body” which is a term that Theosophists call the “etheric double.” Scientists monitoring the energy that surrounds a DNA molecule have measured this. They found that if they moved the actual DNA molecule away, the energy pattern of the DNA molecule remains for a short time, then fades away. Essentially, this energy pattern can be a sort of ‘record’ of where the physical body was (and where it may be in the future).
Wilcock sums up this idea that we live in a place called space-time, but there is another place called time-space. Within these two planes, time is space in the other, and vice versa. This means that if you walk across a room in time-space, then, you move, say, 4 hours into the future in space-time. Wilcock goes through a number of experiments and phenomenon that use this model as an explanation for just about every imaginable paranormal phenomenon out there, and also ties it into the fact that we each have the latent ability to go between the two through our own minds and technology that has already been invented.
For example, he discusses that the physical manifestations of objects moving between these realms is that some of their matter moves from one place to the other. For example, he cites experiments where they would weigh a lead weight, drop it to the ground, and weigh it again. After hitting the ground, the weight would actually lose some mass, which slowly came back in about 20 minutes or so! He proposes that some of the atoms in this weight approach the speed of light and shift over into time-space until eventually returning here to space-time. Another example is if you synchronize two watches, then fly one on an airplane and keep the other on the ground, when you get them together again, the one on the plane is running behind the one on the ground. It therefore experienced “missing time.” This is like when people report ‘missing time’ when someone feels like they were somewhere for 15 minutes, but were actually gone for several hours or days. This is the result of passing over into time-space. This is also Wilcock’s explanation for levitation, UFO phenomenon, poltergeists, walking through walls, the formation of the pyramids, crop circles, and time travel.
Vortexes seem to do a good job of this phenomenon, which explains strange occurrences in tornadoes, where bananas are embedded into telephones poles, and chickens show up in sealed bottles. Somehow, the vortex puts the chicken partially into time-space and it can easily pass through solid objects. Eventually, the items rematerialize in the physical plane. This is how a piece of straw can pass through a concrete wall and become embedded. Wilcock cites that salmon swimming upstream do a vortex dance to create antigravity so they can get up insurmountable waterfalls, and some have witnessed rocks doing this. Also, many UFOs are cylindrical and have vortex technology in the middle. Wilcock cites many 19th and 20th century inventors who displayed such technology, and many who had it taken from them by various government agencies (one was even given an
Isralei peace price after the Israeli army stole his device). In most cases of the various inventions, clocks stopping and missing time seems to be a big part of it, in addition to weird stuff like one inventor pointing his device at a gun, and the police officer couldn’t move the gun no matter how hard he pulled while everyone’s watch stopped, as if the gun was stuck in place in space-time.
Technology aside, Wilcock explains that the Earth and the universe are able to create portals. This explains places like the Bermuda Triangle and the Devil’s Triangle. Apparently, there are many hotspots that form a geometric pattern around the Earth. He gets a lot into numbers and geometry. It gets really deep when he analyzes the numbers involved in the many solar system cycles, galaxy cycles, and universe cycles, and comes back to 2012 as a major cycle shift where we are heading to a time where (again), humans understand how to harness this power that the universe provides. Much of this might be star-driven, as the ancients understood. So, the golden age is a byproduct of where we are in the cycle. Spots on earth have higher levels of ‘coherence’ to make these phenomenon happen at some times versus others, just as certain people have higher levels of ‘coherence’ than others.
He goes on to talk about a book from the 1930’s or so where a guy visits Tibetan monks who, using meditation, are able to move large stone blocks from the bottom of a hill to the top of it. This could explain how the pyramids were made, and also why the stones fit together so nicely, because they become spongey when partially in time-space and are able to fit together (like the straw getting stuck in the concrete). He talks about other monks who sit in a cave for years meditating then come out and make an impression in the concrete outside the cave with their bare hands, as if it were wet cement. The anecdotal stories abound, I’m sure you’ve heard them outside of this book, but Wilcock says they are all based on the ability to manipulate space-time and time-space.
He also goes into why the ancients might want to create pyramids, and cites several stories from the Russians who made PVC pyramids and found they had unbelievable healing powers for various rats who were experimented upon heavily. Also, they went into re-generating organs from holograms, and other experiments where they shot electrical current into wheat seeds and the genome reverted to a more virulent ancient strain of wheat that harvested faster than the new strains. Probably good for gluten-intolerant people is my guess. Another oddity was the spontaneous formation of life in sterilized test tubes, and how Darwin only got evolution ‘partially correct’ in that we are not a byproduct of entropy, but rather, a byproduct of some creative consciousness.
He gets into the some kids in a Chinese program and how they move stuff with their minds and whatnot. Also, there is discussion about something I believe strongly, that is, we could solve Fukushima just by a large number of people with a strong concerted effort and adept in this skill to meditate and make the half-life of the radioactive elements quicken. Of course this sounds absurd to many, but the pineal gland, held dear by most every major religion of history, might somehow have the link to let us ‘see’ time-space, allowing us to manipulate between them.
Overall, the book is an awesome read for anyone wanting to get a more solid case history of physical scientists and inventors like our good friend Nikola Tesla over the years coming across abnormal results and then digging deeper into these phenomenon. It goes beyond those who have reached these realms through personal meditation and shows cases where these things have reached the physical reality. Also, it nicely ties together a bunch of weird oddities that can now more easily be explained by some sort of cohesive theory. Great book, I’d highly recommend.
Copyright © 2013 R.E.D.