Connecting to Blackness

I want to remind you that Jamie is going to have another event in Los Angeles designed to teach you how to communicate with spirit: your spirit guides, your loved ones and, of course, Erik. Erik won’t be a part of the event, but Jamie will still trance channel a spirit during the evenings. Those are always so much fun! I love it when Grace and Maitland come through. If you haven’t experienced that, you need to. It should be on everyone’s bucket list. Here are the details:

Get Closer to Spirit with Jamie Butler
Join Jamie for her Spirit Development Workshops and Spirit Channelings at the Sportsman’s Lodge in Studio City from Feb 18-19

Jamie returns to the Los Angeles area from February 18-19 to help you develop and grow your relationship with spirit. One of the most popular questions Jamie receives from clients in her work is how to effectively communicate with spirit. Many of you are just starting to explore this while others are well into your journey. Jamie has designed a two-day workshop to accommodate different levels of experience. Day one is for beginners and day two is for the more advanced. You can take each class separately or combine them for a full experience.  The cost of each workshop is $195. The cost of both workshops together is $380.

Jamie will also offer a spirit channeling each evening after the workshop from 6-7:30 PM PST. The cost for the channeling is $40. If you are new to channeling this is where Jamie allows spirits to communicate through her to you by coming into her body and relaying messages directly. The first 30 minutes of the channeling is typically a teaching lesson from spirit and the last hour is open for people to ask questions both personal and topic related. Questions are first come, first serve and there are no guarantees everyone will be able to have their question answered.

For complete details and to register for the Spirit Development Workshops please go HERE.

To register for the spirit channelings please go HERE.

See you in February! We are going to have a blast together!

With Love and Light,
Jamie & Amy

Jamie and Amy in their usual craziness!

Now let’s see what Einstein and Erik say about the nature of reality. No small subject, right?

Me: Good morning, Jamie.

Jamie: Good morning!

Me: How are you?

Jamie: Good. I have my coffee.

She shows off her brightly colored coffee mug and takes a sip.

Me: Oh yummy. I’m going to have some, too.

I follow suit and take a sip from mine.

Jamie: Cheers to everyone who’s drinking their coffee right now.

Erik: Hi, everyone.

Me: Hi, Erik.

Erik: Hi, Mama.

Me: We’re going to try to get Shakespeare—Shakespeare? Einstein! We’re going to try to get him back here. Remember we talked to him last time, and he said he wanted to come back and give more information about dark energy and things like that? We’ll also ask him about The Big Bang.

Jamie: What’s the dark energy? That’s not the gray energy?

Me: I mean dark energy and dark matter.

Jamie: Wouldn’t that be the same thing?

Me: No. Or I don’t know! Maybe it is!

Jamie: We’ll find out.

Me: Go get the man! Well, even matter is energy because everything is made of energy.

Erik: We should put Lukas in front of the camera.

Me: I know!

I turn the camera toward Lukas who immediately looks very embarrassed.

Erik: Wanna know what I look like without hair?

Me: There’s brother Lukas who looks very similar to Erik. (Teasing) He’s the handsome brother, Erik! Just kidding.

Lukas tries in vain to hide behind the desk.

Erik: He’s more pretty.

Me: Yeah, he’s more pretty!

Nice grammar, dude.

Lukas grins.

Jamie: Okay, so Einstein.

She gives two thumbs up, indicating that he’s arrived.

Me: Hi, Dr. Einstein. Thanks for coming back like you promised.

Jamie: I love his accent.

Me: It’s so cute.

Einstein: Hello, hello. Hello to everyone beyond the screen.

Me: Beyond the screen!

Jamie and I chuckle.

Me: You were going to give us, in layman’s terms, a definition of what dark matter and dark energy is. Just give us the short version because our minds will probably explode.

Einstein: I find it quite difficult to have the confinement of the positive and the negative of the English language and being able to breach beyond the perspective of the positive and negative when you’re being taught something that doesn’t adhere to the past information you already have. So imagine a tiny little mallet and a tiny little nail. We’re going to break things away. I don’t see what great use it will provide for the human experience, but it provides great use for the experience you have beyond this one.

Jamie (smiling): I love his accent. It’s so hard not to say like “dis.”

Me: Oh, so cute. I fall for accents.

Jamie: Ditto. We both married foreign men.

Einstein: As we continue to talk, it may sound like a child’s story.

Me: That’s good. Do child.

Einstein: Very imaginative instead of discussing direct points because, again, I don’t see how this will enhance the human experience.

Me: Okay.

Einstein: It is like saying to the hamster in the ball.

Jamie (laughing): I’m so going to remember this moment when Einstein says, “The hamster in the ball.”

I laugh.

Einstein: This is your world and [within the ball] are your parameters, but go explore the room. He cannot feel the carpet; he cannot touch the floor; he cannot tell the texture of the wall because he’s in his own world. Much like the human experience, you’re put in a ball and you have certain parameters. If you were to break beyond those parameters, you’d no longer need to be the hamster. You’d no longer need to be the person.

Me: Mm hm.

Einstein (throwing up his hands): Good, we understand. Continue.

Me: Did he tell me what dark matter—

Jamie (To Einstein): No, I don’t know what that is.

Einstein: You had questions that led up to dark matter.

Me: Okay, well.

Jamie: He shows me some progression of questions.

Me: All right. Well atoms or maybe electrons, I heard are tiny black holes. Is that true?

Jamie: I think this is what he’s suggesting because he’s answering.

Einstein: Yes.

Me: What? The electrons or all the particles in an atom or the atom as a whole?

Einstein: No, no, no. Not the atom as a whole.

(Long pause)

Jamie (chuckling): We’re talking about sandwiches?

Me: Oh boy. Another reason for me to be hungry now.

In the previous session we talked about Ed Bacon, and it made me crave bacon.

Einstein: The atom, as a whole, has different elements just like the sandwich does: the cheese, the ham, the lettuce, the tomato. So we have positive and negative particles and all these different elements in the atom. If we simplify and we specifically look at the cheese in the sandwich and we look at the electrons, we’ll find that as we get closer, we’ll find that they are, indeed, a different kind of sandwich.

Me: Oh!

Einstein: That is not the most basic part just as cheese is not. Cheese needs dairy, time, it needs—

Jamie: He’s showing me the whipping motion.

Einstein: It needs –

Jamie: I don’t know that word. Anyway, you know you have to whip—whatever.

Me: Right.

Jamie: Erik, quit! Sit down!

Einstein: So when we look at the electron, there are other smaller elements in it along with the blackness.

Jamie (To me): You call it the black hole, right?

Me: Well, I was wondering if they’re tiny black holes that have so much gravitational pull that even light can’t escape it.

Einstein: Yes, but it’s more flat, two-dimensional.

Me: Right, flat.

Einstein: Two-dimensional blackness. As you find in most human theories, we have cause and effect. We hold very strongly to the idea that for every cause there’s an effect, but this is not the whole truth about the human experience. There can be cause without effect and effect without cause. This does not happen in grander schemes, but –

Jamie: Oo, I can see that! Oh, can you get into my head for a second?

Einstein: The two-dimensional blackness –

Jamie (covering her face in frustration): Dammit. Yeah, I can see why we—it’s good to be a hamster in a ball right now and not know this!

I laugh.

(Long pause)

Jamie: I’m so sorry that I’m struggling. Yeah, I should have gone to school longer. Erik said, “You should have gone to school longer.”

Me: Erik!

Einstein: The blackness, life and all energy are part of one string. Everything you see, experience, smell, touch or feel or not feel is part of one string. So when we simplify and get into the microcosmic world that we are all a part of, you will notice that more windows are on this string than there are walls, doors, solid matter. This blackness is almost a way of instant communication, not so much like a wormhole that you tunnel through and end up somewhere else. Humans like to do measurements to understand where we are in time and space. We do it constantly to stand upright. We do it constantly to keep our balance. We do it constantly in relationships, and some of you do it constantly with budgets.

Einstein laughs.

Jamie: He thinks it’s a funny joke.

Me: Keep your day job!

Einstein: When we use our microcosmic world, we are using it in a way that we don’t understand and in a way that we’re not driving from our heads, our thoughts. But there is a way to communicate to the whole string at once and to be a part of that unity or All That Is. So you may never consciously, in the human head, be able to touch it, smell it, see it, taste it or hear it—those five human senses have fallen short—but the intuitiveness that we have inside this knowingness is very connected to this blackness—

Jamie: He just says blackness. He won’t do the black hole bit.

Einstein: This absorption of light is in a simplified way, a form of storage.

Jamie: The image he gives me in my head is they collect little bits of light and information and they put it in a box and stick it on the string.

Me: Okay.

Jamie: It becomes mass knowledge, mass understanding and building for the entire string.

Me: Interesting.

Einstein: Like I mentioned, it’s as if we tell our children a story. It doesn’t make much sense because we can’t manipulate it. We can use it to meet our needs. It’s just what is.

(Pause)

Jamie: Go ahead. He’s quiet. Do it.

Read this post more than once. I read it a second and third time and got much more out of it. It’s continuation is coming to a blog near you. Meanwhile, if you haven’t watched it already, here’s Part One of our Bigfoot interview. Part Two will be posted tomorrow!

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Elisa Medhus


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