Consciousness of Rocks, Plants and Animals

I hope everyone is enjoying their holiday. It’s snowing and very Christmassy here still. Please note, I’m having way to much fun to edit and spell check so this entry is “as is.”

Channeling Transcript

Me: Okay, one last question. Erik, can you describe the consciousness of rocks and other immaterial things, and plants, animals compared to human consciousness?

Erik: Well, rocks are different from plants and animals.

Me: Okay.

Erik: Plants and animals have a living source, a life source. They create food, life energy, um—

(Very long pause)

Jamie hums in mock impatience.

Erik: Describe it?

Jamie: Yeah, like color or shape, whatever.

(Pause)

Jamie (laughing hard): Describe it, Erik!

(Very long pause—this must be a tough one)
Jamie, singing, again in mock impatience: La, la, la, la, la.

Jamie and I both laugh again.

Jamie: He’s trying really hard to gather the words up. He wants to talk about rocks first.

Erik: It’s energy that IS. There’s not so much of what you’d call a consciousness, but it does have a life force in it. Um, plants and animals have a higher vibrational life force, so it shifts and it grows and it moves.

Me: Interesting!

Erik: So when we look at it, it has a pulse to it. It has a movement to it where the energy of a rock doesn’t have that movement of energy to it. It’s like stagnant energy. Rocks have stagnant energy.

Me: Oh, okay.

Erik: But things like wood that once was a sustainable life force, you know, and then we cut it up, make furniture out of it, and so forth—

Me: Um hm.

Erik: It contains all the memory of it from when it was alive. It contains that source, but it’s movement, just as something were to die, it ceases to have movement to it. It becomes energy force that just IS.

Me: Wow, I find myself patting my desk here. Oh, I’m so sorry you were cut up! So I guess plants have feelings, sensory feelings; do they have emotions?

Erik: Yes! They get happy, they get scared, terrified.

Me (sadly): Aw, no!

Erik: They feel pain. When chemical are put on them, they screech, they pull back, their energy pulls back. They communicate to each other by movement, smell, root systems.

Me: Uh huh.

Erik: They even fight!

Me: Wow! What about animals compared to plants or other vegetation.

Erik: Animals, we can link more to our own personal energy, where they have more of a, um—

(Long pause)

Jamie (chuckling): Yeah, you’re going to catch yourself there, Erik, cuz you’ve got to use our descriptive words.

Me: Ha!

Jamie: He says he doesn’t mean to say plants are lesser forms of life than people, but I think that’s the only way he can put it—that animals have more of a thinking consciousness, problem solving for survival—

Erik: But see, plants have this also, but it’s a completely different web structure.

Me: So the consciousness of animals are just more complex, not necessarily better?

Erik: There you go. I like that.

Me: Okay, I guess we’re out of time, so I’ll end on that. Thank you, Erik. I love you sooo, sooo much.  And thank you for the phone call. I just really thought that was amazing, and I hope to here from you soon. And thank you, Jamie.

Jamie: Sure. Have a wonderful day.

Me: You too.

Erik: I love you, Mom. I’ll see ya later.

Me: Oh, okay! I’m gonna hold you to that!

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Elisa Medhus


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