Give me Some Space, Part One

The planning for the CE multi-city tour has begun! I just need one more poll because on the Canadian cities one, a lot of you asked us to consider Vancouver. Montreal was the clear winner other than that so what should it be, that or Vancouver?

The cities that are on our list currently are (in order of popularity):

Sedona, AZ

New York, NY

Los Angeles, CA

Atlanta, GA

Austin, TX

Montreal or Vancouver, Canada

I would like a list of people who are willing to be a part of a small planning committee and a list of people who would like to teach, perform healing modalities, give readings, do trance channeling or provide other services during the events. Include the cities you’re willing to commit to. Email me at emedhus@gmail.com. Should be fun!

Time to get all Carl Sagan-y with this post on space!

Me: Hi, Erik. You want to get all science-y today?

Jamie (laughing): That was crazy! You know how sometimes he’ll just manifest stuff to horse around?

Me: Oh, yeah.

Jamie: I didn’t see anything in his hands. He just looked like a tall Erik, lean, and his skin on his hands is exposed. He has short sleeves on. He reaches back like this.

She reaches behind her right shoulder.

Jamie: And all of a sudden, he’s putting on a scientist long coat.

Me: A lab coat?

Jamie: Yeah! So, now he’s all white up high (she motions to her neck) and all the way down, like he’s wearing a dress.

Me: Oh my gosh.

Erik: I’m ready.

Me: All right.

Jamie: He has a tie on.

Me: Oh, he’s got a tie on! Wow! Getting all formal on us! It should be a bowtie if you’re a true scientist.

Jamie snaps her fingers, then touches where a tie would be.

Me: Done.

Jamie: [The bowtie] is blue. The tie was a reddish color, but the bowtie is more blue.

Me: Okay, let’s talk about space. What is space made of?

Erik (in the booming voice of Captain Kirk): THE FINAL FRONTIER!

Jamie laughs.

Me (chuckling): Oh, here we go.

Jamie: Is that Star Trek?

Me: Yes.

Jamie laughs.

Jamie (To Erik): Yes, you’re very funny right now, Erik!

Erik: Space is uncontainable.

Me: What?

Erik: It goes on forever.

Me: Okay, but what is it made of?

Erik (making explosion sounds): Is that blowing your mind?

Me (just to make him move along): Yes, it does. What there is left of it.

Erik: You mean space as how human beings view it? Because the way they see it, it looks like empty space.

Me: Yeah, but I’ve heard that it’s not really empty space.

Erik: You’re telling me!

Jamie laughs. He’s really cutting up today!

Me (chuckling): Tell me about it, then. What is it?

Erik: The way they label it is as gray matter.

Me: You mean dark matter?

Erik: Dark matter.

Me: Gray matter’s in the brain.

Jamie (To Erik): Ha ha!

Erik: For some people it leaks out, but yeah, dark matter. When humans understand how to define dimensions, then we’ll be able to hold equational value—

Jamie: I don’t think that’s a word, but…

Me: Define it as an equation?

Erik: Yes, so they’ll be able to look at that dark matter and say, “We’ve got layers of dark matter here.”

Me: Oh. Layers?

Erik: Yeah. It’s not like when we look at—

Jamie picks her cell phone up in both hands.

(Pause)

Jamie (To Erik): You said pick up something!

Apparently, he wasn’t satisfied with her choice.

Jamie (picking up a pottery rabbit): I got random stuff here.

Me (chuckling): Oh, that’s definitely random!

Erik: Like when we pick up this (the rabbit,) we say, “Here’s the rabbit’s head, and it’s holding space, so everything in rabbit, rabbit, rabbit. Plastic rabbit.” Well, it’s not like that because inside of here (He/Jamie points to the rabbit) is more dark matter. This (He/Jamie strokes the rabbit) here is one layer of the dimension, so if we were able to peel back the layer, the rabbit wouldn’t exist in this form. It would have a different set of properties.

Jamie: You’re saying “properties?”

Me: What do you mean? What properties?

(Long pause)

Jamie: He’s talking about vibrating strings.

She giggles and shrugs her shoulders.

Me: Okay.

(Long pause)

Jamie: He’s still talking; he’s not waiting for me.

She shakes her head and looks a little rattled or agitated.

Me: Slow down, buddy!

Erik: Different energy. A different movement of energy, a different vibration of energy, because beyond each layer (Jamie mimics him peeling layers back)—and we can call these dimensions, if you like and that helps you see it in your head—has different ranges of vibration similar to The String Theory.

Me: Okay. I can’t remember [the details] of The String Theory. I’ll have to look that up. Yeah, it’s fascinating.

Erik: So, the whole discovery now where science and spirituality are joining each other is going to be based on dimensional planes. A lot of people might take that as “perspective.”

Me: Mm hm.

I’m a little lost.

Erik: Once that’s understood, WATCH OUT! TIME TRAVEL IS COMING.

Jamie: He shouted that out.

Me: Oh boy. We’re going to get ourselves into so much trouble with that.

Erik: Pretty much.

Me: So basically, you’re saying [space] is made of dark matter.

Erik: Yes. Yes.

Me: Oh, okay. And are there multiple universes or is ours the only one?

Erik: Ours is not the only one.

Me: Oh yeah? Are they parallel universes, like are their other universes just like ours where Jamie and me and you are talking?

Erik: Yes and no.

Jamie: He was clarifying the other question you asked, “Is ours the only universe?” You mean within our universe?

I nod.

Jamie: Okay, because he kept showing that if we took space and we had a star here (she puts a fist in front of her) and a star here (she puts the other fist about a foot away from the first) and we kept peeling back the layers of that space, that dimensional plane, (she mimics peeling back layers between the stars) we’re going to come across other places of existence. Other—

Me: Dimensions?

Erik: Yes, because the way that we are measuring our space, the way that we are measuring what we perceive with our eyes is strictly limited to our five senses. It’s very, very limited, but it’s a great way of perceiving space, everything around us, with THIS instrument.

Jamie taps on her head.

Erik: For this human instrument.

Me: Yeah.

Erik: When we start looking for the truth, though, it gets quite confusing because you’re going to want to not just use those five senses. You’ll need to expand beyond that. To do that, you need to come up with ways to perceive other dimensional planes, whether it’s with an instrument, or—I think it’s going to get pretty freaky up here!

Jamie laughs.

Jamie: When you say, “up here”—

Me: Yeah, is it up?

Erik shakes his head.

Me: The dimensions, are they stacked?

Erik: Yes.

Me: The universes, are they stacked?

Erik: Yes.

Me: Are they swirled and stacked or are they stacked like a nice little Neapolitan ice cream sandwich?

Erik: No, no, no, no, no, no, no. They’re not stacked nice and neat. There are some loose ends, we’ll call them, Mom, or a little bit of chaos. With that little bit of chaos, it’s organized extremely well.

Chaos? Organize? Does that belong in the same sentence, really?

Me: What? That doesn’t make any sense!

Erik: Wait. Blat, blat, blat!

Jamie mimics Erik making “talking hand” gestures, so I start laughing. I guess I’ll have to be patient.

Erik: When you say, “stacked nice and neat,” that doesn’t cut it.

Me: Okay.

Erik: When you say, “organized,” that would cut it, and there’s this sense of organized chaos.

Me: Okay.

Erik: When you talked about swirling, you know, there’s this perfect swirl you can do like in a spiral.

Jamie mimics Erik making swirling motions with an index finger.

Me: Mm hm.

Erik: Or there’s that kind of swirl like you do in Nestlé’s Quik and milk.

Now she mimics him making random, uneven stirring motions.

Me: Right.

Erik: Everything’s mixing, touching each other and overlapping and there are different currents in different directions, but it’s organized.

Me: Okay.

Kind of like my head right now.

Me: Interesting.

String Theory

String Theory

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Elisa Medhus


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