Pole Dancing in the Future

Here I am at the NOLA racetrack watching my husband buzz around over 200 mph on his bike. Not sure I like him going that fast, but he’s a pretty cautious guy. The heat and humidity is oppressive. Hopefully, the temperatures will abate later today. So what will happen 150 years from today? Erik shares what he knows. 

Me: What will things look like at that point, 150 years from now?

Robert: As soon as you asked that, he showed me this huge expanse of things so I told him to narrow it down.

Me: Go easy on him, Erik!

Erik: At that point, humans will have mastered their physical bodies. For instance, they’ll be able to determine how long they want to live. They’ll be able to get rid of energy inequalities that cause disease. The kids who are coming in now, starting in the 80s and 90s, are much more introspective, and the ones that were born at the turn of this century are even more so. They’re very sensitive and empathetic. This is the generation that’s setting up all these things to happen. They’ll go inside themselves to look at why they react to things the way they do. The dysfunction in the world comes from our not being self-aware and of not understanding our own reactions. Once we figure out all that, we won’t feel the need to suppress someone else or to even be aggressive towards them. We won’t feel the need to respond hostilely to anything or anyone. It’ll be like water off a duck’s back. Governments will become completely different from the way they are now.

Me: Thank you, Jesus!

Erik: You can thank, not only history and past experiences for that, but also the Internet. It’s brought everyone together. The best way I can describe it is that governments will be more like the Internet. Everybody will vote through that interconnected web. The Internet is a mirror of how our brains work. It creates these connections that link us all together.

Me: So politicians, lobbyists, special interest groups—

Erik: They’ll kiss their asses goodbye.

Me: Good!

Erik: The only reason people pursue those positions of “power” is because they feel powerless. They want to feel above someone else. Humans will see that behavior as childish, immature.

Me: Right.

Erik: If you look at humans on the scale of maturity, we’re right at late adolescence. We’re approaching adulthood and over the next 150 years, will go into maturity.

Me: Did the magnetic pole shift happen 12,500 years ago during Atlantis?

Erik: Not exactly. The poles started shifting during the existence of Atlantis and that shift was very quick, but it didn’t cause the undoing of that civilization right away. There were all these other reactions in the Earth that happened slowly over time.

Me: Okay, well we’ll talk about Atlantis in more detail later on.

Erik: It happened over decades. Thirty to forty years.

Me: Ah. So is it true that the Sun’s magnetic poles are shifting, too? If so, what effect is that having?

Robert: I don’t know about this personally, but—

Erik: Dude, it doesn’t matter.

Robert laughs.

Erik: To humans, the Sun has these poles like north, south, whatever you want to call them, but in reality it doesn’t. It has poles everywhere, and they’re constantly moving around.

Robert: I didn’t know that!

Me: Interesting.

Robert: I would have assumed that it was more like Earth.

Me: Me, too.

Erik: The reason people make those assumptions is because they think that the entire Universe centers around how their little planet works.

Me: So does the movement of those many, many poles affect us biologically, technologically or any other way?

Erik: Sure. Earlier I said that everything that’s happening in the Universe—and the Sun’s a part of that—is affecting Earth, but at the same time, everything that goes on in the Earth as a result of what’s going on with the Sun can go back and affect the Sun. Another star light-years away can affect our sun.

Me: Give me one example of how this could affect us biologically.

Robert: He’s showing me a group of poles, little separate poles that are all around the Sun.

Erik: There can be a period when they all conjoin to become giant poles.

Robert: That sounds dirty.

Me (laughing): Robert, where your mind goes!

Robert: Sorry!

Erik: Then when you have human beings who don’t have good emotional control over themselves can become more violent. Some people might become weepier; some might become more anxious. You’ve heard about that phenomenon of what happens during a full moon?

Me: Yeah.

Erik: Same thing when this shit happens on the Sun. People just go crazy. I’m using emotions because I think more people can identify with that. It doesn’t always have to be negative. For some, they feel this sense of calm and clarity. It affects everyone’s energy differently.

Crazy pole dancing

Crazy pole dancing

I thought this was funny. Love you guys!

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Elisa Medhus


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