Feelings Create Your Reality, Here’s The Proof
“I do not end, not even at the moon and beyond.” — Dr.Robert Lanza, Bicocentrism.
Have you ever worked really hard to accomplish a certain goal, but no matter what you just couldn’t seem to make it happen?
Regardless of what you tried?
There’s a reason for this, and it has nothing to do with your skills, talents or worthiness — it actually has everything to do with your emotions.
Here’s why:
An Accidental Scientific Discovery
In 1820, a Danish reporter, Hans Christian Oersted discovered that electricity creates magnetic fields by accident.
He was demonstrating something to his students and discovered that an electric current creates a magnetic field.
This showed an intimate connection between electricity and magnetism, which were thought to be completely two separate phenomena.
Then in 1897, physics professor, JJ Thompson realized for the first time that some “small particles” must exist, but he felt nobody would be interested in them because they were too small.
On the evening of his congratulatory dinner, he famously said, “To the electron — may it never be of any use to anybody.”
Making it known that there was no practical use for this discovery. Boy was he wrong.
Scientists rushed to study these and found them to be electrons,
This meant that there was an electric charge that existed within every atom.
This went against the assumption that an atom was at the core of existence, and opened up the idea that there is an electrical field that is creating everything we see — and don’t see.
And that field produces magnetism, which then connects everything together.
Since we are part of this existence, we consist of this same field of electricity and magnetism.
We are electromagnetic beings that produce an electrical charge which vibrates at a certain frequency, and that vibration attracts (like a magnet) more of the same frequencies.
Hang with me, it’s about to get really interesting.
Harvard Researcher Proves That Our Emotions Influence The Earth
On 9/11, one of the United States satellites designed to measure the earth's magnetic fields showed a massive spike in the earth’s electromagnetic field.
Spikes that they had never witnessed before.
When they looked at the data, they pinpointed the precise moment the spikes began.
To their surprise, they discovered that the first spike happened 15 minutes after the first plane hit the World Trade Center.
And the second spike occurred shortly after the second plane hit.
Somehow, somehow our collective feelings impacted the frequency of the entire world.
Why is this so important to scientists in the search of understanding reality?
Because it demonstrated two very important things.
#1 — There is an intimate connection between everything as a whole.
#2 — Our thoughts and feelings “in here” have a direct influence on the world “out there.”
Then again, in the mid 1980’s during the Israeli-Lebanese war, a group of individuals came together to practice transcendental meditation.
During the time period of the mediation the deaths caused by the war statistically dropped by a staggering 72%, war related injuries dropped by 68%, the level of conflict dropped by 48% and cooperation of anti-war activists jumped up 66%.
This in the midst of the war. Coincidence?
Maybe, but there’s more.
Between 1988–90, a group of 8,000 participants gathered to meditate on the feeling of peace, and this effect was global.
It seemed as if a “blanket” of peace went over the world and caused an energetic shift in the minds and hearts of the people in it.
During this time period, all of the major conflicts in the world came to an end.
The seven year war between Iran and Iraq, the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, and the Soviet-American cold war that went on for forty years ended.
Are you starting to see what I’m seeing?
Yeah, so the next natural question is…
Is The World A Mirror Of Our Feelings?
Do our thoughts & feelings project out into space, and mirror back to us that which we are thinking and feeling?
The facts I shared above make it seem so.
Is it true?
Is the world merely a reflection of our own perceptions?
Let’s see what the science has to say.
In 1863, the first detection of the magnetic field created by the heart was discovered by Gerard Baule and Richard McFee.
They were able to determine that the heart itself was producing electromagnetic energy, at the time we knew the brain was electric as well thanks to Robert Bentley Todd and Michael Faraday who discovered the electricity produced by the brain around 20 years prior.
These fields of energy produced by the brain heart can be measured “outside” of the body.
And these same fields of energy were found in every other atom in existence.
This means our thoughts and feelings are made of the same “stuff” that makes trees, dirt, rocks, water and anything that the physical eyes can see.
The separation we see is merely perceptual, but not an actual reality.
We are so intimately intertwined with the events of our lives that we can’t often distinguish between reality and our ideas about it.
They are interwoven with each other.
Each thought we think, and with each feeling we feel forms our personal reality.
Moment by moment. Thought by thought. Feeling by feeling.
You are what is happening to you.
You are projecting your own ideas externally, and they are then materialized.
Human behavior itself is the clearest demonstration of this fact.
If you believe you are bad at math, then you’ll act like you are bad at math and produce the result of poor grades to further support the original belief.
I grew up believing I was a poor math student. So I would feel dumb when I tried to understand anything.
And since I believed I was a bad math student, I didn’t allow myself to practice and study because I felt there was no point, I thought I was too dumb.
The idea of me being a bad math student made me feel like a bad math student, so I then acted like a bad math student and proved it to myself because it materialized as bad grades — giving me a reason to say “Told you so, I’m bad at math.”
You see how it works?
That may be a silly example; but it shows that our actions are the external manifestation of our internal pictures, and our actions create the condition of our reality.
Once again: Your reality is a materialization of your own beliefs, thoughts and emotions.
You believe you can be successful, you will feel inspired enough to take action and stay persistent enough, make decisions and inevitably realize your success.
Conditions of success come from ideas of success.
Conditions of failure come from ideas of failure.
All beliefs about yourself and the world do materialize.
Inside out, this is the only rule.
Change Your Feelings, Change Your Reality
“Does that mean that feeling better creates a better reality?”
Yes. Here’s why.
When you begin feeling better about things, you vibrate at a higher frequency — which means you project a new energy into the atmosphere, and it then reflects back the same energy.
If you create new ideas in your mind, the world will reflect back different pictures.
Each electron knows what we are expecting, and they organize themselves to match our ideas and feelings.
In 1801, an English physicist named conducted the very first double slit experiment.
This experiment showed that particles of matter themselves could behave like waves of energy.
He discovered that merely the act of looking at electrons (tiny particles of matter) caused them to act like matter. But when you “looked away” the particles would go back acting like waves of energy.
Somehow the electrons knew that they were being watched, and they knew what you were expecting them to act like, and organized themselves to mirror that expectation.
Your ideas produce feelings, and these feelings then reorganize reality.
This is not philosophy. This is fact.
Gregg Braden, a scientist and author said,
“If we can change either the magnetic or the electrical field of the atom, we can change the atom. The human heart is designed to do that, influencing the electromagnetic field.”
So by simply feeling better, you will create a better reality.
Interesting, huh?
Feelings, How To Change Them
If changing our feelings can change the world we experience, how exactly do we change our feelings?
The answer is simple, maybe so simple that you may disregard it, but I encourage you not to do so.
You can change your feelings by changing your ideas about yourself.
The ideas about yourself create this feeling about yourself, over time you create a dominant “feeling tone” — which becomes your state of attraction.
If you think you aren’t important, you will feel worthless and act like it.
If you think you are loved, you will feel loved and act like it.
Your emotions come from your beliefs, it is not the other way around.
Beliefs are ideas, or images held in the mind that are accepted to be “true.”
Once a belief is accepted, you must “validate” it to sustain the belief or it would fall apart.
So the belief then influences you emotionally to think and act a certain way that aligns with the belief to prove it to yourself.
Like Henry Ford said, “Whether you think you can or can’t, you’re right.”
It begins with a thought, or an idea, a belief that has been accepted to be true.
This is the source of our emotional responses to the world around us, and changing your beliefs about yourself is how you change your electromagnetic charge: which will then change the reality around you.
All feelings come from beliefs held about the self.
And all feelings impact the world around you.
In Conclusion:
1. You and the universe are made of electromagnetic energy.
2. Your feelings and thoughts do not stay in your head and body — they radiate out into the atmosphere.
3. Human emotion directly impacts the external world.
4. Emotion comes from streams of thought, which are created by core beliefs.
5. If you change your beliefs, you will change the reality around you.