When being green means attachment to 3-D

What I am about to say is probably going to trigger a lot of people but here goes. Some of the ‘green’ sentiment that occurs in the “eco-warrior” world actually represents feelings of attachment to the three-dimensional plane. There I have said it. Now I will explain why.

What you may not know about me is back in the 1990s I was a regular little eco-warrior. I was a member of the Women’s environmental network, I helped organise London’s first organic picnic and even went to marches and sat in fields to protest GMOs.

The main thrust of the eco movement is that we must save the planet and that changes in climate and to the planet are disastrous. I think it is only common sense that we should stop stripping the plant of resources or pouring waste into the sea that is choking marine life and the many other toxic hazards that we create as a result of our polluting human lifestyles. I still applaud all the efforts to halt these.

The Emotional drive behind being Green

However, there is an emotional drive to many green philosophies that I have come to recognise represents an attachment to three-dimensional existence and a concurrent resistance to spirituality.

Yes, I believe that we can make the planet more pleasant by reducing the waste and pollution, but underneath a lot of green sentiment is a desire to keep the planet as it is.  We don’t want the Earth to change its climate and we blame ourselves if we see any signs of it happening.

With every unusually hot summer or turbulent winter, people panic that we are not doing enough to halt these Earth changes and that our polluting lifestyles are causing them. There appears to be a massive drive to keep the planet as it is forever.

What is a planet anyway?

But what if the planet is meant to change? What is the planet anyway? We assume it is a big lump of rock made up of matter. But if a century of quantum physics is anything to go by then breaking down matter to the subatomic level gives us a lot of empty space plus fundamentally nothing more than information. The planet also consists of matter and atoms and is therefore fundamentally made up of information too.

If the Earth is a big ball of information perpetually spinning in a mysteriously frictionless manner that we don’t even understand then we have no right to want it to stay the same. The fact is, we really don’t understand the Earth at all. We have no idea what lies at its core. We are told the core is made of molten iron because we observe the Earth’s fluctuating magnetic fields but we really don’t know if that is true. It is only recently that we have discovered that there is water near the Earth’s core.

So if the Earth shows signs of changes in terms of climate and volcanic eruptions, how do we know what is really going on? It is only a series of assumptions that lead us to believe that we are the cause of it all. The more I have researched the background science of my work with black holes, the more I am shocked to find just how limited our understanding of Earth phenomena really is.

Do we really understand the Earth?

Meteorologists do not have a complete understanding of why water comes from rain clouds and seismologists are not sure what triggers earthquakes. The antimatter found coming out of thunderstorms was a big shock to most scientists. Clearly, we are ignorant of some of the basics when it comes to our home planet.

Why we blame ourselves for Earth changes is due to our emotional makeup. Humans generally like to feel guilty about something. Feeling guilty is an emotional pattern that is instilled in many of us in childhood after being berated by parents and carers.

Habitual emotions can become familiar and if the cause of the original emotion is removed then we will find something to replace it with. It is as if we become addicted to guilt and if we constantly feel guilty about something then it keeps that emotion going.

What is causing the Earth to change?

If Earth changes are not all down to humans then why do we have climate change and an increase in earthquakes and freak weather? If we go back just a few thousand years we can find many recorded incidents of climate change in different regions of the world which may have been responsible for wiping out civilisations in certain areas. These changes happened before the onset of industrialisation, so pollution cannot be the cause of them.

Going back even further, in a lot of ancient cultures there is the idea that the Earth goes through very long cycles. In some traditions this is 26,000 years and involves the planet going from a golden age, falling into a dark age and back again. The Hindu traditions have perhaps preserved this best in the concept of yugas.

The turning point and The Flood

In the current cycle, there seems to have been a clear delineation point: The Flood. The Flood that we read about in the Bible has been recorded by many cultures around the world. Despite people trying to diminish the scope of the flooding to a local inundation in Mesopotamia, there is evidence in scripture for there having been a global flood.

It is interesting what happens pre and post-flood according to historical texts. Before The Flood, people are recorded as having very long lifespans. This is true in the case of the Sumerian Kings lists and of the Pyramid Texts of Egypt. Even the biblical Abraham is recorded as having lived a long time. After The Flood, the lifespans of the kings start to shorten.

I have made the point elsewhere at length (such as in the video below) that I believe this is because space and time itself were different in what we call the past. Dimensions were closer together and therefore the gods, or interdimensional beings were more present in peoples’ lives. The Flood makes a sort of delineation point, it possibly indicates the fall from a golden age to a dark age.

From Earth Shifts to ascension?

If this is true and the Earth cycles from the golden age to dark age and back again with the very fabric of spacetime shifting as this happens, then it is likely that we are in the middle of shifting back again to a golden age. If so, then this shift could be contributing to the extreme weather and earthquakes that we see happening right now.

The very fact that the Earth is shifting could be a good thing. Obviously not for those who are suffering in the short term, but in the long term we could be moving towards a golden age. In that case, we don’t want to the planet to stay the same. In fact, it doesn’t matter what we do or think because the cycles of the Earth are going to happen anyway.

The ultimate attachment to material reality?

So the green approach which is about holding onto the planet and wanting it to stay the same also comes from an emotional need to hold onto something in our personal lives. It shows an attachment to the three-dimensional paradigm. For all we know, the Earth is changing because it is starting an ascension mode. By wanting the Earth to stay the same, we could be trying to avoid an ascension process back to a golden age.

A need to hold on to the Earth is really the ultimate in attachment to material reality. It is not a multidimensional approach. Does that mean that we shouldn’t take care of our planet? Absolutely not, I don’t mean that. We are currently burning through fossil fuels and creating a lot of problematic toxic waste that is dumped on land or in the oceans. Fumes create health problems for us too.

Seeing the bigger picture

But to blame the massive changes in climate and earthquakes purely on our actions is not seeing the bigger picture. It is fine to want to be good to the planet but be aware that the Earth may be shifting multidimensionally.

So maybe we shouldn’t want to save the Earth but to allow the Earth to go through its changes whilst cleaning up our act and exploring so-called Free-energy technologies.

In this way, we may truly progress from concern for the Earth being a purely three-dimensional affair to taking a Multidimensional perspective. And who knows what may happen when we lose the collective guilt and better understand our planet.

I hope you enjoyed this article. To find out more about the Black Hole Principle and how it affects Earth Science, check out Punk Science here.

Image: Shutterstock

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