A Reality Check

The most powerful tool you have isn’t money, connection, talent or luck ~ it’s the ability to imagine an incredible life for yourself. 

You create your reality.

There’s nothing else in the mix.

Your brain comes with quantum technology that simulates any future you wish to create for yourself.

Neuroscience calls this practice, “episodic future thinking”. 

Your brain can imagine scenarios that haven’t happened yet and does so with such precision that your body feels the emotions as if they have already happened. 

When you feel emotional as you think of your future life, you’re not just randomly daydreaming ~ you’re literally rewiring your brain to believe it is possible.

And with consistency over time, you build the neural pathways that make it inevitable.

Your subconscious doesn’t distinguish between the future and the past, it only perceives your thoughts and emotions as your reality, whether imagined or not, and projects these primary pictures as your future reality.

When you repeatedly ‘visit’ your desired life, your brain starts gathering evidence of it, thereby creating alignment.

And when you dwell on your optimal future, your brain perceives it as true.  

As you practice this technique, a better life simply starts coming to you.

You begin to randomly feel out of place in your current circumstance as you are no longer aligned with your physical life in the present.  

And so, you walk into rooms differently.  

You attract new experiences as evidence of your reality completely transitioning. 

The future isn’t waiting for you. 

It’s happening inside your head.  

If you’re steadfast in imagining it, your reality has no choice, but to simply catch up with you!

Stardust

Perhaps the most elegant view in astrophysics today is that all the elements of our existence (earth, water, air, fire and plasma) originate in the stars.

It’s one of my favorite notions, in fact, I even attribute my own consciousness to the infinite stars in the sky.

And I wonder in my logical mind, how could this actually be?

All stars begin their lives fusing hydrogen into helium, a process that creates their light, and the longest phase of their lives.

Once a star runs out of hydrogen at its core, it contracts and temperatures rise high enough for helium to fuse into carbon.

In stars with enough mass (at least eight times the size of our sun) heavier elements are created, like neon, oxygen and silicon.

Over time, the star creates iron, deep within its core, which can lead to the star’s collapse and a super nova explosion that scatters their core enrichment throughout the universe.

In this way, the next generation of stars and planets are born, by way of these key ingredients scattered throughout the heavens. 

And in turn, the planets receive the stuff to create life upon themselves. 

Perhaps we truly are stardust. 

Indeed, it’s a lovely notion.