It might be that there are no probabilities in these variables, and the sliding door is only the longing to know what might have been in the face of a shut door.
If there is a set world, you might be able to model the sequence of events, the flow of energy, and know where the tiny pieces that make our soul in the brain are, after they were scattered by death . Find a way to reassemble them in a brand new body and you can reincarnate people .
I believe NDEs bring people closer to the life they'll live after they die and are brought back, but also anxious about their failings and about living in a place of justice, filled with empaths that sympathize with the victims and have means to know everything that was ever done to anyone .
A fully deterministic world where everything gets destroid in a big crunch, only to be recreated in a big bang, only to be followed by the same big crunch brings the unending repetion of the same life .
Everyone gets to repeat the same life forever . Reincarnation ? Yes, but to live the exact same life, with the same events . Unless you are talking about reassembling people after we fix the world .
And because after each big bang we need to start from scratch, we make a lot of mistakes, we endure a lot of pain . We are not ourselves . So please, likesdninjas consider that you might be wrong about that contract . Please consider a world where you can do what you want and you have something good within yourself that will pull you to do the right thing . Please forgive yourself when you need to . I believe with all my heart that your fate is to achieve what you are looking for .
About the Kavanough confirmation : It is very difficult to predict what you're passionate about . You might reach the truth and refuse it with all your heart . We all heard and saw the Christine Blasey Ford testimony . How could you accept a prediction that a great injustice would further itself ?
Thanks Michele for your kind words .
I wasn't sure where to post this but this thread seemed most fitting. Has anyone ever had what you later realized was a glimpse into a future or even past time? One evening last week my wife and I were out walking in our area, we came over a hill and noticed a large number of cars parked outside a house on the next street. I commented that they sure had a lot of company, she agreed and we got busy discussing something else. I then glanced toward the house again and there were NO cars at all parked outside. It was impossible they all got moved in a minute or so. We both saw the cars then they weren't there. Could this have been some image from the future or past?
I haven't had many such things happen to me. Any thoughts?
Hi Martin, I feel strange even writing about this because it's so hard to believe, but I too have experienced similar types of things. And luckily I wasn't alone when they happened otherwise nobody would believe me. My husband and I walked past a restaurant that was under construction and not close to being completed, more like a demo site. And the next day we saw diners eating there. We asked the waiter how long the restaurant had been open, he said 3 weeks. But we had been there the day before and saw plaster and lumber and no furniture. Also around that time, I was on a subway going a certain direction and suddenly it was going the opposite direction, even though I never switched trains and it continued moving "forward."
I have no scientific proof of this, but the only thing that makes sense to me when these sorts of things happen is that we have collectively or individually jumped forward or backward in time or perhaps jumped over to an alternate possible future timeline. If we can move around in time with our minds, perhaps there is a way to do that with a physical body?
My husband and I were in San Diego a few years ago, doing all the tourist things and toured a haunted house in Old Town. We were talking to the docent of this historic building and I asked her what was the strangest experience she had ever had there. She opened a doorway to a large room and explained that it had once been used as a courtroom or town hall in the early days of San Diego. One day she had opened the door to find that room full of people dressed in the garb of early townspeople and clearly having some kind of public meeting. The docent walked into the room and no one seemed to notice her. She felt as though she had slipped through time into the past and then stepped back through the door into the present.
Bluebelle... Have you seen the film 'Somewhere In Time' ? It's from the book by Richard Matheson (What Dreams May Come)...
This explores those slip streams in time, and Matheson brings up the possibility of actually the physical reality of concious time travel........
I think the “time loop” idea is interesting, especially the concept that we may be accessing our own future knowledge rather than receiving information from somewhere external. But like you said, it seems harder to apply this theory to long-term prophecies or situations where multiple possible outcomes appear at the same time. Your comparison of fate and free will to gravity and wind is actually very practical. It reminds me of how we deal with uncertainty in real life decisions. For example, in fields like project planning or cost estimation, there is always a “predicted direction” based on current data, but external factors can shift outcomes. The estimate may be accurate at one moment in time, but new variables can change the final result. Maybe precognition, if it exists, works in a similar way not as a fixed destiny, but as a projection based on current conditions that can still be influenced.
@nathanflores Thank you for bumping this important thread and for your contributions. I sometimes feel when we read certain aspects of the future that are quickly shifting, like upcoming elections, we are seeing a race track and seeing where the competitors are at the time of the meditation. Another theory is that we are seeing the actually final intention of the voters, but there are intervening factors that change the results, like gerrymandering, requirements for showing IDs that many people cannot meet, even though they are legitimate voters, or reduced polling places, long waits with people not being allowed to have a drink of water or go to the restroom, and now the possibility of stationing armed, masked, ice workers at polling places. These interferences can alter the final vote, not to mention even worse and more direct hanky-ranking at the polls that we cannot know about and lack evidence for. .
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The “time loop” idea is fascinating, especially the notion that we might access our own future knowledge rather than information from an external source. It’s harder to apply to long-term predictions or situations with multiple possible outcomes. Your comparison of fate and free will to gravity and wind feels practical—similar to how we handle uncertainty in real-life decisions. In fields like project planning, construction estimation and takeoff services provide a predicted direction based on current data, but external factors can shift the outcome. Similarly, precognition, if it exists, might act as a projection influenced by current conditions rather than a fixed destiny.