Experience

Joe Rogan – The Sensory Deprivation Tank


“The planet’s spinning a thousand miles an hour around this gigantic nuclear explosion while these people roll these machines with rubber tires over this hard surface that we’ve laid down over the planet so that we can easily move ourselves back and forth.” 
– Joe Rogan

The Sensory Deprivation Tank is an amazing experience, I really recommend everyone try it.

Alan Watts – Wholeness

“We do not “come into” into this world; we come out of it, as leaves from a tree. As the ocean “waves,” the universe “peoples.” Every individual is an expression of the whole realm of nature, a unique action of the total universe. This fact is rarely, if ever, experienced by most individuals. Even those who know it to be true in theory do not sense or feel it, but continue to be aware of themselves as isolated “egos” inside bags of skin.”
– Alan Watts

Gregg Braden – The Holographic Nature of The Universe


“There is only one of us here. We’re unity by nature.”

“That unity consciousness is moving collectively towards this rare moment in history”

“We have direct access to the creative forces of our world”

“The science of compassion may be the most ancient science, that allows us to gracefully transcend the great challenges of our life, with grace”

– Gregg Braden

Alan Watts – Existence Is Weird

“It is a special kind of enlightenment to have this feeling that the usual, the way things normally are, is odd – uncanny and highly improbable. G. K. Chesterton once said that it is one thing to be amazed at a gorgon or a griffin, creatures which do not exist; but it is quite another and much higher thing to be amazed at a rhinoceros or a giraffe, creatures which do exist and look as if they don’t. This feeling of universal oddity includes a basic and intense wondering about the sense of things. Why, of all possible worlds, this colossal and apparently unnecessary multitude of galaxies in a mysteriously curved space-time continuum, these myriads of differing tube-species playing frantic games of one-upmanship, these numberless ways of “doing it” from the elegant architecture of the snow crystal or the diatom to the startling magnificence of the lyrebird or the peacock?”
Alan Watts