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Everything posted by tesla
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The Science Delusion by Rupert Sheldrake. Also anything by Dean Radin or Russell Targ. Whole by T. Colin Campbell is a good critique of reductionism as well.
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A hot witch girlfriend
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tesla replied to Leo Gura's topic in Spirituality, Consciousness, Awakening, Mysticism, Meditation, God
Does anyone have any tips for what exercises to do? I've tried yoga before, but all the exercises I've found are boring to me, and don't really feel like proper exercise. So I've never really got into it, I already enjoy other forms of exercise like running/hiking, so for me to do this it needs to compete with those -
I've found surprisingly little info on this. My goal is to master psychic abilities to the point I have full control over them and can induce them at will. So far what I know is you have to master meditation (specifically concentration practice), which is a foundational skill used for other skills such as psychic abilities. And I'm doing this. But once you've mastered this, how do you go about mastering specific psychic abilities, such as telepathy, remote viewing, intuition, or whatever? Does anyone have any recommended resources? This is really esoteric and I've researched it a lot, but it's been really difficult to find legitimate, decent resources that actually show you how to do it in a pragmatic way.
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tesla replied to Elshaddai's topic in Spirituality, Consciousness, Awakening, Mysticism, Meditation, God
This doesn't sound right. The half life of these substances is short. It's like the myth that LSD causes flashbacks because it stays in your system. If it has any permanent effects, it's probably because it's rewiring your brain/body, not because it's staying in your system. -
tesla replied to tesla's topic in Spirituality, Consciousness, Awakening, Mysticism, Meditation, God
@Aaron p I've heard it's a byproduct, but I'm not convinced. Lots of supposedly awakened people don't use psychic abilities, or at least they haven't mastered them. And there's also lots of BS as you said. I'm trying to find resources that are the real deal, people who have actually mastered it to the point they can induce it at will -
Clearly you have overlooked the research or you wouldn't be saying this. For instance, The China Study literally proves that any amount of animal protein causes cancer. Or how Nutrition Facts has sources saying that animal protein induces an inflammatory response. Not to mention how the physiology of humans (such as our teeth and intestinal track length) strongly matches those of herbivores/frugivores. There's tons of other facts in those resources that clearly show what you said isn't true, perhaps you should go back and look at it. The reason I didn't bother addressing everyone's individual points is simply because a) there's a ton of comments here and I don't have all day, and b) only people who are seriously interested will actually look at the resources I've posted and see for themselves (if someone won't do this, they're really not interested in investigating it so it's a waste of time for me to try and convince them).
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What makes you so sure it's a theory? Have you actually seriously investigated it, or are you just assuming it's BS because it's contrarian? Yes, while some conspiracies are BS, not all of them are. In fact, a lot of them are true. But if you're not open-minded and don't actually look at the evidence, then you can't say it's nonsense. Everything must be questioned, and conspiracies are no exception. Because if you don't question it, you don't actually know what's true, you're just assuming it's not. COVID is no exception—there's some speculative theories about it, such as the 5G/corona connection (which I doubt is real). But corona is most certainly a conspiracy. There's many health experts for instance who seriously question the narrative, they're not quacks. There's also so many other facts, such as how Bill Gates "predicted" the same time/place/location it was going to happen (and is the same guy calling for mandatory vaccination, immunity passports, and is one of the main funders the WHO, etc). Or how the virus doesn't spread asymptomatically, yet totalitarian laws are being passed such as house arrest. These are all facts, and any rational investigation clearly shows something is going on here.
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+1 I've noticed Leo has dismissively mentioned conspiracies in some of his videos. This is a topic not many people want to seriously investigate, yet it's real and needs to be addressed
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+1
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There's so much misinformation, myths, BS, and confusion here. Clearly many of you haven't done much research into veganism or you wouldn't be saying these things, it's just not true at all. As for @Leo Gura, this includes you. I respect you and have learned a lot from your videos. But I think this is one of the main blind spots you're missing. I might just be a random on the internet, but if you look into this further I bet you would change your view and go vegan. I'm not going to bother debating everyone's individual points here. Instead, for anyone who is seriously interested in researching this further, you can go and see for yourself: Read The China Study by T. Colin Campbell Look at https://nutritionfacts.org/ Watch Dominion/Earthlings/Game Changers Look into the evidence for the environmental impacts Try a proper whole foods plant based diet yourself If you've done all that and still haven't noticed benefits from a whole foods plant based diet. Pretty much the only reason is because you have some underlying gut issue, such as leaky gut, SIBO, or something else. Going and eating foods that are proven to be super unhealthy (such as meat) to mask your symptoms is not the solution, it's only masking the problem, not to mention leading to other health consequences. The solution is to fix any underlying gut issues you have, whilst going on a whole foods plant based elimination diet tailored to the foods you tolerate well, and that's not hard.
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I'm a self-taught freelance software engineer. It takes quite a lot of work to become proficient, but once you are, it's not that hard to find work. The key is to just become super good at your job and market yourself well for inbound leads (create a really good portfolio, create profiles on LinkedIn/Angel List, etc). The average rate for a senior software engineer is very high. As for how long it takes, that depends on how much time you spend learning, how effectively you learn, and how dedicated you are. It took me about 6-7 months to get a job as a junior developer when I was 17 years old (I quit school). I also didn't go to uni and basically taught myself everything online and from building my own projects, which is the fastest and best way to learn. If you do it that way, you can become a pretty decent developer within a few years or less if you're committed.