Carl-Richard

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Everything posted by Carl-Richard

  1. I think the dream I had last night which I wrote about above came as if you had ordered it ๐Ÿ˜† Talk about psychically communicating with the universe ๐Ÿ˜† But yes, I've had a decent amount of personal experiences that, even if most aren't "100% proof", if I grant psychic phenomena to be possible, they just become so much easier to explain.
  2. (For those unfamiliar with GeoGuessr, he gets a photograph and is supposed to guess where in the world the photograph was taken): Look at the people in the comment section twisting themselves into a pretzel trying to explain this within the materialist paradigm. If you just accept that psychic phenomena exist, the explanation becomes so incredibly simple.
  3. I once made a thread about some prophetic or rather spatially non-local but temporally parallel dreams I had. I think I just had another one, and this one is probably one of the weaker ones, but it's still interesting so I'll share it: Firstly, all these dreams are nightmares which end with me suddenly waking up. I seldom have such nightmares, and I can't remember the last one I've had. And all of them seem to happen temporally parallell to the real-life event (so while I'm dreaming, the event is happening). So in the dream, me and two people I know are in a garage. One of them is standing on what looks like a skateboard, but instead of a wooden board, it's this thin, red, carbon-fiber-like but also spandex-like fabric that is stretched out really thin, and it has a tiny hole in it, maybe two centimeters in diameter, near one of the corners. They are very inexperienced with skating and are barely able to keep balance. They slowly skate over to this low (probably 30 centimeters tall) non-mortar brick wall consisting of decently sized natural rocks. Then they lose balance and fall ontop of this wall of rather pointy, sharp and unwelcoming rocks. They really hurt themselves and lie there screaming. Me and the other person walk over to see if the person is alright. The person starts shouting really fast and desperately while in intense pain, saying "Call 911 now! Call 911 now! Call 911 now! Call 911 now! Call 911 now! Call 911 now!" etc., and they just keep going. And the other person starts supporting one of their legs which seems totally broken, almost missing parts of it. In general, their legs were really badly broken. As their voice becomes more and more desperate, I wake up from the dream. It also turns out I had overslept (the time was 1 PM and I had to rush to get to a meeting). Anyways, I found out later that day, as I was asleep and starting at 12:30 PM, there was a school shooting in Sweden, the worst they have ever experienced. This reminds me of one of my earlier dreams that occured during one of the worst disasters that particular area had ever experienced. Now, the overlap here with the dream and the real-life event is obviously people getting hurt, lying on the ground, probably some of them screaming for help, possibly somebody screaming to call 911, and possibly somebody having their legs severely broken and not being able to get up. But then as I'm writing this, I just thought about something else: why was the skateboard made out of red fabric? Why was there a tiny hole in it? I feel like I'm really stretching it here, but you simply cannot not ask the question: is it a bullet hole? Is it red because it has something to do with blood? Or danger? That last detail is not really the main attraction that drives it home for me, but it makes you think.
  4. Cuz awakening, morality and street cred often go together. People generally like you when you're high consciousness. It's just sometimes people don't like or understand what you're saying. But they like what you're doing.
  5. When you find out what you really want to do, what you really value, what you really feel drawn towards doing, that's meaning, and when you construct your life around that, that's your life purpose. People who do this are driven by their very nature and can achieve great things if they keep going down the right track. However, life is filled with challenges. There will be people, experiences and environments that might make you doubt yourself, your abilities, even your values. And when this happens, you might feel lost, confused, disappointed, disillusioned and discouraged to keep going down what you think is the right track. And while you might learn a lot of new things about yourself when that happens, a core thing to remember is: persevere. We often underestimate what we are capable of, what is possible and what opportunities and lessons may lie around the corner as you persevere and keep yourself on the right track. Emotions like fear and anxiety want you to close off and reduce uncertainty, because uncertainty is often associated with danger. However, it's also possible to tap into the opposite predisposition, of persistence and perseverance, and also reduce uncertainty: I have set my goals, and I will keep going. But also, here uncertainty is not seen as purely negative, but again, as a source of opportunities. Doing this is not the same as being blindly optimistic or unrealistic or not willing to deal with cold hard facts. You should be willing to open yourself to everything that may provide you valuable information that can help you pursue your goal. It's simply that when things look dark and you start doubting, you keep pushing forward. Because before you know it, you'll break through to an ocean of light on the other side. How But how do you practically do this? How do you practically tap into this feeling and awaken it within yourself? You simply need to look at what is possible, particularly the stories of other people. There are potentially endless examples out there, but one that struck me recently and which awoke this insight within me is this woman, Kate Tolo, the co-founder of Project Blueprint. She has a fascinating story going all the way back to her childhood, but in short, she was 21 when she stumbled upon Bryan Johnson, started contacting him trying to get hired, got ignored but kept contacting him for years, eventually landed a job interview, got rejected, contacted him again and got rejected again, then essentially begged him, and finally she got hired and soon became the co-founder of now one of the most rapid-growing businesses in the US (Project Blueprint). In the video I linked at 34:09, she is asked what is the best advice that she has ever received. She doesn't answer the question but instead gives the best advice she could ever think of giving, which is itself a huge sign that this is something deep, because she can't help herself but to share it. And for me, it was. And just like I've been stating, here is what she said: When I heard this, I thought "cool" and I felt some sense of inspiration, but only later, it really dawned on me what the ramifications of it truly are. And when it did, I was filled with a warm feeling of love in my chest, a feeling that I was now allowed to express what I truly felt. Because it turns out, despite having extensively explicated my values and life purpose, I've been discouraged, had doubts, seen some of the dark, and all I needed was some little boost and encouragement. There are again many other examples that could inspire and awaken the feeling of perseverance in you. One funny but a bit trite example is Andrew Tate's response to the media about him trying to become the next British prime minister: When I heard that, I was like "wow, this is a guy who just doesn't give up". I also get the same feeling when watching my country's politicians speaking on TV, particularly our prime minister Jonas Gahr Stรธre and our now soon-to-be ex- Secretary to the Treasury, Trygve Slagsvold Vedum. When I watch them, I get the sense that no matter what challenge, tension or scandal is upon them, they are so driven and focused to get to a solution and keep going forward, without losing their step or their ability joke or smile. No matter what you do, and no matter how persistent or flaky you are about it, merely doing it is itself an act of perseverance. If you for example are typing an e-mail but the internet cuts out and you can't send the e-mail, you might spend quite a few minutes trying to fix the internet, and when you do, you can finally send the e-mail. It might've been a minor challenge, but you persevered. And you couldn't have been sure that you would be able to fix the internet, but you tried, and it worked, and you could send your e-mail. So you are persevering in many aspects of your life all the time. What I'm suggesting is that you can become more conscious about it and also apply perseverance in a general and long-term perspective, and it will bathe you in a warm blanket of love for your goal and yourself, reinforcing the drive and meaning you feel from your life purpose. I have experimented with other types of "catch-all" values or mindsets that augment your mind in a way that seems valuable, but many of them seem to subtract something from you more than they add anything to you (for example, "your feelings are not real"). You can operate extremely efficiently from such a mindset, but you might also become very ungrounded and lost very quickly (as you get dissociated from your feelings). The value of perseverance simply amplifies an already existing value, your highest value, your life purpose, and that's really it. Other aspects of yourself, except doubt, uncertainty, fear and flakiness, are kept mostly intact. And it doesn't only amplify a part of yourself, but it amplifies who you truly are. And even if you experience doubt, uncertainty, fear and flakiness, perseverance doesn't actually negate or repress those feelings. Perseverance mainly deals with what you are "doing" (in terms of working towards your goals), not how you should feel or respond to a particular thing (in contrast to "your feelings are not real"). You keep doing the right things, but you don't stop yourself from feeling. However, when you're doing the right things, those feelings will rarely arise. So what perseverance fundamentally does is it emboldens you to stand up for who you are and not back down too easily from a challenge. And that's why it's also a Stage Red virtue, because it emboldens your core sense of individuality. With that said, if your values and life purpose are aligned with something other than Red, don't be afraid that you will "become Red" by emboldening your sense of individuality. Your individuality is core to who you are, no matter if you're Red, Blue, Green or Yellow. So be yourself, and persevere.
  6. Again, I brought up materialism vs idealism as a rhetorical device (which I maybe should have made more clear) while you actually started talking about materialism vs idealism. That's not really what the discussion is about. Materialists tend to be skeptical of psychical phenomena, and that informs the discussion, but I wasn't intending to evaluate materialism as a metaphysical system (and weigh it up against idealism). Sure, those are valid explanations. I would re-iterate that I'm open for all explanations, but also that virtually all cognition is fundamentally psychic and that we're talking about a spectrum. When you have extremely little learned information to go by (especially unconscious information), but the right answer just "occurs" to you and you can't really explain why, then that is on the far end of the psychic spectrum. This is likely the times where Rainbolt acts surprised and turns off the camera (he has no idea how he got it right). Meanwhile, the times where he thinks or vocalizes a particular reason for why he picked what he picked (which is what he most often does), he generally seems less surprised, like "yep, that is what I thought". But even that is on the psychic spectrum, because why his mind produced exactly those answers is still mysterious. For the cases that are closer to zero learned information, you would have to find clips like the one I just posted above. But again, such clips are not "proof" of anything. If you want "proof" (which is of course also debatable), go read actual scientific studies on psychic phenomena. When Rupert Sheldrake attended a panel in my town, he mentioned that there is a vast psychic literature of replicated experiments with overwhelming statistical significance (the names of the institutes and journals escape me; I haven't read them because I don't need convincing ๐Ÿ˜†).
  7. I would start at improving my health.
  8. Thanks for perservering and reading through the entire thing ๐Ÿ˜ƒ
  9. She is not his girlfriend ๐Ÿ˜  They co-founded Project Blueprint together as business partners ๐Ÿ˜Š
  10. If you wanted to beat death, where would you start?
  11. I just randomly got recommended this one ๐Ÿ˜‚:
  12. I agree with all that, except calling it "less likely". Psychic phenomena is so much more common than you think. It's an everyday occurence for many people, and in a real sense, like @The Crocodile is saying, reality is psychical. Because let's even assume Rainbolt used distinct memories of past games to somehow deduce Mexico and Pretoria, South Africa. Even if we grant he isn't able to fully "download" the correct answer with atleast some deliberation and weighing of options, how exactly does his mind pull out the relevant things to deliberate on? Why those particular memories? And how does his mind land on exactly those two options and not anything else? I bet if you gave a computer access to all of his previous games and made it present a list of most plausible answers, you would have a long list of almost equally plausible answers, and you would have no good reason to decisively pick one over the other. The very mechanics of the human mind is psychic. It acts on very limited information, and it pulls that information seemingly out of nowhere. More generally, it runs on relevance realization. And that's what distinguishes us from AIs and why we currently don't have fully autonomous robots doing everything humans can do.
  13. There seems like there is no pattern, meaning I can't find any pattern. "This is literally just blue". He was given a random zoomed-in picture of a blue sky. That seems like all that was going on there. If you find something, please tell. Sure, but I think you're overestimating what I'm really saying here. I'm not here to undoubtably prove psychic phenomena, even though the title might suggest that. This is all I said: I'm not the one framing this as either/or. Materialist, highly improbable and vague "explanations", are fine too. I'm just pointing out that psychic explanations are particularly fine. When you see essentially a color and you derive that we're speaking of Mexico, and then you straight after derive we're speaking of Pretoria, South Africa, that's headshot for psychic phenomena. If you want to go out to definitely prove psychic phenomena, there are other ways to do that. Man, I didn't bring up materialists having to justify their metaphysics; you did ๐Ÿ˜‚ Again, I just said this looks, smells and feels like psychic phenomena, and then I point out that @Nemra's skepticism seems to be putting materialism as the default position and making it harder for him to see that, because again, he is willing to gulp down five-digit probabilities and vague nothing-burgers. What is probably the strongest argument in favor of the non-psychical position is @something_else's estimate that he has 20k hours of playtime and that considering essentially everything is streamed, something weird is bound to be caught on tape. But I "intuit" with my pseudo-psychical powers that I could go on a Rainbolt research spree and find dozens of such clips where psychic phenomena similarly looks like an obvious explanation. You can take that up if you want and "prove" that I'm indeed "psychic" (or just lucky? ๐Ÿค”).
  14. It "seems", meaning as far as we can tell, there is no pattern. If not, what is the pattern? I was not bringing up idealism vs physicalism here to argue for or against either one. I was just showing how similar the thinking is between physicalists and skeptics of psychical phenomena when encountering an anomaly, as a rhetorical device, as many here are familiar with the flaws of physicalism. I'm not establishing anything. I'm saying the video becomes so simple to explain when you grant psychical phenomena. And I'm pointing out how not-simple the alternative explanations are. There is no mechanism but the fact that information is gathered and beamed into your mind so to speak. It's truly mysterious. And that's not a problem. It's materialists that need to find a mechanism. They believe they have standalone existence, as I said.
  15. There seems to be no pattern. But if there is and we just don't know about it, sure. But then look at what this starts sounding like: When materialists try to explain consciousness, they appeal to ideas like strong emergence (consciousness arises from physical processes but we can't know exactly how or point to any specific mechanism) or weak emergence (we should be able to know how but we just don't know yet). When some materialists try to explain quantum collapse, they invoke an infinite amount of invisible universes that we have no empirical evidence of. Suddenly, they are willing to entertain the most absurd and groundless hypotheses just to hold on to their materialist assumptions. Meanwhile, if you grant idealist assumptions, the answers become simple: consciousness is at the bottom, physical quantities are the results of measurement and don't have standalone existence. Likewise, when granting psychic assumptions, the answers become simple: information about the universe can be obtained non-locally; no five-digit probabilities, no vague unexplained patterns/mechanisms.
  16. You're assuming a lot there ๐Ÿ˜‚ He said "Mexico" โ€” it was Mexico. He said "Pretoria, South Africa" โ€” it was Pretoria, South Africa. It's as if he picked that information straight out of the ether. I think for virtually any piece of information suggesting psychic phenomena, you can always assume it's luck or they're cheating or appeal to some vague pattern. So again, I'm not saying it's 100% undoubtable proof that it's psychic phenomena. But if you grant psychic phenomena exist, psychic phenomena is an obvious go-to explaination. It's a materialist predisposition to start going into epistemological nihilism mode and granting five-digit-level probabilities and vague learned patterns. Put a little differently: you seem to be generally not convinced about the existence of psychic phenomena, and your bar for invoking it as an explanation is therefore very high, because you want to be convinced about it; you want 100% undeniable proof. And you default to any other explanation no matter how unlikely or vague until you get that. But if you are already convinced it's possible, the bar for invoking it is much lower.
  17. Well, the game he played was called "pan and zoom". So it supposedly takes a random image from Google Street View somewhere in the world and zooms in on a part of the image. So granted that the image selection process is random, that's still random. Whichever way the game chooses to zoom in on the image should not have anything to do with the image that is chosen. But sure, maybe the image selection is not random, but that's what we're told, and you should maybe find some concrete evidence to the contrary if you want to seriously entertain it.
  18. Like you say, there are many reasons why you could crash a car. There are fewer reasons why you could guess a country by looking at the blue sky. You can easily name the reasons for crashing your car, while with guessing the country, you appeal to either luck or something ethereal and vague like "learning a pattern" (that from the perspective of the person doing it is indistinguishable from both luck and intuition). Thomas Campbell has some stories. People who experience psychic phenomena are often in denial. And go figure when people cannot do anything but gaslight you about it. Again, you will always call it luck if you don't have another explanation, no matter how unlikely it is.
  19. "Determine" is a strong word. "Strongly suggest" is a better one. It's a cop-out answer because there is no condition no matter how absurd where you would not invoke it. It's the God of the gaps of statistical reasoning.
  20. Well, he still guessed the correct country, and the math I showed still applies granted the assumption of equal probability for all countries. He in fact also guessed the correct city for one of them, so the probability is even more astronomical than that. Of course, there are ways to narrow down the probability. Although the game is supposed to pick a random image from Google Maps (according to Rainbolt himself), most images on Google Maps are taken around crowded populated areas (as that is where there are proper roads for the Google street view car to drive). But even then, there are many crowded areas in the world. Maybe the game engine is not random. However, look at our options now: he either is extremely lucky, or he has learned some extremely subtle pattern that he has no way of personally introspecting into and distinguishing from luck, or he intuitied the correct answer because that is how intuition works sometimes (you simply tune into a "data stream" as Campbell would call it). If you're grasping onto to the materialist paradigm, all of the explanations seem quite ridiculous. If you don't grasp onto the materialist paradigm, one of the answers are quite simple.
  21. If he is just lucky, he is extremely lucky. There are 195 countries in the world, and he guessed the right one twice. That's 1/195 ร— 1/195 = 1/38025 โ‰ˆ 0.00263% chance (given that each country are equally likely). When I create five-digit participant codes for my study participants (I run a random generator on 0-99999), I don't even care to check if the numbers are unique, because it's so unlikely that they're not. Events with five-digit probabilities when rolled only a few times are astronomically unlikely.
  22. Haha no. It just felt like I was a bit numb and my body was lighter than usual. The visual field seemed a bit flatter and "fluid".
  23. I'm not a Stockholm Swede but a Vestland Norwegian, so close enough (not really). I remember one time I was technically in benzodiazepine withdrawal (but only mildly), I was drinking with some of my friends and I started thinking about how I had become tolerant to the GABAergic effects of the alcohol and that I would start to feel more of the NMDA antagonist effects than usual. And at one point I tried to do some pushups in the bathroom and it felt a little more weird than normal alcohol. I have never tried dissociatives outside N2O, but I could see how that would be what a threshold amount of ketamine would feel like.