A friend of mine often seeks comfort of trees. Not just any tree. He walks up a long trail and finds himself outside the city. This trail leads him to a special tree. A tree named Constance.
My friend goes to Constance for wisdom. On this day, he says to Constance, “You are amazing. You are so patient to sit here for hundreds of years.” With a belly laugh –if Constance had one– he replies, “But I am rarely here. Time is for thinking, for the mind. I live outside that construct. I travel all over, when ever.”
This leads us to another lesson about time. But today, I want to type about time from a linear standpoint. In this linear state we can begin to look at time in other ways. Foremost in my mind, is the intuitive mind and its role in prediction, forethought, or pre-crime like the movie Minority Report.
In Minority Report, as the name implies, the Precogs sometimes disagreed. Sometimes. Other times they are spot on. The crime will happen absolute. What am I getting at? I’m getting at the perception of the Precog. The Precog is you and your intuition, your psychic friend, or counselor. What they see, what they look at –in the future– AND how they perceive it. But wait. There is more to consider. When you, or someone you get counsel from looks into the future. They are seeing future through their lens, through their perception of the Is.
Simply put, if the Precog, thinks time is always changing and that the future is open then their looking will be open to that change. AND if you think that, then your information will reflect it no matter who you get it from – unless, you think a certain person is special. But lets back up.
What this implies is that I’m leaning toward an absolute reality. Preordained. Where your future is already decided. But what if you don’t believe that?
Enough of the riddles of the mind. You are always right. Your world will validate for you, based on what you believe is real. AS does it for everyone else. The point for today is when I look into my future. Like choosing an exit price for a house. I look at the absolute outcome. Not a probability. Where will I arrive, period. Not where could I arrive, where might I arrive, or I hope I arrive.
I know –for me– an absolute arrival is there. And, as such I look for it, not something else. I ask to see that absolute outcome, rather than a probable, or possible outcome.
I wonder, what outcomes are you asking for?