Search A Light In The Darkness

Wednesday 21 February 2007

Holographic Memory

By David Icke

And so to the brain, the computer-like interface between the mind and the holographic 'body' of the five-senses. The brain is not the mind, it is a computer used by the mind and thus scientists have never located where in the brain lies the mind. They never will because it's not there.


We don't think from the brain, but through the brain at the five-sense level of reality.

Mainstream science has also been unable to locate the area of the brain that contains the memory because the memory (the computer hard drive) exists throughout the brain.

Of course it does, the brain is a hologram and every part contains the whole. Horrible experiments on animals have removed massive parts of their brains and still found they could remember the tasks they were set when the whole brain was intact. People who have large parts of their brains removed because of tumours do not lose specific memories. They might not remember in general quite so well because they have moved to a smaller level of the holographic memory where there is less clarity than in the whole. But they don't lose one memory completely and retain another in crystal clarity which they would if memory was
located in one area.

The hologram has a staggering capacity to store information. You can store many pictures on the same piece of holographic film, for instance, and by changing the angle at which you direct the laser you can choose which one you want to see. Accessing our memory works in basically the same way. We move our 'laser' to find the information we are looking for in the hologram and those who can do this highly efficiently are said to have a 'photographic memory'. Yes, a holographic photographic memory. People can 'read' objects like watches or jewellery and glean from them detailed information about their history and owners because the objects are holograms and they have recorded that information.

Our body holograms store memory from all of the senses. When, for instance, we smell something it can trigger a memory just as powerfully as when we see or hear something that recalls an experience. Our memory extends beyond even the brain hologram and is located throughout the body hologram, too. In turn, the body hologram contains the memory of the cosmic hologram and so on.

Everything is connected to everything else.

Everything is everything else.

The Matrix cannot literally divide the whole into parts because Oneness is always Oneness, but it can give the illusion of division and polarity, and this is what it does by manipulating our sense of reality.

Division and polarity are illusions because all is One.


Extract Taken From ‘Tales From The Time Loop’ By David Icke