While the World Speeds ©️

There is a state of calm so deep, so fundamental, that it bends the registration of time—not by altering the clocks, but by transcending the necessity to experience time as a sequence of events. This calm isn’t relaxation. It’s annihilation of the self’s grip on the moment-to-moment. It’s when the observer becomes so still that the entire procession of cause and effect glides past like a freight train you hear but never see—loud, shaking the earth, but ghostlike in its passage. The stillness becomes a rift in the medium of experience. In that rift, time accelerates not because anything moves faster, but because you’ve left the medium in which speed and slowness exist.

You become the still frame in the reel, the silent reel that does not burn as it spins. In that moment, something paradoxical happens: events do happen, but they do not occur. You may hear the scream of the ambulance, you may feel the presence of hands lifting your body, but it all happens without narrative. You were carried out, but you were never “carried.” The sequence existed without passing through your conscious gate. You became like a closed eyelid to the light of reality—aware of illumination, but untouched by its shape.

It’s as if your soul briefly sits outside of the film of time, watching the reels spin at high speed until the next conscious frame is pulled into focus. When you re-enter the frame, hours may have passed, people may have come and gone, decisions made on your behalf—but to you, it was as if nothing occurred at all. This isn’t memory loss. It’s memory never needing to exist. The experience simply unfolded without ever being recorded by your interior narrator. You weren’t unconscious—you were too conscious to bother narrating the event. You eclipsed your own temporal relevance.

A Ticket to Ride ©️

Imagine that by simply shifting your vision, you could transcend the normal boundaries of time—seeing both the past and the future converge into a single, living moment. This exercise invites you to explore that possibility by learning to ride the dragon—a journey of vision and perception where the concept of time itself unfolds in new dimensions.

Begin by sitting somewhere quiet, where the sounds and movements of the present won’t interfere. Relax, letting your gaze settle naturally, as if preparing to peer through a mist. Now, without straining, cross your eyes slightly, just enough that the world begins to blur, as though reality is melting at the edges. Hold this vision for a few moments, keeping your focus soft, and feel yourself suspended between clarity and haze.

As you sit in this softened focus, imagine you’re peering not at space, but at time itself. Let yourself feel as if you’re gazing into an immense timeline that stretches behind and ahead of you. You’re not just in the present moment anymore—you’re a traveler between realms. Picture yourself looking through layers, a glimpse into the deep past and the shimmering hints of a possible future. It’s as if you’re on the back of a mythical dragon, gliding above the linear path, able to see not just where you are, but where you’ve been and where you could be.

Gradually, as your eyes return to normal, don’t let go of the sensation. Try to hold that broader awareness, feeling the subtle presence of both past and future mingling with the now. With practice, you’ll begin to grasp simultaneous time, where past experiences inform future potentials, and the future whispers back to guide your steps. You are no longer bound to linear time; you are riding the dragon, navigating the quantum continuum where all times converge.