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Stephan A Schwartz


At times of great stress it can be extraordinarily helpful to get even a glimpse of what lies in your future.

Meet Stephan Schwartz

Research carried out at laboratories at universities and institutions around the world tells as that it is possible to obtain verifiable information from the future, providing we follow a structured protocol. My CD, "Looking into your Future" has been especially designed to allow you to do that.

The CD takes you through a process of relaxation, followed by a carefully structured sequence designed to produce experiences of your own future at a date of your choosing. It could be a month, a year, or a decade. All your senses will experience the future: taste, touch, smell, hearing, and visual. Additionally you will have a sense of “knowingness” revealing information beyond the direct senses. The experience will be something akin to a waking dream. Then you will be asked to record what you have experienced.

Alternatively, you can have someone close to you sit with you and you can verbalize what you are experiencing as it happens and they can write it down. As time spools out towards your date, you can refer to your record, and it will prompt you to be aware of elements going on in your life at that time. On your chosen date you will be able to evaluate your own accuracy, on the basis of your own experience.

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Seeing Trends in the Now, Stephan Schwartz
Is there a "Neutral Seeing" within presence?
We all See Patterns in our lives

 And we see those patterns through a filter of reaction.  Perhaps our reaction is the greater part of the pattern that we see?

 

How can we ground ourselves to get some kind of independent point of view?  We spoke of the importance of a meditation practice.

 

I am happy with how this interview moved.  But just as we were getting to the good part (for me) we had to close.  Stephan said that perhaps anxiety was symptomatic of underlying problems, and not necessarily causative.  I tend to think that anxiety is the big filter that makes everything look threatening.