Imagination

“Neuroscientists have found that all human brains are connected through extremely low-frequency electromagnetic waves. These subtle signals, far below the range of our normal senses, may form a hidden “neural network” that links human consciousness across the planet.”
~ Unknown author

The above was first posted on an anonymous blog, and then quoted or paraphrased on a Science and Astronomy Facebook page, and finally shared to the Jungian psychology group I belong to.

Initially, I added the following comment:

|”This is fascinating. If true, it would add some scientific substance to the concept of a collective unconscious, psychic phenomena, and the experiences of empaths.”|

The key phrase above being, “If true…”

As often happens on social media nowadays, at least several readers quickly responded that there is no verifiable, published, peer reviewed source backing this up, and thus it is fake, BS, and clickbait. Granted, I can certainly understand the cynicism online nowadays, as there is a deluge of misinformation and lies streaming through the feeds in the form of articles, memes, videos, music, and AI generated fabrications. I’m very cautious myself, not considering anything that seems completely unfounded, unlikely, or just simply ridiculous. Yet, I find it disturbing that so many readers quickly jump to the conclusion that there is no truth in anything they read, except for what aligns with their own personal beliefs, which often have many gaps or leanings toward conspiracy theories. For example, the belief that we never landed men on the moon, stolen elections, the earth being flat, hostile aliens on their way to earth, etc.

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Timeless

“We cannot apply our notion of time to the unconscious. Our consciousness can conceive of things only in temporal succession, our time is, therefore, essentially linked to the chronological sequence. In the unconscious this is different, because there everything lies together.”
~Carl Jung

Facebook meme: 
“Sorry I
just saw your text from last night,
Are you guys still at restaurant?”
~ Thomas Lélu, Lacan Circle of Australia

I chuckled upon my first reading of this meme, my initial reaction being that the text writer was still waking up and had not yet recovered a sense of time—past versus present. You know, that foggy haze we sometimes wake up with, being confused as to where we are and what time it is.

However, just maybe this fictional text message is more complex than meets the eye, suggesting the way we sometimes hold on to images, thoughts and memories that continue to affect us, as if they are timeless and continue to exist or haunt us in the present, like an echo of something that seems as real today as it was yesterday. Dreams often operate on this level, combining images of the past and present from different places; the dream depicting them as occurring at the same time and in the same space.

Some psychologists and physicists believe that everything is happening in the here and now, and it is only our minds that divide them into past, present, future, and separate spaces.

Are time and space convenient illusions? What about cause and effect? Try to imagine a lifetime of relationships, people, things, places, events and situations existing together in the here and now; no need to separate any of it into past, present, future, spatial distances, or causes and effects. Impossible?

Related post at: Moving minds

© 2025 David M. Rubin. All rights reserved.

Nothingness

“Is it possible that existence is our exile and nothingness our home?”
~ Emil Cioran, Tears and Saints

The concept of NOTHINGNESS is extremely difficult to imagine or wrap ideas around.

How could there be NOTHING, not even the void of space, since a void could not exist if there were nothingness? What would nothingness be like if we could perceive it through vision, hearing, smell, touch?

Whenever I attempt to imagine nothingness, I think of a darkness that is darker than darkest black I’ve ever seen; no light or sound whatsoever, nowhere to move to or towards, like being buried alive six feet under or death itself. Yet, how could there be colors and darkness if there were nothing or nothingness? How can nothingness be described, explained or written about, if never experienced or observed? Even more imponderable, is the idea that “SOMETHING” could come into existence from this nothingness.

Note: I’m using NOTHING and NOTHINGNESS interchangeably, but there is a subtle difference. NOTHING refers to the absence of specific things, whereas NOTHINGNESS refers to a state of non-existence, non-being; an existential, all-encompassing void.

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Thoughts on projection

“Whatever happens in the world is real, what one thinks should have happened is projection. We suffer more from our fictitious illusion and expectations of reality.”
~ Jacque Fresco

Many psychologists believe in a specific end goal to therapy, which is to consciously take back ownership of all that we’ve been projecting into the world and onto others—referred to as individuation in Jungian theory. Yet, I wonder what would happen to humanity if we projected nothing outside of ourselves, re-internalizing (introjecting) all of the feelings, motives, imaginings, and conflicts formerly experienced as occurring outside of us or between us and others. Would this in effect nullify the need for an outside world of things, people, events, and situations? Would we still perceive an outside world at all, or exist entirely within ourselves? Is the outside world merely one big projection or imagining of all that stirs within us? I cannot definitely answer these questions, simply because I don’t know the answers—nobody does.

There is an ongoing debate going on, as to whether an objective, relatively unchanging reality exists—regardless of whether or not we observe it—or if so called reality shapeshifts to fit our expectations and projections. Some quantum physicists have concluded that reality exists one way when not observing it, and another way when we observe it, the exact form depending upon the inclinations of the observer. In layman’s terms, what we see is what we expect to see.

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The screw

You’ve been out of work for a while, unemployed because of layoffs. Your wife is getting on your last nerve, pressuring you to do something productive, maybe fix the broken slats in the fence, or set up the vegetable garden she’s been asking for since Desert Storm…anything that shows a bit of initiative, maybe impressing the neighbors. You know, keeping up with the Joneses thing.

So, she finds this prefab gazebo at the home improvement store; excited by the sales pitch of a quick and easy install, she says, “Even you can do this, hon! The sales guy said it is a very quick and easy assembly.” Despite being a thinking kind of man, rather than a hands-on, can build anything kind of guy, like every husband on your block, you go ahead and purchase the gazebo.

After assembling the gazebo, you notice an extra screw in the plastic bag that held the other screws. You check and recheck the assembly directions and screw holes several times. Nothing seems to be amiss. Every screw is screwed into a screw hole, except for this extra screw.

What is with the extra screw? you think to yourself.

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