
250 Quasars Are Projections and Leaves Hold Memories
The Early Sessions · C33
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Show Notes
250 Cosmic Deep-Dives and Crunchy Leaves
Welcome to the cosmic lounge, friends. We’re diving into the deep end of the reality pool with Session 250 of The Early Sessions, Book 6 of the Seth Material, recorded on April 11, 1966. Pull up a chair, grab a snack, and let’s see what Seth has to say about why our scientists are basically looking at the universe through a funhouse mirror.
The Quasar Quagmire: Shadows on the Wall
Seth kicks things off by basically telling our astronomers to take a seat. Apparently, we’re looking at quasars all wrong because we’re obsessed with the "camouflage" of our own system.
- Projections, not Realities: Those giant, energy-spewing quasars? They aren't what they seem. Seth notes: "What your scientists are perceiving is the form, the camouflage form, which the projections of the quasars take within your system."
- Time is the Trip-Wire: We can't understand these things because we’re stuck in the "antiquated concepts of past, present and future." Quasars are actually originators of energy that exist in our future as much as our past.
- The Size Lie: Despite their massive energy, quasars are "incredibly small." They aren't matter; they are "instantaneous motion and infinite electrical intensities."
- The Brick Wall: Scientists keep looking for beginnings and endings in an expanding universe. Seth warns that the universe expands in a way that has nothing to do with space, but we keep hitting a "brick wall" because we can only see what we think is there.
Atoms: The Ultimate Multitaskers
If you thought an atom was just a tiny ball of stuff, Seth is here to blow your mind. Atoms are actually multi-dimensional travelers.
- The Invisible Nucleus: Our instruments only see a tiny sliver of an atom’s nucleus. The rest? It’s chilling in antimatter or other systems we haven't even named yet.
- Smashing Success (or Not): Seth gets a bit cheeky about our technology, stating: "Atom smashers do not smash atoms. They merely change the atomic parts that appear within your system."
- Universal Construction: Our physical universe is basically an "outward manifestation of inner reality." We can mess with the matter, but we can't touch the "inner reality" behind it.
- The Neighborhood: Seth suggests that in many ways, our entire system is basically just one atom in a much larger, more complicated structure.
The Great Maple Leaf Mystery
The session takes a weirdly personal turn during an "envelope experiment" involving a faded maple leaf. Instead of just talking about the leaf, Seth goes on an emotional scavenger hunt through Jane’s family history.
- Emotional Residue: The leaf was picked up near a relative's house, which triggered a flood of impressions about funerals, family tension, and "unpleasant episodes."
- The Shredded Wheat Incident: Seth picked up a tragic, oddly specific memory of Jane’s grandmother being killed by a car while going to buy Shredded Wheat. Talk about a heavy grocery run.
- Psychic GPS: Seth explains the confusion by saying: "It is of course because of your highly distorted ideas of time that you persist in projecting antiquated concepts of past, present and future outward into explorations of your universe." Basically, the past and future of that leaf and the people near it are all happening at once in the psychic "now."
Final Notes and Homework
Seth wraps up by suggesting a "spring break" for Jane and Rob, noting that atmospheric conditions play a part in when these sessions are most effective.
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