Who Was
Seeven?
During the
1980s, a unique psychic entity was channeled through the
consciousness of a psychologist practicing in the greater
Bay Area of Northern California. Channeling, in
psychological terms, is a process of dissociation through
which the thoughts and words of a disembodied spirit are
given physical reality and presence in the voice and
expressions of a person, the channel, who transmits them
directly through his or her own mind and body. In a
series of meetings with clients and other interested
persons, Seeven spoke directly to the living concerns of
his questioners and interlocutors. These pages are the
transcribed records of those meetings, presented as a
public service by The Psychic Internet.
Perception
The great
variation among elements of creation is attributable to
perception. Perceptual differences create variation.
Beings think they are different from each other by,
again, judging their exterior appearances. Their
differences are, in fact, in their perceptions of life.
This is the great difference. The visual differences are
miniscule compared to the perceptual differences. The
perceptual differences increase markedly as one moves
down the 'life' spectrum. The perception of the goldfish
is, of course, much more different from a Being's than
the difference between one Being and another. As one
moves down the 'life' chain, one finds less and less
variation among members of that perception plateau. You
see that all ants of a particular genetic composition
look exactly the same, as though manufactured by the same
machine, and using the same mold. This is because the
perceptual differences among the lower creatures is
ant-like; it is that small compared to the perceptual
differences in your reality. The rock has a perceptual
difference that is so similar that it becomes a uniform
mass acting as one perception. A tiny pebble is billions
of perceptions by your number reasoning, but, because of
the lack of apparent differentiation - again, as apparent
from human brain perceptions - these focused perceptions
combine as a colony and you have, in your perception
field, a pebble, a rock, a boulder, a mountain. This type
of perception - a colonized sort of perception - does
grow, also. But the more colonized a perceptual field
becomes, the slower the growth. Man is, of course,
growing most rapidly because of the wider variations that
prevent as compact a colonization. Man's cities represent
a slower growth potential than open country areas. Man in
cities is most rock-like. But then, as I mentioned
earlier, the pace must be slowed. You can thank cities,
also, for helping to slow the growth pace.
Now, you can
develop a whole new litany: thank you Hitler; thank you
Attila; thank you cities; thank you college drop-out;
thank you rapist; thank you psychopath for allowing the
universe, in a most interesting physical reality, to
continue. How would your churches like that?
My, you are a
serious group. I've come to enjoy myself, and I am met
with stony silence. What do you think this is, a funeral?
There you have an example of black-and-white. In oriental
cultures white was the garb of the dead; in western
cultures black is the garb of the dead. How
black-and-white can anything be? (Next Page)
|