David Icke: Beyond the Cutting Edge Page #8
- Year:
- 2008
- 380 min
- 62 Views
the Zulu shaman, he told me when I called him,
I talked to him about this some years
ago, and he said, oh, yes, he said, in Africa
when they used to eat
people, he said, it was a golden law
that the people who they were eating
had to be boiled to a certain temperature
and for a certain time, because the legend
was that if you ate them without that being done,
then you became them,
you took on their personality.
Now one of the great ways that we identify
with being this is I'm a man or I'm a woman.
It's nothing wrong with that! It's an
experience. We're having different experiences.
Great! Fabulous!
It's an illusion, enjoy it!
But we get caught in the illusion of
there who we are, suddenly we are in a place
where we can get
manipulated and diverted.
Now how can who we are be a man
and a woman when the nature of that
can be changed by chemical change?
This is oh this is not, but this is a
chicken indicating the story I'm gonna tell...
Freaky the Chicken, you might
have heard that story a few years ago.
Freaky the Chicken started out life
as a hen, laying eggs, all that stuff,
and then suddenly, because
something happened in the chicken's body
of testosterone, it grew a comb, it started
crowing at dawn and chasing the hens.
Why? Because it had moved
a male purely by a chemical change.
Because it's the
computer changing, not us.
I've got this from BBC News recently.
Scientists have been
able to take control of flies' brains to
make females behave just like males.
Researchers genetically
modified the insects so that a group of
brain cells that control sexual behaviour
could be 'switched on' by a pulse of light.
The team was able to get female fruit flies
behaviour usually only seen in males.
Why? Because it's a
computer program. It's software.
Sometimes I get up early in the
morning in the winter, before dawn,
and I sit there in the office
working on the website and stuff.
And then the sun starts to
come up, and the birdsong starts.
And I'm thinking, you know,
is it like a conductor with a stick
waiting for dawn and
going cue! Eeeeeeeeeeeh!
No! They just start singing.
Just like Freaky started crowing at
dawn when the testosterone came in.
Because it's a body computer
program, a software program.
Then we talk about personalities and emotions.
It's no accident, I would suggest, that so many,
enormous numbers of
near-death experiencers tell the same
story that when they've left the body
in that period, they don't
feel emotion like they feel here.
They're not cold, but they don't
feel the intensity of emotion that we feel.
Why? Because that's the body
consciousness, software program.
This is why psychiatrists
and people, they say, some of them,
they can break down human personalities
into about 12 archetypes
and combinations of them.
You can't do that with Infinite Possibility,
but you can do that with a computer program.
We had that lady in Britain a few years ago
who had been in institutions, in and out of them,
with real manic deep depression
for 40 years, and her personal file said:
'Oh, she's a manic depressive,
that's who she is, that's her!'
'What happened about the time this
started? Can you think? Did you do anything?'
And she said:
'The only thing I can think ofis I had something like 19 tooth-fillings, mercury.'
It was pointed out that
maybe there could be a connection.
She had all the mercury tooth-
fillings taken out, went on a mercury detox.
After 40 years, manic depression - gone.
Because it was a computer level of operation
that was manifesting it due to a chemical imbalance.
We're not even our
emotions, most of the time.
We are consciousness, and we've forgotten.
And therefore, these computer
programs, these software programs
take us over, and we think we're them.
And so instead of driving the bus, we're
sitting in the back thinking we can't drive it.
The brain is two halves of the brain.
There's the right brain,
and there's the left brain.
And they have very, very different
roles to play, especially in personality.
And between them is this
bridge called the corpus callosum,
which bridges the information
(again information!) between the two.
Now, this is another picture
that Neil Hague did for me recently,
symbolically looking at what
the right brain and the left brain do.
The right brain is out there. It's
creativity. It's inspiration. It's the maverick.
It's the connection to all
that is. It's the greater awareness.
And the left brain is about structure.
It sees things in parts, not as wholes.
structured. It's about language.
And it's about
organization in a physical way.
It's about being what we call (though
often that's not what it is) rational thinking.
And both sides of
the brain are necessary.
If you get a right-brain
person (we've all met them),
they're fantastically creative,
but they're out on another cloud.
There's nothing going on down here.
But if you get a really
imprisoned left-brain person,
they can't see the connections
with anything, they're here: boom-boom.
I'll tell you a f#in' story.
Sounds like Max Bygraves: I'll tell
you a story. Not many people reacted there.
Who's Max Bygraves? Shows my
bloody age. He's just a bit older than me.
Anyway, what happened was I was asked to
speak at the Oxford Union, Oxford University, right?
Now, there are whole-brain people at
Oxford University, I'm not knocking it.
But because of the nature
of it, there's a hell of a lot of real
left-brain people at Oxford University.
And I had this bizarre situation.
When I do something like this
to open-minded people, I just give it.
There you go, there it is,
make of it what you will.
But when you're talking to a real left-brain
audience, even at the elite Oxford University
where they passed all these
exams to get there (he's clever) ...
I'm sitting in a hotel
and I'm thinking how do I put
this in baby steps so they'll get it.
Why? Because the left brain
is what I was talking to there,
and it doesn't get this wider picture.
I'll come more to that in a second.
Now I wanna give you an
idea of this left-brain thing.
If you go to my website
the What Is Reality Research Archive,
you can see this 20-minute clip of
this lady. It was sent to me a few weeks ago,
and it was like a eureka moment,
because of what she experienced.
This is a lady called Jill
Bolte Taylor, who's a neuroanatomist,
brain scientist, for short.
And she had a stroke,
which shut down her left brain,
and instead of
conking out, she spent hours
experiencing what was
happening while it was going on.
And she talked about the fact that
she got up, she was having this stroke,
she didn't realize it immediately,
and she got onto the exercise machine.
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