Did you know that our bodies emit enough voltage to light a 100W electric light bulb—or more when we’re exercising? The body, according to Gregg Braden, houses 50 trillion cells. Each cell contains 100 trillion atoms. Every cell has input and output photons of light, enough for each body to generate an electrical potential of nearly 3.5 trillion volts. When we enter a room where people are gathered, we are all separate bodies, but our energy interacts with the energy of all the others in the room. We become one, and as our energy expands outside the room, it joins energy throughout the universe. We control the emotional state of our energy. If we want to live in a world of peace and love rather than fear and frustration, we must transmit a loving energy into the quantum field. Then with other positive energies, we can become this world of peace and love we desire.
Humanity’s Team, a streaming platform, espouses Global Oneness for everyone on the planet by the year 2040. During this year’s Global Oneness Summit, the founder Steve Farrell interviewed Gregg Braden. Braden, a trained structural geologist PhD, began his career working on the Strategic Defense Initiative during the Reagan era. While in this position, trying to conceive the necessary weapons to win the “Cold War,” he decided to vacation in Egypt. There, he wanted to see the sunrise from Mt. Sinai. What he experienced was a scene so beautiful that he wondered “If I left this world today, would I feel complete with my life?” When his answer was “no,” he decided to quit his job and do only what would fulfill a “yes” answer for him. He became a best-selling NY Times author, a scientific researcher and seeker, a musician, a speaker, a teacher. He refused any invitation to which he could not respond “yes.” Since then, he daily praises “the Beauty I live with, the Beauty I live by, and the Beauty upon which I base my life.”
In his interview, Braden asserted that we, as humans, have been taught since early childhood that we are not “worthy,” that we are not “enough.” He disagrees. He calls humans “soft technology” who are much more than we have been led to believe. When compared to “hard” technology (the computer), the human brain exceeds it in capability, 100 million times more efficient than a computer chip. (After all, our human genome has never changed. All technology today comes from human sources.) He references a Stanford study at the Salk Institute comparing brain synapses to a microprocessor. The computer is, of course, faster. However, a chip’s material, silicon, restricts its ability. It can never attain any greater capability than that of the material’s capacity. The human brain has unlimited possibility. When the brain’s neurons reach an alleged apex, they morph and adapt so that they open a new dimension and expand past that prior perceived limit.
In 1991, scientists identified the neural network in the heart. Further research reveals that coherence between our brains and our hearts helps spread positive energy. Scientists have measured the magnetic field of the heart and discovered that it extends 5-8 feet out from the body. Since energy has no boundaries, why does this field extend only 8 feet? The answer: the machine can only measure out to 8 feet. Therefore, the energy potentially extends much further into the universe. How can we ascertain that this energy has quality? Braden asks, “Do we love ourselves enough to embrace the truth of being human today and the responsibility that comes with it?” We need to decide what we want the world to be and project that world ourselves by directing our own biology. We need to expand our emotion to love rather than contract it in fear.
Reducing stress increases our immune responses. If we slow our breathing, we can bring coherence (reduced stress) between our heart and our brain. The breathing is simple: slowly inhale four counts, stop the breath briefly at the top of the inhale, and then exhale 8 counts. Such breathing triggers the parasympathetic response by affecting the Vagus nerve and relieving bodily tension. It also increases measurable heart rate variability. The more variability we have, the more resilience we have when things change. (One simple addition to aid this process is to think of something for which you have gratitude.) The breathing also affects DNA. The protein chromatin sheafs our DNA. Spooling winds our DNA and controls its elasticity. When not wound too tightly, DNA spools more efficiently. Scientists now know that our body’s stress level strongly affects the tightness of the spooling. Less stress positively affects DNA function. And we can reduce our mechanical stress, regardless of its source, with only three minutes a day of breathing into coherence. If we chose diets without added chemicals or food prepared properly and try not to breath toxic air, we can further contain molecular stress. When we began treating our bodies, our temples, the way they should be treated and listen more to our hearts, we can retain our power. The question we must ask is “what power have we given away to fear?” Each of us can only answer that question for ourselves.
(To be continued)