TimeSpace101


———Causal Loop———

This is when an event is both the cause and the effect of the same. This can be a phenomenon where one event is both, singularly, a cause and effect (a singularity) or an origin event that necessitates following events that tighten the cause of the origin. This is the type of temporal shaping that creates a fixed event or several in a linear loop of timespace wherein the separation of cause and effect are often illusive. 

—EXAMPLE: Imagine a thought given to you by a peer in your early childhood. A brainworm of ideas. Say you think to yourself, long before the advent of sicial media and memes, “what if my red isn’t the same red as others’ red? Wouldn’t we be taught it’s the same? And, wouldn’t that be right?”. After some time, others do ask this question. Moreover, when the world doesn’t become lucid fast enough to surpass a great filter of sorts - you think to pass that message earlier in time. So, you go back in time to 100 years before your birth and give this idea to that period of time, never knowing you tried that and it failed to reach memetic criticality and was only just a murmur - leaving you to stumble across the idea after a peer tried repeating a brain teaser that their uncle told them once - “what if my red isn’t the same as yours?”.

—To avoid this: You may want to avoid a casual loop. In the event you do find yourself in one and wish to not, …nothing. Nothing is precisely what you do. If you are not the origin event and do not want to be, do not make yourself the origin.

—To adjust this: Although it seems undesirable, remember now how you do enjoy games where you get extra lives to attempt to get a better score or complete a level. Being able to adjust some of the causally tied fixed events slightly can create momentum in the origin event. PLEASE REMEMBER CAUSAL CHRONOLOGY IS NOT NECESSARILY TEMPORAL CHRONOLOGY and the origin may not be ‘at the beginning’ from a linear perspective.

—To break this: Consider the example story. The idea came from somewhere and you need to find where - or in this case, who. If you want to leave the event you must not be in its origin. This would involve raising a small litter of people who may question the same question, and using the universes chaotic nature to unbind yourself from the role of teacher so your litter can achieve eternal causality. Don’t ‘send’ your litter. Raise your litter with the intent of sharing all of your knowledge and it might be so that they will one day take your role as teacher.

    In short, view the origin event as a local maximum in a field of cognizable topo-sophi-logical events. As you move it, different fixed events will maximize near it. Creating momentum with enough acceleration can leave the origin event surrounded by events not causally connected enough to necessitate it and minimize probable recursions in the local field, meaning it is now only metaphysically possible, and not necessary (the point of origin isn’t a fixed event anymore, loop is go bye bye for now)


———Assumptions———

—We like flat time. 

A river likes a lake or an ocean. Clouds like to rain, lakes like to fog and fog loves the clouds. We like flat time. We assume flat time every time we think it’s weird and uncomfy when it appears to constrict, dilate, or lapse. We can drive to work and every stop light can feel like 10 mins when it’s 2 minutes and be on the roadway for 20 minutes and lapse time completely, we don’t notice and miss our turn or make a wrong one. This is upsetting until we realize this is a trick our brain plays with our attention because we like flat time. We like to think time is flat and our perception of it changes in apparent density due to our attention.

—Time is not flat. 

Nothing is flat. ‘Nothing’ is the only ‘flat’ concept we have. Nothing, within the universe is a line, everything is curved. No single photon travels in a straight line within our galaxy. Time, and space appear to bend around matter and mass and repel from antimatter.

—We are in a casual loop. 

The farthest record of supernatural phenomena refers to an ‘alpha’ and an ‘omega’ and those two being one, apparently conscious, and impactful on our development unto this current time.

—Loops are reiterative. 

Although we assume thermodynamics a limitation to tidally locked temporal loops in our larger minds, I simply don’t. Intertemporal perceptive assumes an alpha and omega of causality. Ethereal forces travel from the Alpha to the Omega and allows fields of energy within spacetime. We can travel, in time, closer to the Alpha like we travel upstream in a river. Some schools of thought say this energy decays from Alpha to Omega. That is to say the moment we live is a finite amount of traveling ether, and is not incorrect, but unimportant in this context.

—Loops can be instancial. 

For the timespace area inside the loop, time will be apparently reiterative and leaving the loop will finish the ‘instance’. The perspective is chosen and individual, being one may assume the loop instancial once one leaves, or once everyone in the loop leaves, or once everything in the loop leaves and the loop collapses. This is to say it’s debatable as to when the loop is ‘over’. When the observation of the primary ethereal forces are no longer observed, minimally observed, or removed from the area of timespace containing the loop.

—In conclusion:

We like the idea of flat time, but flat time is consciousness without a brain, a bulb with no light but a power source, and an engine with no movement. It’s like saying to a server “I want an MP4 with my favorite movie, but i want all of the bits to be zero and only zero.” It simply does not ‘work’ that ‘way’. That’s not how ‘any’ of this works.



———Fixation———

—Fixed Nodes: 

Fixed nodes can be positive or negative on the toposophalogical field of ‘timespace’. It is important to separate a ‘negative’ node as a period in time where there is low causal energy available to alter events in the local ‘moment’ and not just a moment that is undesirable; and a ‘positive’ node as a high potential of causal energy that leads to a common effect and not just a desirable outcome.

—Negative Nodes:

Negative temporal nodes are instances or iterations of negative causality. In negative time, attempts to change the environment in regular linear causality is muted. 

-First person:

I can try to make the bus, but the bus shows up early or late depending on when I show up, relatively. Usually, if I look at surrounding events I will be able to eventually arrive in sync with the bus - but this time the hints are much more subtle. In the extreme, I can no longer look at preceding busses and ignore the phone app’s predicted arrival time to sync with the bus. In theory I would have to create momentum outside of the local area to force the bus at a certain time. I might create an effect to collapse a tree to buy myself more time as the tree won’t be clear until a later time. I might have to create a positive node to offset the balance and leave without preparing for my day entirely and showing up really early.

—Positive Nodes:

Positive temporal nodes are instances or iterations where the event itself seems to demand itself near the maximum.

-First person:

I may have difficulty with syncing bus times because another person ‘always’ makes the bus and ‘makes it on time’ to work by not having to stop on their way to work. When I try to show up early I end up arriving to an empty bus stop. This other person is on a positive temporal node. This other person struggles to get on the bus, waving it to stop just before it leaves, getting on it while dropping their phone in the street and, after realizing it’s shattered, pauses to grieve and chat at the bus driver over how the phone is replaceable and exuberayting gratitude at the bus driver’s willingness to stop before realizing their anxiety shouldn’t go any higher as they struggle further to find a suitable seat least likely to incur confrontation or demand for interaction as they prepare themselves for their days work… oh! and they’re likely going to be late now and hopefully don’t have a lot of people to pick up. It’s at this moment I may think to myself “shit, maybe I missed it” and start to cross the street just to see the bus speed by to get back on schedule.

—Fixed Event:

A fixed event has an extreme local maximum with a surrounding moat of extreme local minimums of negative nodes leading to any attempt to gain iterative or instancial momentum being met with the universe itself decelerating and returning itself to the extreme maximum positive node. Trying to alter a fixed event is akin to trying to ‘move’ a black hole. You will most likely get stuck on its event horizon long before ever altering its trajectory.

-First Person:

I realize that missing the bus is an event that is difficult to retain positive affect and everything. I decide to take drastic action to achieve my goals. In order to do this, I look at the week preceding. When I do, I see that the night before there is a large storm and a tree was struck and downed over an alley way. I also notice that the day of the storm a taller tree was cut because it was rotting in the ground. I realize that tree is likely to be struck without intervention so I interrupt the tree cutter and claim to be the homeowner and to have plans to relocate the tree to a better location and don’t want it cut. Without understanding my drastic action mentality also carried to parallel times where I yell and times I call the city on the worker, and one time I threaten them to leave, I also find several other ways to sabotage the road and the bus. Now, I make the bus on time, but this other person ‘always’ has a bad day, and is late to work. Stacking my positive affects onto their already positively chaotic day induces a ‘fixed event’. My insanity becomes their chaos and instead of letting bigons be bigons I have instead discovered why I couldn’t make the bus on time ‘locally’ and created a local minimum of potential causality where no one can make it anywhere ‘on time’, no matter what they do.


When you feel a morphic resonance, that means you have an important decision to make, yet and easy one to ignore by choosing to retreat from the feeling of non-linear time. Free will is scary, and often psychically painful for those struggling with trauma and, specifically, traumatic temporal wounds in their biofield.


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