How do we know, on an individual basis, that our lives are making some kind of difference in the world? That our lives amount to something?
Well, perhaps we can’t KNOW for certain – that is, point to measurable data as proof – that we have a positive impact but we can be sure that how we live impacts other lives around us. And we hope it’s a positive one.
For those of us who are older, we can feel forlorn when asking the question: am I making a difference? Older, retired, perhaps alone (willingly or unwillingly) – how can we feel that life holds anything further?
The answer lies with faith. And within faith, a secret has been revealed through quantum science.
Quantum science has lifted the veil on creation in many ways. But key to this idea of faith, is the quantum proof that our thoughts create our reality.
This idea will not be new to anyone who has read the Seth books by Jane Roberts or studied any of Neville Goddard’s writings or Napoleon Hill’s works or those of countless others who began by asking, “how does Life work?”
These seminal publications and many others inspired The Secret, the book that has done more in the past 18 years to both excite and frustrate those of us trying to create the life we want through manifestation.
Make no mistake, quantum physics has proven that manifestation does work. But, as within the physical universe, there are hard and fast “rules” that must be followed.
This week, The Art 2 Aging opens up a discussion around one question pertinent to all of us but an especially burning question for those of us who are aging: is there any further meaning to life? Is there something more that I can be reaching for?
Our guest is Peter Merry, Managing Director of Ubiquity University in the Netherlands, an educational institution that offers “transformational higher education”.
Peter is well immersed in the quantum sciences as well as the research done at the Princeton Lab for roughly 20 years beginning in the 1960s into how two concepts impact our physical reality: intention and attention.
Taken together, intention and attention are the creative forces for each of us in our lives.
So, join us tomorrow on The Art 2 Aging for an important conversation with Peter Merry.