Cold Spot, Multiverse, and the Sovereignty of Consciousness -with Narration

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Introduction: Modern Myths in Cosmic Cold Spots

In 2004, satellite maps of the cosmic microwave background (CMB) revealed an anomaly—a vast region of sky slightly cooler than expected, now famously called the Cold Spot. Initial doubts that it was a fluke were erased when the Planck satellite confirmed the Cold Spot with high significance in 2013. Scientists were faced with a cosmic mystery: according to standard models, such a huge cold region simply shouldn’t exist by random chance.

Explanations poured in. Some argued a gigantic “supervoid” in that direction of the universe might be sucking energy from the CMB. Others entertained a more exotic narrative: perhaps the Cold Spot is “the bruise” from a collision with another universe, a relic of our bubble universe bumping against a neighbor. If true, it could be the first evidence of the multiverse—billions of universes like our own branching beyond cosmic horizons.

Such speculative cosmology captures the public imagination. The multiverse idea has seeped from academic papers into pop culture, fueling a modern myth: the idea of infinite versions of ourselves. We tell ourselves that if reality truly contains innumerable parallel worlds, then every choice we didn’t make still plays out somewhere. The lonely what-ifs of life are soothed by an epic narrative in which no opportunity is ever truly lost—some other “you” gets to live it. It’s a seductive story, almost like a new religion draped in quantum physics.

But what do these scientific myths tell us about ourselves? Why do we leap to believe there might be endless copies of our very identity out there? In exploring the Cold Spot and the multiverse, we are really gazing into a psychological mirror.

Our interpretations reveal a deep misunderstanding of consciousness and selfhood. We cling to the idea that “we” could be replicated infinitely, that our essence is just a combinatorial outcome of physical events—no more unique than a die roll repeated over and over. This essay will peel back that assumption with an uncompromising lens.

Modern science, in wrestling with cosmic anomalies, is inadvertently engaging in myth-making. Just as ancient cultures spun constellations into gods and heroes, we spin anomalies like the CMB Cold Spot into grand narratives about parallel universes.

But behind this urge lies a blindness: a failure to grasp the nature of consciousness as something other than a byproduct of matter. Our journey will move from the chilling emptiness of the Cold Spot to the intimate terrain of the mind. We’ll challenge the fallacy of “infinite yous,” present a model of consciousness as an electromagnetic (EM) phenomenon, and introduce the idea of field sovereignty—the notion that your personal energetic field must be kept uncompromised.

By journey’s end, the Cold Spot’s true lesson will emerge: it matters less whether other universes exist and far more whether you exercise sovereignty over your own inner universe. In an age of both cosmic and societal upheaval, this realization isn’t just philosophical—it’s survival.

Let me be clear: this is not about disproving science or claiming personal “truth.” It is about pointing out that science, in this perspective, is not right—and that what comes before science—knowledge that cannot be labeled, measured, or confined to a lab—is worth serious exploration.


Listen to a deep-dive episode by the Google NotebookLM Podcasters, as they explore this article in their unique style, blending light banter with thought-provoking studio conversations.

The Fallacy of “Infinite Versions of You”

Flip open any popular science magazine these days and you’ll likely find an article musing on the multiverse. The concept comes in many flavors—quantum many-worlds, endless inflationary universes, branched timelines—but they often get boiled down to a tantalizing take-home: every possibility you can imagine is real somewhere. Perhaps in one universe you became an Olympic athlete; in another, you never met your closest friend; in yet another, you died tragically young or lived to 120. It’s a heady idea, and even respected physicists indulge it.

Caltech’s Sean Carroll, for instance, champions the Many Worlds Interpretation of quantum mechanics, which implies that “every person, rock, and particle in the universe participates in an endlessly branching reality,” continually splitting into alternate versions whenever multiple outcomes are possible. In this view, nothing is truly unique—not even you. If reality branches infinitely, there would inevitably be countless copies of you, experiencing every permutation of events.

Some cosmologists make a similar case on the grand scale. If space is infinite or filled with countless bubble universes, then somewhere out there, the cosmic dice have rolled the same way twice. Given enough volume, the arrangement of particles that makes up “you” must repeat, perhaps infinitely. A piece in Big Think laid out the argument like a wager: if the multiverse contains more universes than the number of possible histories, “then there are plenty of copies of you, including copies that made different life-affecting decisions… somewhere out there, there’s probably a ‘you’ that has a better, happier life…and somewhere else, a version of ‘you’ that has it far worse”.

It’s a strange comfort – or perhaps a curse – to imagine that all your fateful crossroads did go both ways in some alternate world. The myth here is subtle: it equates physical possibility with personal identity. It presumes that if a being exists with your face and memories, it is in some sense you. And yet, something in us should pause at this claim, even before we get to the science. Is an alternative twin living out a different life truly “you” in any meaningful sense?

At the heart of the multiverse zeitgeist lies a category error about consciousness. Physics may permit that identical configurations of particles recur infinitely, but consciousness is not a material pattern that can be cloned or proliferated like wallpaper. Consciousness is an experience, anchored in a particular point of view. If we had a perfect atom-by-atom copy of you, would it share your awareness? Philosophers have debated this thought experiment for decades. Increasingly, neuroscience suggests that mind is not just information, not just computation—it may be an electromagnetic pattern, a field phenomenon tied intimately to a living brain here and now. Even within known physics there’s a principle that resonates as an analogy: the quantum no-cloning theorem.

In quantum mechanics, if you have an unknown arbitrary quantum state (say, an electron’s precise spin orientation), you cannot make a perfect copy of it. Nature disallows duplication of fundamental states; you can have similar states, entangled states, but not an independent identical state. Likewise, even if there were another universe where every neuron in a person’s brain was arranged the same as yours, it would still be a separate quantum system, a separate locus of experience. That other “you” would not be you—it would be its own sovereign awareness, looking out from behind its own eyes. Your consciousness, as you directly know it, is singular and nontransferable.

The multiverse “infinite you” trope fails to appreciate this. It reduces selfhood to a mere pattern that could be stamped out repeatedly, like identical prints of a painting. But consciousness is more like the original canvas—there can be many similar paintings, yet each is one-of-a-kind in its existence. Here we must be razor sharp: there is a difference between imagining many hypothetical yous and the reality of your unique sentience. By misunderstanding this, we risk cheapening our concept of personal identity. We subconsciously start thinking of ourselves as disposable or interchangeable, just one of innumerable copies. This is a fallacy that has profound consequences for how we value life and how we treat our own minds.

So let’s set the record straight with a different model. Instead of picturing consciousness as a software program that could be run on multiple “hardware” brains across parallel universes, consider that consciousness might be more fundamentally an electromagnetic field phenomenon.

That isn’t New Age jargon; it’s a serious scientific proposal gaining traction. Electromagnetic (EM) theories of consciousness posit that conscious experience is physically embodied in the EM field generated by the brain. In this view, your consciousness is literally the electromagnetic field that is produced by your neural activity—a dynamic, unified field that is only present here, in your living brain, and not copyable elsewhere. Even if another brain elsewhere had identical anatomy, unless it was continuously coupled to your field, it would generate its own field – its own consciousness. There is no mass-production of the subjective self. No matter how many doppelgängers physics might allow, your inner life is singular.

By embracing the uniqueness of conscious fields, we can appreciate why modern multiverse musings, compelling as they are, remain mythic in flavor. They resonate with ancient human longings—rebirth, immortality, the idea that we might correct regrets in another life. But in the cold light of day (or the Cold Spot of the CMB), these are projections of our psyche onto the cosmos.

The truth waiting to be realized is that our selves cannot be outsourced to other universes or copies. We are each tasked with the stewardship of one life, one stream of consciousness, right here and now. And that realization leads us to a deeper question: What is the nature of this conscious self that we must steward? To answer that, we need to explore a paradigm that treats consciousness as an electromagnetic blueprint — an energetic reality that underlies and directs the matter of our brains.

Consciousness as an Electromagnetic Blueprint

It’s important here to distinguish between brain, mind, and consciousness. The brain functions as the CPU—it processes, interprets, and interacts with electromagnetic signals, translating field dynamics into neural activity. The mind is the sum total of your electromagnetic “storage” and processing system—not confined to the brain, but distributed throughout the entire body’s EM network. In contrast, consciousness is not bound to this physical infrastructure. It exists as a higher-order field phenomenon, anchored to the body-mind system during a life cycle, but not limited to it. Consciousness persists beyond the hardware; the mind and brain interface it here, but do not contain it.

I have written about this distinction in depth on my sites, but it’s worth a brief clarification here to keep our foundation precise. Understanding this distinction is crucial when considering how electromagnetic activity in the brain relates to the broader phenomenon of consciousness. With this clarified, we can now look at how mainstream science approaches the brain’s EM field—and why this perspective might be too limited.

This might sound radical, but it builds on known science. When your neurons fire, each action potential generates an electromagnetic pulse. Collectively, the brain produces electrical currents and oscillating magnetic fields—a veritable symphony of EM activity that can be measured as brainwaves (EEG) or magnetoencephalograms (MEG). Standard neuroscience views this EM activity as a mere byproduct of neurons doing their thing.

The EM consciousness model turns the picture inside-out: it suggests that the global EM field produced by all those neurons is not just a side-effect, but the seat of consciousness itself. In other words, consciousness might be the brain’s EM field in action, and that field in turn can feed back on the very neurons that generated it, influencing their synchronization and timing.

Biophysics has shown that fields and particles are two sides of the same coin. Modern physics tells us that the particles making up your brain—electrons, protons, ions—are excitations of underlying quantum fields. And virtually every interaction in your brain (and body) is electromagnetic at root: when a neurotransmitter molecule binds to a receptor, or a thought races through a neural circuit, it’s ultimately EM forces at play in complex arrangements.

We routinely harness EM fields in technology to encode and transmit information—television, radio, WiFi—all depend on electromagnetic signals carrying structured data. Why then is it so bizarre to think that nature could harness an EM field to encode the data of consciousness?

As one neuroscientist pointedly asked, “Is it really so bizarre to propose that some [electromagnetic interactions] are the substrate of life’s greatest gift, consciousness?”. After all, the difference between a living brain and a dead one is not the atoms (they’re all still there); it’s the organized electrical dance that has ceased. That hints that the electrical/EM organization is what animates the mind.

Researchers like Johnjoe McFadden have articulated how an EM blueprint of consciousness might work. McFadden’s CEMI theory (Conscious Electromagnetic Information theory) posits that the brain’s EM field integrates information across different neural regions and is in itself the “bridge” where conscious awareness happens. According to McFadden, the brain is both transmitter and receiver of EM signals: neurons transmit into the field, and in turn the field influences neurons, creating a feedback loop. This loop could explain mysterious features of consciousness like its (fields naturally unify data encoded in them) and our ability to make free, holistic decisions (the field can integrate many inputs and bias neural outcomes in a way a disjointed network couldn’t).

The conscious EM field in this model is self-directing to an extent—it’s not static, it actively shapes neural firing patterns by biasing which neurons fire in synchrony. It’s coherent: when you pay attention or enter a focused state, large groups of neurons oscillate together, strengthening the field’s influence. McFadden pointed out that synchronously firing neurons (which produce stronger, more ordered field patterns) correlate with conscious perception, whereas asynchronous firing correlates with lack of awareness.

In experiments, if a visual stimulus doesn’t reach awareness, the neurons don’t synchronize; if the stimulus is consciously perceived, those neurons lock step in rhythm, amplifying the field. This is a hint that the EM field might be doing the binding and “lighting up” of experience.

Now contrast this “EM blueprint” with what we might call the EM signature of matter. Every lump of inanimate matter has an electromagnetic signature — thermal radiation, charge distributions, etc. But that’s a passive fingerprint, not an active blueprint. By calling consciousness an EM blueprint, we assert it’s a causal, guiding pattern. It’s self-cohering and informationally structured. It doesn’t just sit there; it directs flows of energy within the brain.

If the brain is hardware, the EM field is like an operating system that organizes processes, except it’s continuous and holistic rather than digital. Importantly, this EM blueprint is unique to each being. It’s shaped by that person’s particular neural wiring and life history. You can’t copy it to another brain any more than you can have two magnetic fields occupying the same space independently — they would interfere and merge. And unlike a simple magnet’s field, a conscious field is highly complex and patterned, carrying the imprint of thoughts, feelings, and intentions.

One might ask: if consciousness is an EM field, can’t it radiate away? Why is it tied to the brain? Good question. The answer lies in coherence and coupling. The brain’s electromagnetic field is not like a radio broadcast that shoots off into space; it’s more like a localized web of energy tightly coupled to the brain’s structure. The field’s influence drops off with distance, and it’s continually regenerated by neural activity each fraction of a second.

It doesn’t leave the brain any more than the field of a magnet leaves the magnet (the field extends around it but is anchored to it). So we’re not talking about a ghost that flies out; we’re talking about a physical field that overlaps the matter of the brain, inhabiting it. Think of the field as the real-time blueprint of how all the neurons’ information is integrated. The moment-to-moment patterns in this field are your thoughts and sensations.

This has a profound implication: consciousness is not copyable or transferable because it is a process bound to a specific physical EM matrix. That matrix can change (you can learn, your brain connectivity can rewire, your field patterns can evolve), but it remains yours.

Even if a twin existed with identical brain structure, your two EM fields would be separate domains, each with its own self-organizing history. The myth of “infinite yous” dissolves in light of this. There may be infinite bodies or brains similar to you in a multiverse scenario, but each would generate its own conscious field. There is no cosmic Xerox machine making duplicates of the ongoing process that is your awareness.

By framing consciousness as an electromagnetic blueprint, we set the stage for understanding how consciousness interacts with other energy fields. Because if consciousness is fundamentally EM in nature, then it must obey (at least in part) the laws of field interaction. And that opens up an entire dimension that mainstream discussion often ignores: fields can overlap, interfere, and modulate one another.

In other words, if each of us is an electromagnetic being at the core, then we are not as isolated as we think. We swim in a sea of EM fields—the natural fields of the Earth and cosmos, the technological fields of our devices, and crucially, the fields of each other’s hearts and brains. Which brings us to the next key idea: the permeability of the EM field and how influences can radiate, permeate, or even inhabit our personal field space.

The Permeability of the Electromagnetic Field

Electromagnetic fields do not stop neatly at the boundary of a skull or a skin. They are inherently permeable and interpenetrating. Consider a basic example: your heart generates a powerful EM field with each beat. This field extends outside your body; instruments can detect your heartbeat’s magnetic signature several feet away.

In fact, researchers at the HeartMath Institute have shown that information about a person’s emotional state is encoded in the heart’s magnetic field and can be detected in the environment. When you experience emotions like appreciation or anger, the rhythm of your heart changes, and so does the spectrum of the field it radiates.

In experiments, the spectral pattern of a person’s electrocardiogram becomes more coherent (more harmonic) during positive emotional states and disordered during negative states, and these changes are reflected in the magnetic field radiating from the heart. This means your inner condition is literally broadcast, however subtly, into the space around you.

Now, what happens when two people are near each other? Their fields overlap. Studies have found, for instance, that when people sit close, signals from one person’s heartbeat can be measured in the other person’s brainwaves and vice versa. This is not psychic speculation but a physical fact: when two electromagnetic fields intersect, they superimpose. They don’t bounce off each other like two billiard balls; they pass through and create an interference pattern.

In everyday terms, this means that on an unseen energetic level, we are continuously influencing and being influenced by the fields around us. Most of this happens subconsciously—we might simply register it as a “vibe” or a gut feeling around someone. Have you ever felt the atmosphere change when a particular person walks into a room, even before anyone speaks? Or felt discomfort standing too close to someone who is radiating agitation, as if your own nerves start buzzing? These could well be examples of electromagnetic field overlap affecting your nervous system.

I’ve personally observed this many times over the years during healing work. When conducting energy balancing or healing sessions, especially when standing behind a seated person and directing intention through specific sequences, their breathing pattern inevitably begins to mirror mine within a minute or two. While I haven’t directly measured heart rate synchronization, it would be reasonable to suspect it follows. This isn’t spiritual fluff—I don’t do fluff. These are real, field-tested observations of how one human’s electromagnetic field can entrain another’s. It’s a tangible demonstration of field interaction, not wishful thinking.

To give a concrete scientific example of field permeability, consider transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS), a medical technology. TMS uses a strong externally applied magnetic field to induce currents in specific regions of a patient’s brain. It can change neural firing patterns and is even used to treat depression by pushing brain activity out of pathological states.

What is this if not an external EM field influencing the internal conscious field? In fact, McFadden noted that the brain responds to electromagnetic fields of similar strength and structure as its own endogenous field.

That’s precisely how TMS works: by introducing a structured magnetic pulse, it “talks” to the brain in the brain’s own electromagnetic language. Our personal field can thus be permeated by outside fields, for better or worse. In daily life, most outside fields are much weaker than TMS of course, but we are bathed in them constantly—power lines, cell phones, Wi-Fi, radio broadcasts, Schumann resonances from lightning in the atmosphere, solar magnetic storms, and the blended emissions of all living beings around us.

We’re so used to this electromagnetic cacophony that we tune it out, much like a city-dweller stops hearing the constant background noise. But our bodies and subconscious minds haven’t tuned it out; they are responding in subtle ways. It helps to introduce a framework for these interactions. We can categorize field influences into three types: Radiated, Permeated, and Inhabited.

  • Radiated influence is what you actively broadcast. It’s your field signature, shaped by your current state. When you radiate calm, that calmness can induce a degree of coherence in a nearby anxious person’s field (think of how a mother’s soothing presence can steady a frightened child—part of that may be her coherent heart field calming the child’s heart rhythm). Radiated influence is generally not intentional; it’s a byproduct of who you are being in each moment. But it is real. Just as one tuning fork can induce sympathetic vibration in another, one coherent mind can gently encourage coherence in another mind’s EM field. Conversely, a chaotic or “dark” radiated field can disturb others, even if invisibly.
  • Permeated influence is what happens to you when external fields impinge on your own. We are permeated by the Earth’s geomagnetic field; its fluctuations correlate with human mood and health in measurable ways. For example, during solar storms, when charged particles from the sun rattle Earth’s magnetosphere, studies have found increases in anxiety, sleep disturbances, and even depression in sensitive individuals. People don’t realize that a restless night and irritable mood might trace back to a perturbation in the magnetic environment—they just know they feel “off.” On a more personal level, if you sit next to a deeply sad friend, your own emotional state can become permeated by a tinge of that sorrow, even if no words are exchanged. We often attribute this solely to psychological empathy, but there’s likely a physical electromagnetic component: their heart-brain field is literally overlaying onto yours, and unless you maintain a strong sovereign vibration, their pattern can induce a similar pattern in you (much like two pendulums mounted to the same wall will eventually synchronize). Permeation is why field sovereignty matters—more on that soon.
  • Inhabited influence is the most subtle and perhaps the most startling: it’s when an outside field actually takes up residence in your space, co-opting your field from within. This might sound spooky, but consider a mundane example first: viruses invade your cells and use your cellular machinery to replicate, effectively “inhabiting” your body. Now translate that concept to the electromagnetic domain. Is it possible that energetic parasites or foreign consciousness fragments can hitchhike on your field and influence your thoughts and feelings from the inside? Many spiritual traditions would say yes—this is their explanation for phenomena like spirit possession or entity attachment. But even without invoking ghosts or demons, we have psychological analogs: someone’s ideology or intent can burrow into your mind and take root, as if a piece of their field has colonized a piece of yours. Think of the way a charismatic cult leader’s influence “lives inside” a follower’s head, directing their will. Or at a more commonplace level, think of a toxic person from your past whose voice you still hear in your own self-talk—an internalized critic that isn’t really you. These are examples of what we term inhabited influence: when the boundary of self is breached and an external pattern operates from within the host field. It is an unseen energetic war that most of us don’t even know we are fighting, because science and society rarely acknowledge it.

These field interactions—radiating, permeating, inhabiting—are happening all the time, but because they are invisible and not part of mainstream discourse, we misattribute their effects or miss them entirely. If you suddenly experience a wave of irrational anger, you might think “I’m just moody today,” not realizing perhaps you walked through the residual field imprint of a quarrel that occurred in that room earlier, essentially stepping into an angry cloud.

If you have a bizarre intrusive thought, you might assume it’s your own subconscious, not suspecting it could be an energetic fragment picked up from someone else’s projection. We have no cultural language for these possibilities, so we default to either purely internal explanations (“it’s just my brain chemistry”) or supernatural ones that are often tainted with fear and superstition.

It’s time to ground this discussion: fields influencing fields is normal physics. Every radio we use is proof that information can transfer via field resonance. Two radio antennas tuned to the same frequency will exchange energy; one sends, another receives.

Is it such a stretch to imagine that two human brains, which emit complex EM signals, might at times achieve a kind of transient resonance where information (a mood, a thought, an image) transfers from one to the other?

We’ve all experienced telepathy-like moments—knowing who is calling before you look at your phone, or sharing the same thought with a friend at the same time. Skeptics call it coincidence, but when you appreciate the brain as an electric organ, you realize direct signal transfer isn’t mystical at all, just not yet well understood.

The permeability of our fields means we need to take for the company we keep and the environments we inhabit, not just on a physical and psychological level, but on an electromagnetic level. You can be doing all the right things for your mental health—therapy, meditation, good diet—and still feel oppressed if you live in a soup of discordant fields, be it the chronic stress emanating from your workplace or even ambient EM smog from constant electronics.

Conversely, entering a high-coherence field environment—perhaps a place of worship filled with prayer, or a home with loving family energy—can uplift and clear your mind in ways you can’t intellectually pinpoint. We must become field-aware. We must realize our consciousness is both influencing and being influenced via this electromagnetic interplay continuously.

The concepts of Radiated, Permeated, and Inhabited influences are explored in greater depth on my sites and in the foundational book, “TULWA Philosophy – A Unified Path.” That work lays the groundwork for those seeking to walk a self-governed, introspective path with clarity.

One striking example of field interplay is the phenomenon of déjà vu, to which we now turn. This strange mental hiccup could hold clues about field resonance and even the remnants of foreign influence within our field.

Déjà Vu as Misattributed Field Recognition

Nearly everyone has experienced déjà vu: that eerie feeling that a present moment is uncannily familiar, as if you’ve lived it before. Traditional science explains déjà vu as a memory glitch—perhaps the brain’s pattern-matching circuitry misfires and flags the current experience as a memory when it isn’t.

But even the experts find that explanation somewhat unsatisfying, given how vivid and out-of-the-blue déjà vu can be. It often has a quality of otherness, like you’re recalling something that isn’t in your own timeline.

This has led some to propose more exotic theories. For instance, renowned physicist Michio Kaku has speculated that déjà vu might occur if our consciousness momentarily tunes into a parallel universe. He offers the analogy of multiple radio stations (parallel realities) all around us: normally you’re “tuned” to your home frequency (this universe), but once in a while, perhaps the brain’s frequency wavers and you pick up a whisper from another world.

It’s a fascinating idea, essentially invoking the multiverse as an explanation for a mental event. In Kaku’s view, déjà vu could be a clue that somewhere, another version of you has been in a scenario very similar to this, and your brain is picking up on that overlap across universes.

Now, let’s consider an alternative that doesn’t require multi-universal travel. If we stick with our EM consciousness model, we can ask: could déjà vu happen within this universe, via field interactions? Perhaps what we label “misfiring neurons” is actually a moment of field resonance.

Imagine that you enter a space or meet a person, and unknown to you, your electromagnetic field synchronizes briefly with a pattern that is not originally yours. This pattern could come from another consciousness entirely—maybe someone else’s strong memory or emotion that imprinted onto the environment like an energetic residue. When your field brushes against that pattern, you get a sudden flush of familiarity.

It feels like you’ve been there before, or heard those words before, because in a sense you have – just not in your own life. You’re recognizing something, but it’s misattributed. The recognition doesn’t stem from your personal past; it stems from a field overlap with someone else’s past or an ambient field memory.

Consider places that carry a heavy atmosphere—old battlefields, prisons, ancient temples. People often report an uncanny feeling in such locations. We usually chalk it up to psychological suggestion, but maybe those places truly retain echoes in the EM field.

If you come into tune with that echo, a bit of that memory might play out in your mind as if it were yours. Déjà vu could be the conscious experience of encountering a field imprint that matches a pattern in your own field closely enough to fool your internal recognition system. It’s like recognizing a melody, but played on a different instrument. Your brain says, “I know this!” even though you can’t place where.

Another intriguing possibility is what we might call “hitchhiking field fragments.” Imagine during some intense experience, a fragment of someone’s field sloughs off and attaches to yours (this relates to the inhabited influence concept). It could be a fragment of emotion, or a thoughtform that almost has a life of its own. You carry it unknowingly, like a little parasite or stowaway in your aura.

That fragment contains information (it came from someone else’s memory or desires), and most of the time it lies dormant. But then you wander into a situation that resonates with that fragment’s content. Suddenly, it activates and floods you with a sense of familiarity—after all, it has seen something like this before, even if you haven’t.

The result: you experience déjà vu. Not because you lived this moment, but because something living in your field did, or at least experienced something analogous.

This perspective reframes déjà vu from a mere brain quirk to a potential symptom of field entanglement. It suggests that our sense of self may at times be influenced by pieces that aren’t originally ours. When people say, “I feel like I’m not myself today,” it might be truer than we realize. Perhaps they are resonating with an external field influence that’s coloring their thoughts and perceptions.

Mainstream science would demand evidence for such claims. Fair enough—this is frontier thinking. Yet there are clues: consider the documented cases of organ transplant recipients who inherit memories or personality traits of their donors. Some heart transplant patients report new preferences and emotions that uncannily match the deceased donor’s life, a phenomenon sometimes called “cellular memory.”

While controversial, one hypothesis is that the donor’s heart EM field (which carries informational patterns) imprinted something on the recipient’s body. If a physical heart can carry memory traces, why not an EM field fragment?

Even if one remains skeptical of these specifics, it’s clear that the human mind is more networked than our isolated body would suggest. We are receivers and transmitters in an experiential web. Déjà vu might be one of the rare moments we catch a glitch in that matrix, when the lines cross.

Instead of dismissing it as a fluke, perhaps we should pay attention: what am I recognizing here? Is this feeling trying to tell me something about an influence I’ve absorbed? Approached this way, déjà vu becomes a doorway to self-inquiry: it hints at the unseen tapestries connecting consciousness to consciousness.

Of course, not every déjà vu will have a deep revelation behind it. But adopting a field-centric view of mind expands our explanatory toolkit. It allows us to entertain that some subjective experiences (like intuition, telepathic hunches, or sudden moods that feel “not ours”) might correspond to genuine field interactions.

Rather than invoking parallel universes for déjà vu, we can look at the multiverse of minds right here — billions of conscious fields on Earth constantly overlapping. The truth might be that we are far more entangled with each other than our lonely skull-encased experiences let on. And if that’s so, it raises both amazing opportunities (for empathy, collective upliftment) and serious concerns (for manipulation, loss of self). This is why, in the philosophy of TULWA, reclaiming one’s field sovereignty is paramount. Let’s look into that with a clear eye.

Why TULWA Must Be Razor Sharp on Field Sovereignty

We live in an era of systemic blindness to subtle influences. Modern spirituality often speaks of energy and interconnectedness, but too frequently it does so in fuzzy, feel-good generalities—“ and light” without diving into the mechanics of power and control in the energetic realm.

Mainstream science, for its part, has been outright dismissive of anything that smacks of “vibes” or fields affecting consciousness. It wasn’t long ago that even discussing the brain’s EM field in relation to mind would get you side-eyed by neurologists.

Though this is beginning to change (with serious journals now publishing on EM field theories of consciousness), such ideas “remain controversial and are often ignored by neurobiologists and philosophers”.

In other words, the establishment—whether scientific or new-age spiritual—has largely failed to acknowledge the full implications of field interactions. This collective blind spot leaves a gaping vulnerability in our understanding of mental health, social dynamics, and .

Enter TULWA. TULWA is not a doctrine but a philosophy of Total Uncompromising Lucidity With Accountability. (Technically, TULWA stands for The Archetype—but in this context, the acronym’s attitude matters more than its official title. The content of this article doesn’t just complement TULWA—it sits at its core. Understanding this isn’t optional. It’s foundational.) The tone of TULWA is sharp, clear, and no-nonsense because it recognizes what’s at stake: if you do not claim sovereignty over your own field, something else will. There is no neutral ground in this energetic ecosystem.

Either you actively cultivate and guard the integrity of your consciousness field, or you passively allow it to be shaped and even invaded by external forces – be they social, technological, or metaphysical.

This isn’t paranoia; it’s a sober assessment of how nature works. Just as a cell must maintain the integrity of its membrane to live (keeping nutrients in and toxins out), a conscious being must maintain the integrity of their EM field to remain self-directed.

Why must TULWA be razor sharp on this? Because most existing frameworks, whether scientific or spiritual, fail to account for field influence, leaving people defenseless on a crucial front. Consider the mental health field: It almost exclusively attributes disorders to internal biochemical imbalances or personal psychological history. These are no doubt factors, but how often does a psychiatrist ask a patient about the electromagnetic environment or the energetic hygiene of their relationships? Virtually never.

If a patient feels continual anxiety, we point to genetics or trauma, rarely to the possibility that, say, they are unconsciously enmeshed in the field of an anxious family member or being agitated by environmental EM noise. Our treatments address the individual in isolation – medication, cognitive therapy – assuming the problem is all inside them. It’s akin to treating a fish for stress without ever considering the quality of the water it’s swimming in.

On the spiritual side, you have well-meaning teachings about compassion and oneness that sometimes inadvertently encourage boundary dissolution. People are told the ego is an illusion, to let go of separateness. While there’s truth to transcending egoic rigidity, some interpreters go too far, ending up with porous psyches that welcome anything in under the banner of unity.

They lack discernment; they might attribute every thought or emotion to their own karma or lessons, not recognizing when something foreign is intruding. In short, parts of the spiritual community are wide open energetically, and ironically this can make them more susceptible to deception or influence.

If you don’t believe in negative influences (because you insist “all is love”), you won’t guard against them. If you assume every inner voice is either your higher self or a divine guide, you might not consider that some could be what TULWA calls “It”—an external presence or influence, not originating from you.

In TULWA, “It” is a general descriptor for non-physical intention and consciousness acting upon your field. This includes both constructive and destructive forces. TULWA deliberately avoids labels like angels, demons, or spirit guides, because those are human interpretations. What matters is recognizing influence—whether it uplifts, distorts, or deceives—not getting caught in names or appearances.

TULWA’s stance is uncompromising: clarity first, over comfort. That means we prefer an uncomfortable truth to a comforting fantasy. And the truth is, field dynamics play a pivotal role in human affairs, yet we’ve been systemically blind to them. It’s akin to living in a world with bacteria and viruses before germ theory—you can’t see the microbes, so you concoct other explanations for disease (bad air, curses, imbalance of humors).

We are presently pre-germ-theory when it comes to energetic influence. We explain social contagions or sudden mood swings with whatever frameworks we have at hand: maybe it’s “mass hysteria” or maybe it’s “astrological transits” depending on your bent. But what if a lot of it comes down to fields infecting fields?

Think about the collective crazes and manias that periodically grip societies—whether it’s a burst of violence, a viral internet trend, or a stock market bubble. We usually credit memes, group psychology, or economic forces. But behind those abstractions are people’s brains and hearts syncing up energetically.

A compelling idea or emotion radiates from a source and permeates those receptive to it, effectively entraining their consciousness to the same frequency. This can happen for positive movements or negative ones. The phenomenon of a crowd mentality, where individuals lose their sense of self and act as one, is a classic example.

Crowd psychology studies note how a kind of collective mind seems to form. TULWA would add: that collective mind is facilitated by a blending of fields—the boundaries loosen, and people literally “go along with” the dominant field of the crowd. It takes a very strong sovereign field to resist that pull. Most people’s fields are fuzzy-edged and easily overwritten by a stronger broadcast.

Thus, reclaiming field sovereignty is not a selfish isolation; it is a precondition to true individuality and authentic action. Without it, your intentions and thoughts may not even be your own; they could be the ones implanted by societal conditioning or opportunistic influences.

When TULWA insists on being razor sharp, it means developing a keen discernment of what energy is me and what is not me. It’s drawing a clear line, not out of fear or hostility, but out of self-respect and lucidity.

You wouldn’t leave the door of your house unlocked in a high-crime area and assume all is fine. Yet we leave our minds unlocked daily. We scroll through social media feeds (a bombardment of mental energy from millions of others) and think the resulting emotions are entirely self-generated.

We marinate in the 24-hour news cycle of outrage and wonder why our baseline anxiety is high. We might do yoga in the morning to center ourselves, then spend the day in environments that energetically undo all that centering, and then blame ourselves for not being spiritual enough.

This is the systemic blindness: we keep addressing only the internal, individual level and neglect the relational, field level.

TULWA doesn’t throw out personal responsibility—far from it. In fact, it heightens personal responsibility by expanding what we’re responsible for. You’re not just responsible for your actions and thoughts in isolation; you’re responsible for managing your field’s interactions.

This means setting boundaries (in the literal energetic sense), practicing techniques to clear foreign energies (be it through visualization, breath, even high-tech EM balancing gadgets if they exist, or TULWA’s Personal Release Sequence technique), and choosing your influences wisely.

It means sometimes being “hard” in your refusal to engage with certain toxic influences, even when society pressures you to be polite or compliant. Remember: clarity over comfort. It might be uncomfortable to, say, limit time with a friend whose energy consistently drains you, but clarity demands you acknowledge the effect and act accordingly, perhaps helping them from a distance or when your own field is strong enough not to be pulled down.

The reason we must be sharp as a razor is because the opposition—the forces of external control—have become extremely sophisticated. Whether you frame it as authoritarian systems, manipulative media, or literal negative entities, the common factor is they exploit unseen vulnerabilities.

If you aren’t crystal clear, you’ll miss the sleight-of-hand where an idea or emotion that isn’t yours slips in and wears your voice. TULWA calls this out and trains one to see it. It’s not about fear; it’s about empowered vigilance. Think of it like learning to see bacteria under a microscope—you don’t panic once you know they exist; you simply practice better hygiene. Field hygiene is perhaps the missing layer in our pursuit of wellness and enlightenment. TULWA treats it as essential.

In summary, the world at large is just beginning to wake up to electromagnetic fields in neuroscience, and only fringe elements talk about spiritual energy in concrete terms. TULWA stands at the intersection, shouting what should be obvious: we are energy beings in an energy environment; ignore that reality at your peril.

This philosophy is willing to be unpopular if it means being truthful. It’s like a doctor delivering a tough diagnosis: you may not want to hear that you have an infection, but only by seeing it clearly can you treat it. Likewise, humanity has an infection of misused and malign field influences—parasitic ideas, divisive energies, chronic stress webs—and we need to diagnose it clearly. The cure begins with individual sovereignty, which scales up to collective awakening once enough individuals hold their field with strength and integrity.

The Cost of Ignoring Field Sovereignty

When we ignore the layer of field dynamics, we misdiagnose many problems and therefore apply inadequate or even counterproductive solutions. The consequences of this oversight are staggering, both at personal and societal levels.

Psychiatric collapse, violence, identity breakdown—we often view these as personal failings or purely “chemical imbalances” or sociopolitical issues. But reframed through the lens we’ve been exploring, many of these are symptoms of an unseen energetic war. This is not a war to be won by fighting it. Victory comes through understanding—not succumbing. It’s not an external battle against darkness, but an inner task: releasing light from the grip of confusion and internal distortion.

Consider the rising tide of mental health crises in the world. Even before the global disruptions of recent years, anxiety and depression were surging. We typically blame social media, economic uncertainty, trauma, genetics. These are real factors, yet notice how they all funnel into energetic stress.

Social media, for example, is not just informational overload; it’s energetic overload—hundreds of emotional impressions hitting you as you scroll, each post essentially a fragment of someone’s mental-emotional field intruding on yours.

Economic uncertainty creates a pervasive field of fear in a population, which each individual then feels amplifying their own worries. Trauma and genetics predispose one’s field to be more easily perturbed or less coherent. But none of our mainstream solutions address the energetic hygiene aspect.

We medicate the brain chemistry (which can help, but doesn’t teach the person how to shield or cleanse their field). We might teach cognitive behavioral techniques (helpful for thoughts, but what about energies that aren’t originating from your thoughts?). We are treating symptoms in a localized way, not addressing the battlefield on which the person is fighting unseen foes.

What happens when someone’s field is heavily compromised? In TULWA’s view, this can lead to what psychiatrists label “psychotic breakdown” or “dissociation.” The person loses the cohesive center of self. Is it purely a biochemical snafu? Or is it that their field has been so invaded and entangled that their original signal is drowned out by noise or hijacked by foreign patterns?

Many schizophrenic patients report hearing voices. The standard model says it’s generated internally by a misfiring brain. But if we entertain for a moment that consciousness fields exist, could some of those voices be actual external entities or thoughtforms that the person, with a porous field, has picked up? It’s telling that in shamanic cultures, what we call schizophrenia might be interpreted as a spirit intrusion or possession – they see an energetic cause where we see only a broken machine.

The truth could be a mix; perhaps certain brains are prone to tuning in to stray signals, like a radio picking up multiple stations at once. That yields confusion, distress, and if no one around acknowledges the signals are real (even if not literally “demons,” they could be energetic fragments), the person is left to fight ghosts with no support.

In medieval times, people had an elaborate mythos of spirits and exorcisms, which had its own problems (sometimes the “cure” was worse than the disease), but at least they acknowledged an unseen battle. Today, we often deny the battle entirely, leaving the sufferer feeling utterly alone, their experiences invalidated.

Violence and social breakdown similarly can be seen through this lens. When a society ignores energetic reality, negative fields can spread unchecked. Rage, hatred, and despair can propagate like invisible wildfire. We then act surprised when violence erupts seemingly out of nowhere, or when irrational mass movements take hold.

It’s not that people spontaneously “go mad” en masse; it’s that an energetic contagion has been allowed to fester, perhaps even deliberately stoked by those who know how to manipulate fear and anger for power.

The cost of ignorance is that we fight each other without realizing we’re being puppeteered by forces we don’t see. How many conflicts are amplified by echo chambers—essentially resonant field bubbles—where each side’s worst emotions are fed by constant input? At some level, humans love narratives of possession and mind control in fiction, but reject them in reality.

Yet propaganda is exactly a crude form of mind control: it inserts ideas into populace fields to control behavior. We accept that much. Now think subtler: there may not only be human propagandists, but also negative energy complexes (you could call them egregores or morphic fields) that take on a life of their own in the collective psyche and drive people to acts of cruelty they’d never do in a clear state.

Have you ever looked back at something you did in anger and thought, “I was beside myself” or “It was like I was possessed”? That’s a chillingly accurate description: you were beside yourself, because your core self was displaced by a surge of field energy that took the driver’s seat. In that moment, it claimed you.

Identity breakdown is another cost. We see so many people, especially youth, grappling with a fractured sense of identity. Part of this is cultural flux and information overload, but energetically, it correlates with a generation that has grown up marinating in a million energies without guidance on filtering.

If you are constantly on the internet, you’re experiencing a torrent of other minds—their opinions, desires, anxieties—beamed into your awareness. Young people often report not knowing which thoughts are truly their own. They try on personas like clothes. This fluidity can be creative, but it can also lead to losing the thread of one’s authentic self.

The concept of field sovereignty explains why: if your field is never allowed to firm up, to establish its own frequency, it will simply oscillate with the strongest external frequencies. One month you’re an activist filled with righteous fury (perhaps influenced by an online community’s field), the next month you’re listless and nihilistic (perhaps picking up the general ambient despair of climate change news), then you’re imitating a celebrity’s lifestyle vibe.

There’s nothing inherently wrong with exploration, but without sovereignty, a person becomes a patchwork of other people’s energies—a collage without a unifying theme. Eventually, that can implode into depression (“I don’t know who I am, nothing feels truly me”) or impulsive drastic actions as one grasps for a sense of reality.

It’s important to emphasize: none of this absolves individual responsibility. Instead, it reframes many individual “failures” as systemic failures of our understanding.

If someone succumbs to addiction or violence, yes they made choices, but we also must ask: what field conditions were they subjected to? Ignoring field sovereignty is like blaming a soldier for getting shot when he was sent to the front without armor or intel. We drop people into a field war naked and then judge them for getting wounded.

The cost isn’t just on the individual level; it’s collective. We fail to evolve as a society because we’re constantly in triage, treating wounds that could have been prevented with better energetic awareness. We also miss opportunities—think of positive collective fields, like coherent group meditations that have been statistically linked to reduced crime rates and improved social indicators in some studies.

Those show the upside: when fields harmonize in a positive way, there is a tangible uplift. But we barely harness that because we don’t officially recognize it. It tends to happen on small scales or by accident. Imagine if a city’s public health strategy included maintaining a healthy energetic atmosphere—perhaps through architecture that fosters calm, community rituals that synchronize hearts, limiting electromagnetic pollution.

These ideas sound futuristic, but they could be as standard as sanitation and vaccination in a more enlightened era. The absence of such thinking is costing us dearly in terms of human potential and happiness.

In sum, ignoring field sovereignty keeps us locked in a reactionary mode—chasing crises, blaming ourselves or scapegoats for issues that are fundamentally about energetic mismanagement. It also leaves the door open for malign influences (whether you conceive of those as literal entities or self-organizing negative thought fields) to wreak havoc unchecked.

The victims of this unseen war are everywhere: the teenager self-harming because an online hate-field made them believe they are worthless, the parent spiraling into alcoholism because they unknowingly absorb everyone’s stress at work, the communities torn apart by polarization that was engineered by targeted disinformation (field poisoning through media).

We treat these as separate issues—mental illness, addiction, social discord—but from the field perspective, they interconnect as consequences of not guarding our energetic commons.

If all this sounds dire, it’s because it is—but acknowledging it is the first step to empowerment. The next and final section will tie everything back to where we started: the cosmos. It’s one thing to talk about sovereignty in an abstract sense; it’s another to truly seize it in our current domain of existence. The Cold Spot in the sky might hint at a multiverse, but the real question is, what good is a multiverse to someone who has lost sovereignty over their own mind?

Let’s conclude by bringing the focus back to you—your domain, your universe within—and why reclaiming it is the most urgent task at hand.

Conclusion: Reclaim or Be Claimed

Look up on a clear night, and you peer into depths that even our boldest theories scarcely comprehend. Whether the Cold Spot is a bruise from another universe or just a statistical fluke, whether multiverses teem with doppelgängers or reality is a singular tapestry—we remain, for now, here, in this life, in this self. And here is where the battle for sovereignty is fought.

In truth, it matters little to your liberation whether the multiverse exists. That’s a question for telescopes and equations. The pressing question for you, the reader and the living soul, is far more immediate: Who or what holds sway over your mind and life right now?

If there are infinite universes but you live enslaved by influences in this one, the multiverse is just an academic curiosity. Conversely, if there is only this one universe but you learn to master your field here, you have gained something far more precious than any theoretical parallel life – you have gained yourself.

“My kingdom is not of this world,” a wise teacher once said, and one interpretation is that our true domain is internal. Each of us is the monarch of a kingdom of consciousness, and like any kingdom, it can be governed well or left in disarray, defended or overrun.

Reclaiming field sovereignty is akin to a king or queen reclaiming their throne from usurpers. Those usurpers might be external energies, manipulative persons, toxic ideologies, or even our own untamed fears (which often started as external seeds). The process of reclaiming is not easy; it requires that hallmark of TULWA: clarity sharpened by truth.

You have to see where you have ceded territory. Perhaps you realize, “My constant self-doubt is actually the echo of my father’s critical voice – I allowed his field into mine.” Or “This addiction I struggle with isn’t ‘me’—it’s an energetic pattern that latched on when I was a teenager as a coping mechanism; I can cast it out.” Such realizations are the beginning of regaining control. Each insight draws a boundary: This is me, this is not me. With each boundary drawn, your field becomes more defined, more yours. You’ll have to fight for it—but not against others. The real fight is with yourself.

Reclaiming sovereignty doesn’t mean isolation from others or shutting out the world. Think of it like having a strong immune system. You can mingle freely because your defenses are robust; you can embrace others’ energies when you choose and let in love and joy, but you can also repel invasion and shed toxicity before it takes root.

A sovereign field is flexible yet intact, open yet protected. It’s not a brittle wall; it’s a semipermeable membrane – allowing nourishment in, keeping harmful agents out, and crucially, being consciously managed by you.

This conscious management is what most people have never been taught. We learn to manage our time, our finances, our image, but not our energy. Imagine how different life would be if from childhood we were taught how to center ourselves, how to clear emotional residue, how to ground into Earth’s stabilizing field, how to shield when walking into an environment seething with anger.

Instead of “stranger danger” purely in the physical sense, we’d learn to spot energetic stranger danger – that feeling when something unseen is trying to slip past your gates. We’d trust those gut alarms instead of dismissing them.

In reclaiming your field, you also reclaim compassion in a healthier way. You no longer merge indiscriminately with others’ pain to prove you care; you can be present and empathetic without losing yourself. In fact, true empathy might heighten because you’re clear on what’s yours and what’s theirs.

It’s the difference between a doctor who catches every disease of their patients versus one who can assist while staying immune. The latter can help more people effectively. Likewise, a sovereign individual can radiate peace into the world without being consumed by the world’s chaos. They become an agent of stability, a source of coherent field influence.

This is how individual sovereignty scales to collective good: each person who lights up with their authentic, unhijacked self acts as a beacon. Their very presence starts entraining others toward coherence, much as a single tuned laser can induce order in a medium.

Multiply this by hundreds, thousands, millions of individuals, and you have a society far less prone to manipulation and violence—a society that could begin addressing root problems rather than forever battling shadows.

Returning one last time to the cosmic perspective: humans have always created myths to make sense of the unknown. The multiverse and quantum mystique are, in some sense, modern myths that fascinate us as we grapple with questions of destiny and identity.

But perhaps the function of myth is to point us back to ourselves. The Cold Spot might hint that our universe isn’t alone—wonderful. But on a more metaphorical level, perhaps it also symbolizes the cold spot in our own understanding: that yawning gap in knowledge about consciousness that we’ve left void, to be filled with wild conjectures.

In absence of understanding our inner reality, we project fantasies onto external reality. We might be looking to the multiverse to find “infinite versions” of ourselves because we haven’t yet mastered the one version that matters.

It’s easier, in a way, to daydream about parallel lives than to take full ownership of this life. The multiverse won’t save us from ourselves; if anything, it challenges us to mature. If there are indeed myriad worlds, perhaps only those who learn sovereignty in one universe get to traverse or meaningfully connect with others — a speculation, yes, but it underscores a principle: master your own domain before seeking others.

TULWA’s necessity, at its core, arises from love—love for truth and love for the potential greatness of human consciousness. It is uncompromising because it sees how precious we each are, and how tragic it is to let that treasure be stolen or squandered. It calls to that warrior spirit in each soul: the part of you that will not let you be taken advantage of, the part that stands up and says, “No. My life is mine to live.” In a world of myriad influences, that declaration is revolutionary.

Reclaim or be claimed. This is the final rallying cry. It doesn’t mean live in fear of being claimed; it means stand in the power of being a claimant. Claim your right to clarity, to decide what influences you allow, to define your purpose unclouded by programmed wants, to feel your feelings free of inherited guilt or shame that isn’t yours.

As you do this, you will find an interesting paradox: the more sovereign you become, the more genuinely you can connect with others. Free will and true love are two sides of the same coin; only a sovereign being can truly choose to love or help another without entanglement. Slaves of unseen forces cannot give freely—they are compelled.

Free men and women, masters of their own field, can unite in conscious harmony. That is the vision TULWA ultimately holds: not an isolation of egos, but a gathering of sovereigns. A world where collaboration happens by choice and from a foundation of wholeness, not out of coercion, herd instinct, or codependency.

In closing, reflect on the journey from the cosmic Cold Spot to the intimate space of your next breath. The external mysteries are grand, but the internal mystery is profound and urgent. By all means, marvel at the cosmos—explore, discover, dream. But remember that your consciousness is a cosmos unto itself, one that you can explore and need to discover with equal zeal.

Scientists sent the Planck satellite to map the ancient sky, confirming anomalies that challenge our cosmology. Let that inspire you to deploy your keen awareness to map the terrain of your own mind, to identify anomalies in your psyche that hint at deeper truths.

If something in you feels “off” – investigate it: is it a foreign imprint? a trauma pocket? a latent gift even? Treat your inner field with the same curiosity and precision as a scientist treats data. And treat your sovereignty with the same importance as nations treat theirs.

The multiverse might be a reality or just a metaphor. In either case, what ultimately matters is not how many universes exist, but how you exist in *your* universe.

Do you reign as a conscious, compassionate sovereign of your field, or do you abdicate and let anything and everything pull your strings? This is the myth-making of our time: not spinning tales of endless other selves, but heroically reclaiming the self we have, here and now.

In doing so, we write a new narrative—one where human beings are neither cogs in a deterministic machine nor playthings of random quantum chance, but aware creators participating in reality with wisdom and intentionality. Such humans would be equal to any multiverse because they would bring to it the one thing it truly needs: meaningful, self-aware participation.

So step forth and reclaim your field. The cold void of ignorance recedes before the light of knowledge. The many worlds hypothesis pales before the richness of the one world alive within you.

And as you secure your sovereignty, you become a living answer to the chaos: a point of order, a source of truth. That, ultimately, is what TULWA calls us to be. Let the myths of science and spirit alike converge into this living truth: Consciousness, claiming itself, is the greatest force in any universe.


Citations & Sources

Cosmic Background & Multiverse Theories

Electromagnetic Theories of Consciousness

Heart-Brain EM Interactions & Field Coherence

Environmental EM Influences on Health

Déjà Vu & Parallel Universes

Electromagnetic Fields & Cognitive Performance

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