Many people feel that our world is in chaos. It feels upside down and incoherent. Crisis after crisis ensues, wars, financial problems, political tensions, polarity, unethical tech, surveillance, division, loss of trust in institutions, and the list goes on.
I’ve long discussed this occurrence as part of a shift in consciousness. A rolling set of events that allow us the opportunity to wake up if we choose to slow down and look closely.
For me, the key details around ‘the shift in consciousness’ is that it’s not just our outside world changing, but us. It’s how we engage with the world, how we make sense of it, how we make sense of ourselves and even how we feel about all of it.
Within this evolution or awakening of sorts, comes the death of an old paradigm so something new can emerge. These days, aspects of this idea are often referred to as the Meta-Crisis. Or if you are the World Economic Forum (WEF), you call it the Polycrisis.
Don’t run away. Just because elitists have once again hijacked a meaningful observation within our society to push their agendas, it doesn’t mean the observation itself is ‘evil’. In fact, the reality of the meta-crisis is inescapable, and it’s up to each of us to become part of shaping a new future. We either take the reigns, or we let it happen to us via the WEF.
In my 15 years of interdisciplinary work studying and conveying ideas around transformation, consciousness and their impact on society, one debate has arisen consistently. What impact do our thoughts have on reality?
The Science
Over the last 15 years, we’ve written hundreds of articles exploring the science of consciousness on Collective Evolution. There is so much data to support the idea that consciousness is likely the fabric of our entire reality, that it’s hard to continue to accept the materialist paradigm as it stands.
That paradigm of course states that the brain is the source of consciousness, and when the brain dies, that’s it. That paradigm leads to a rather random and chaotic view of reality. Nothing happens for a purpose, it just happens. While it can be comforting to want to believe in a paradigm that says we go on after death and that life has a purpose, bringing about the potential for bias, it’s also important to not ignore the overwhelming amount of science that supports the idea. Simply: just because it’s comfortable to believe in purpose, doesn’t mean the science isn’t supporting that reality.
Whether it’s the quantum mechanics and psi experiments, the reality of remote viewing that was exhaustively studied by the US gov’t, evidence for precognition via The HeartMath Institute, the direct evidence of human thought affecting random number generators, or any of the other hundreds of studies supporting the fact that consciousness is non-local, the evidence points to the fact that the current materialist paradigm is not complete. Space has to be made to refine science and our understanding of reality. (We published a nice summary back in 2014.)
To dive into one of these examples more deeply let’s look at Princeton’s PEAR lab studies with random number generators (RNGs) and human intention.
From an article I wrote on CE in 2013 (republished in The Pulse):
A project that initially started when a student was curious to study the effects of the human mind and intention on the surrounding environment, turned into a rigorous testing lab where Dr. Robert Jahn and his lab assistant spent many hours experimenting to determine whether or not the mind has an effect on our physical world.
Dr. Jahn and his assistant were able to determine that the human minds interactions with the machines demonstrated a relationship that was not physical in nature. The mind was able to affect and change outcomes of the machine in ways that were beyond standard deviations. In essence, consciousness was having an effect on the physical world.
As the research group states:
“Our purpose is to examine subtle correlations that may reflect the presence and activity of consciousness in the world. We hypothesize that there will be structure in what should be random data, associated with major global events that engage our minds and hearts.”
To determine the effects of the mind’s intention on the physical world, they built several machines called a random number generator (RNGs). The machine would essentially mimic a coin flip and record the results over time. The machine performed 200 flips per second and produced an average mean of 100 as one would expect.
Left unattended, the machine would continue to produce results that suggested a 50/50 chance of producing either heads or tails. The interesting results came when human intention started to interact with the machine.
What was once a random 50/50 chance of producing heads or tails began to deviate from expectation as humans were sintructed to intend for the numbers to be higher or lower.
While the effects of the mind over the machines was not large, it was enough that contemporary physics is unable to explain what exactly was happening. Hence the need to refine our model of material reality. In the materialist paradigm, what this science shows is impossible.
RNGs also responded differently with large scale collective events like presidential inaugurations, tsunamis, the deaths of public figures and famously, 9/11. Peaks of order are commonly recorded during these moments of shared attention and emotions.
The implications of this research on humanity is fascinating given it could reach into the realms of creating a world of peace, a thriving world and abundance. If intentions and thoughts can impact something the way it has been demonstrated above, why not explore the boundaries of how far this can go?
It is my feeling and understanding that we impact our reality with our intentions and state of consciousness, and I feel science is starting to confirm this.
To summarize, many studies have shown our current understanding of physics and the materialist paradigm is not complete. These anomalies have to be accounted for and it is more likely than not that consciousness does not originate in the brain but is the fabric of our reality.
Perhaps not surprisingly, skeptics have largely ignored the rigor involved in all of this research, holding dearly to the materialist paradigm as it stands today. The materialist paradigm has indeed brought us much in terms of value, but are we really to pretend we aren’t going to continue to learn more?
Why are staunch skeptics so hell-bent on crushing these new theories when they show promise? What is the addiction to a nihilistic and meaningless world proposed by the materialist worldview? This I’ve never been able to understand.
That said, what are the implications of this new post-material paradigm when it comes to everyday life?
Everyday Implications
As someone passionate about the intersection of individual transformation (consciousness included) and the state of our world, I’ve come to my fluid stances on what I think is going on. This has of course guided the work I’ve done over the last 15 years.
Many can sense that there is great suffering happening on our planet, and to some extent, there is a shared collective feeling that we are fed up with it. Not just from the standpoint of being tired of seeing endless suffering, but because fundamentally we sense and feel something else is possible, and that knowing is poking through and acting as an evolutionary pressure.
To create meaningful change in our world I believe we must examine the nature of our reality and the worldviews that drive the creation of our society. If the post-materialist paradigm indeed states consciousness is the fabric and we are all connected, could this change the way we see one another? If we fundamentally knew and accepted that we were all actually connected, would we truly be as violent and dominant towards one another? Or would cooperation and love emerge much more easily?
This can be a hard question to answer when most of what is available in our conscious mind to provide an answer is the materialist paradigm or religious belief, and the culture that has been created from both. To sense a new worldview and what society might be created from it is a bit more subtle, something often sensed through meditation, contemplation or embodiment practices. Psychedelics too.
As we explore the implications of this new worldview I want to point to five ideas. Remember, we have to explore the question of “how much our thoughts and intentions truly impact our reality.”
- Let’s get this one out of the way: on one hand our thoughts can impact our emotions, and our emotions impact our nervous system, and that can then change the lens through which we see the world and the choices we make. I believe all this to be true and have studied it extensively over the last 15 years. But you’ll notice this is less about the quantum and more about the relationship between our mental, emotional and physical bodies. Does it translate to the quantum in a big way? We don’t know.
On the other hand, people will say that by thinking or believing something we are manifesting it. That our thoughts impact the quantum and create what happens around us. People may then become fearful of what they are thinking or reading because they believe it’s reinforcing what they don’t want. They often go on policing speech, suggesting that anything that sounds ‘negative’ is reinforcing the old or bad patterns.
Perhaps this is partly true, but I believe this idea is misunderstood. Further, embodied intentions and thoughts are two different things. It’s this piece I want to offer thoughts on especially as it has to do with the science. - Emerging scientific evidence supports what many ancient teachings have laid out: there is a unified field of consciousness that connects all of us and all things. We are one in that sense.
- Further, it tells us that our consciousness, individual and collective, has some effect on our reality. Even if the effects are very small, this upends our materialist paradigm and we must refine our scientific view of reality and the worldviews built from it.
- This of course invites the popular idea that if we just change our thoughts we will change reality. As mentioned, this is partly true but I believe it’s misunderstood and oversimplified. The pathway to manifest on a global social scale is very complex as it touches many layers of co-creation. Understanding what might add complexity to our consciousness’ impact is important. (I explore this more in part 2 of this essay coming next week. Subscribe to not miss it)
To expand upon #4, remember that effect sizes are often small when it comes to consciousness impacting reality. Why? To me, I think this has to do with two things: (1) the fact that our reality is designed to be experienced physically, (2) the complexity of how material things are created in our reality
1. When it comes to the physical part, I believe that to some extent the dense, 3D, material matter we play with daily is the video game. It’s the stuff we came to feel and play with.
Imagine trying to play a video game that is only 1’s and 0’s and doesn’t have a graphical interface with sound, levels, and story: it’s boring and rather unplayable.
In a similar sense, although consciousness may be the fabric of our reality, and quantum experiments suggest an ‘all possible’ world sits within it, I do believe we are here to experience the physical video game and not the ‘god-like’ mode of entirely ‘all possible.’
That doesn’t mean we can’t expand our possibility beyond what we experience today, it means it’s important to consider the mystery and potential utility of small effect sizes.
After all, why would we incarnate into human bodies with limitations if there wasn’t a point to the limitation? (More on this in part 2 of this essay coming next week.)
2. On the side of manifestation complexity, when we think about something like manifesting a house, there is a lot involved in that. Is the house built? Are the materials available? Is the land available? How would you get it? Who will build it all? Who will give up the house? How might you get the money for it? etc.
I’m not saying this to shoot down the idea of manifesting a house, I’m saying it to point out that in our physical world how things come to be is complex. Our reality is shared amongst one another and what we choose to manifest inevitably has to impact other people and beings.
Thus, the basic idea that consciousness and thoughts create our reality bumps up against the existing complexity of how we live within our reality. It can be hard to manifest things that don’t exist or aren’t available, no matter how hard we try. It can be hard to use our thoughts to redesign a whole society when there are so many minds and physical things to support it. It’s complex, therefore effect sizes might be small as complexity scales.
If our conscious manifestation is held back by the complexity of scale and the grandness of society, it stands to reason that we either have to get most of us on the EXACT same page manifesting something, or we must bring our physical actions into the picture.
I feel Dean Radin, PhD, Chief Scientist at The Institute of Noetic Sciences put it well when he said:
“If you have a large pond and you want to get all of the water out of the pond, you could take a rock and throw it into the pond and a little water would be pushed out as a result. So you might think, well, I’ll just get 1,000 friends and we’ll all throw rocks into the pond and it will make all the water spill out. Well, that probably won’t happen. The reason is that unless you throw the rocks in at exactly the same time and at exactly the right configuration, you won’t end up with one giant wave. Instead, you will end up with just a very disturbed surface of a pond because all the waves are interfering with each other. In the same token, if you have one person thinking about peace, that probably does affect the whole world, a little bit. But if you have 100 people thinking about the same thing, then you won’t get 100 times more intention. You may end up with zero intention because the waves cancel each other out.”
This idea suggests the need for greater coherence, something attained when parts involved in a whole are communicating well with one another. In the case of human beings playing a physical game of creating the society around them, we must realize our coherence is gained through communication and shared realities.
Our ideas matter and how we make sense of our reality together matters. To think we are just going to “wish” a new world into existence is a nice thought, and consciousness certainly plays a role in what is and what we believe is possible, but there is an element of living this complex physical experience that seems to govern this “all possibility.”
This is why we see very strong, obvious and measurable results when we examine the interplay between our thoughts, emotions, and physical body, but we see small effects looking at how consciousness tries to move foundational aspects of our physical reality.
Again, I’m not saying this to shoot down the possibility of consciousness creating reality. I’m suggesting that by not acknowledging the need to ‘play the game too,’ we’re disempowering our ability to create change. We end up waiting for a vision to unfold, for our consciousness to just change everything, instead of being the change agent who not only holds a vision for a future but who is actively creating it with their peers on the physical plane.
To many the ideas I share might seem obvious, but I’ve come across large numbers of people in my day who honestly and truly believe we need to do nothing except imagine the world we want and it will manifest.
Influential Factors That May Limit Effect Size
If you consider that consciousness is what we hold in our minds, beliefs, worldviews, cultures etc. and that it informs our actions, then our consciousness is always creating and impacting our reality. But in that case, it’s our consciousness aligned with our physical actions. Together, they create a matrix of experience where our minds hold in place what is possible while our actions reinforce it in an interplay.
But consciousness experiments open up a slightly different question. How much do thoughts alone, with no action added, impact our reality? Can our intentions heal cancers, manifest objects, change or bend matter etc? Can this scale-up be applied to how our society is designed?
Although at some level we see the incredible effects of consciousness affecting our reality, we see that effect sizes are either small, sometimes rare, or hard to reproduce – nonetheless, they exist.
Here’s some of what I’ve pondered about this mysterious hard question related to intention alone impacting our reality.
I want to remind readers that there is a difference between how the quality of our consciousness affects the lens through which we see the world, and the discussion of just our consciousness changing matter.
1. The Journey of Our Soul
I believe as souls we reincarnate. I feel that way not only because I’ve had very strong memories of some of my past lives since I was a kid, but because science has given us a great deal to think about on that subject as well. I believe our universe is driven by evolution. Consciousness is always tending toward growth and evolution. Given that, I feel we incarnate to have experiences that continually tend us toward evolution. Thus, our soul is exposed to different experiences to gather experience and grow from it.
Imagine if our soul had an unfoldment it was looking to experience for growth, like levelling up in a video game if you will. It could perhaps be the case that what we consciously intend to create would interrupt that lesson, and thus perhaps the soul’s journey governs part of our conscious intention.
2. Collective Consciousness – Collective Evolution
Beyond individual soul growth, there is also the collective game being played, which is held for the collective to evolve as a whole. If our collective soul is on an evolutionary path that requires specific unfoldments to occur to evolve the general masses, then certain individual creations may be limited by the game of the whole. I won’t say some things become impossible, more so that they may become less likely.
In that sense, our reality is co-created and it may be worthwhile to consider if our individual manifestations may be limited by the consciousness of the collective. Also, even a group’s consciousness may be limited by the collective. In this sense, we co-create our reality, the idea that only YOU as an individual creating your reality, is likely limited.
Think of the famous experiment where a group of meditators in Washington DC lowered crime rates in their city by 25%. The crime rates went back up after, why? Why was the effect not permanent? Is it a battle of collective consciousnesses? Is it that the effect wears out as the physical world built will tend back to the results its design incentivizes?
Collective Consciousness – Competing Consciousness’
Another worthwhile thought experiment is to consider that many people consciously try to create a similar outcome, yet these things cannot work out for everyone at the same time based on our worldly. How often do we hear of people trying to use their consciousness to create some sort of wealth or job promotion, yet we rarely consider who else has to ‘lose’ in the process?
Imagine 10 different employees with a meditation practice and vision board for becoming the next department head. All trying to use their manifestation and consciousness powers to get the top job. But only one can have it. How would this work? We don’t know, but it does point to the fact that our reality is co-created and this is part of having the human experience. This is not often considered in the realm of manifestation.
In this sense, the very design of our material society is a container in which consciousness is limited based on how it has become collectively defined, and there are competing interests.
Collective Consciousness – The Old Story
Why is it that the first thing most spiritual manifestors say we should create are things that come from our societal story of what it means to be successful? Sure, not all push this, but it’s often the case.
Many of these manifestations come at the expense of other people’s suffering. Think of material possessions made by slave workers for example. Think of lavish cars people want to manifest that rape the earth of minerals in unsustainable ways.
Similar to the journey of our collective evolution, perhaps we are being pushed to step out of the story of hyperindividualism and into a more holistic view of living. That seems to be our collective evolutionary journey right now. Thus a regulating factor on our consciousness may be that the game of separation and hyperindividualism is dying and will be less supported by our collective consciousness. In essence, evolution may not be feeding the old ‘wants.’
How often do you hear people consider how their goals and conscious manifestations cost others? I can tell you as someone who has been prominent in this field for 15 years and who’s made friends with many in high places, many of the conscious gurus, authors, and business owners out there are just as cutthroat as any greedy business person. It’s rare to find integrity.
3. The Human Experience IS The Point
I proposed this to my good friend Adam Curry who worked with IONS and the PEAR lab on the study of consciousness, and we had a great conversation about it.
It’s essentially the idea that although we may be able to peer into the underpinnings of the fabric of our reality and see its workings to some extent, perhaps the point is still that we are here to have a slower, physical manifesting experience, one that is co-created and tending toward evolution at the pace the collective creates together.
Just because we can see that everything is consciousness and that simply viewing something shows our intentions has an impact on it, doesn’t mean there aren’t co-created confines to the human experience that make the experience what it is for a reason.
After all, if the fabric of our entire reality is consciousness, why create a lived physical existence? Consciousness may want to experience something different.
When I recall many experiences I’ve had of non-duality or even being deeply connected to all that is, there is a sense of everything all at once. A deep peace, connectedness and limitless feeling, but also an ineffable feeling of wanting to create, experience, and evolve.
It’s hard to put into words. It’s like being in this incredibly peaceful and loving place yet feeling that being in that space ‘all the time’ isn’t the point. That creating, experiencing and evolving is.
Just these words may bring about so many preconceived notions of what I’m saying, but really, this experience can’t easily be put into words.
Thus, the regulating factor here is simply that earth was designed within the limitlessness of our reality to be a physical experience limited, to some degree, in how our consciousness impacts that reality. Manifesting an apple into your hand simply because you feel like you and want to eat may not be the point of this realm. Tending to, caring for, and growing the apple over a season may be.
All Of This Points to Engagement
Part of our collective challenge is learning to listen to one another, understand one another, respect one another and unlock a level of collaboration we haven’t seen due to our paradigm of separation and individualness.
As stated in part one, consciousness science suggests we must be on the same page to have our consciousness effectively impact reality. If we cannot get on the same page as to what we want to create in our world, how can we create it? How do we know if we have a similar vision for a future society?
This points to the need to act on various elements of ourselves. Our spirit, minds, hands, and hearts – all to explore what needs to unfold in ourselves to collaborate and get on the same page. Hence the need to make sense of our world together, and explore philosophies, stories and ideas. It all matters.
The question of consciousness creating our reality is a big one that has many layers to consider. While this concept has been largely oversimplified by many teachers, authors, speakers, it’s important to consider how we play with a concept that I’ve seen create so much suffering in people.
I’ve watched as friends have died from illnesses because they dedicated only their consciousness to getting rid of it. I’ve watched as people have waited around for years, even decades, trying to manifest a better life with their thoughts, while doing very little with their actions to create it. Perhaps this is the experience people were meant to have, or perhaps this is a society not yet wise with its understanding of quantum concepts.
It’s my feeling that life is meant to be lived, to be felt, to be experienced. If I’m being honest, through my past life memory of a much less physical world, I have a deep appreciation for the physical experience here on earth. So much of our modern world is geared towards overwhelming our eyes and ears with stimulation, we often forget to sense, touch, and feel inward. It is part of the beauty of being a sensorial creature. Touching things and feeling things. Not all realms have that experience, and yet to some degree, I see many humans trying to escape it.
I promised to discuss increasing effect sizes when it comes to consciousness impacting reality, but this essay is long enough as it is. All I will say is that I believe the effect size of our consciousness impacting reality can increase with practice and with a new collective paradigm, but I sense there is still a welcomed and designed limitation within this experience we call the human one.