XVII — The Mirror of the Resonant World

Resonance

XVII — The Mirror of the Resonant World

← Karl Swainston / Resonance

From the very moment of the Big Bang, entangled particles exist in our minds, our bodies, in materials, in light, in space, and in the Universe. At the resonant realm, unlike in the real world we see around us, matter can behave in rather peculiar ways, and what to our rational minds seems bizarre becomes entirely possible at this tiniest level of our existence. It's as though there are two worlds existing side by side. Once this new resonant world of reality is allowed a comprehension within our minds, then we can begin to alter both our states of consciousness and ultimately change the fortunes and happiness of our lives.

Within our beings, within the smallest atoms vibrating within our existence, there is all the information which abounds in the deepest well of the Universe. Since the point of singularity, when the whole structure and architecture of our Galaxian world was condensed down to the point before the 'Big Bang' we were all collectively one. And it doesn't matter how many millions of light years have distanced us from all the other atomic particles that were with us at the point of singularity: we are still together; we are still harmonised, synchronised and together is this beautiful song of life. We only need to reach out with the spirit of the Universe within us to touch all the other Universes that were once part of us.

The world all around us, the physical world, enveloping us, charging us, living in us is a Universe of vibration. Every tree rustling, every bird song we hear, traffic moving, wind blowing is all vibration. This profound rhythm of life we hear since the conception of our birth. Our senses vibrate to the rhythm and create their own resonance to synchronise with Nature's song of life and of the Universe.

We might think that we are not connected with the Universe, but there is an unalienable vortex connecting us all with the Universe: the Universe of our Past, Present, and our future, both in this life and the next. In Buddhism the mind is a mental continuum with no beginning or end: it is the eternal now.

It is our thoughts which connect the three worlds of life: the past, the present, and the future, and the Past controlling the Present can, and will, control the future.

Each simple thought, each neural vibration which resonates in our being, brings forth a new experience, an experience mirroring the thought experience. We may be conscious in delivering this new thought to our subconscious and our souls, but our soul is unable to determine the true reality of its creation; our soul and its vibrational engine, the subconscious, doesn't care, and only delivers its service and actions to our desires. This is why all the walls, the floor, even resonating in the roof, a place can be suffused with negative or positive energy. Have you ever walked into an establishment and 'felt' it's not right, 'I don't like it here?' Everything vibrates the action and moment of the time. It does not take a clairvoyant or a medium to enter these places and feel the energy: everyone listening can feel the negative pulses of the past vibrating within their being, and this is why they turn round, and say, 'I don't like it here.'

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Karl Swainston

About Karl Swainston

Karl Swainston is a writer and storyteller whose work is forged from a life lived across the North of England and far beyond. Growing up on a Leeds council estate in the 1960s, Karl's journey was anything but linear. By the age of thirty, he had already lived a dozen lives: from the rigors of grammar school to a degree in Latin, a stint as a fishmonger, a period of discovery living in Marseille, and a return to the hustle of London. Whether working as a postman, a builder, or competing as a county-level chess player, he was, above all, an avid reader—constantly documenting the world around him. This restless spirit continued into his professional life. Karl later taught in Bradford, where he ran a specialist unit for 244 of the most excluded students from across the region—young people whom even the local Pupil Referral Units could not accommodate. Working alongside his old friend Malcolm, Karl spent his days navigating the volatility of Bradford's most aggressive and dysfunctional teenagers. Throughout his life, Karl has been an avid runner and has always shared his home with a rotating cast of beloved dogs and cats—companions who have been constant witnesses to his work. As a writer, Karl's range is as expansive as his history. He works across a wide breadth of genres, including fiction and short stories, autobiography and memoir, biography, non-fiction, and metaphysical writing, as well as providing sharp commentary, opinion, analysis, and essays. Whether writing about his years managing the Harrogate Arms or offering insights from his current adopted home in South East India, where he lives in a simple village with his dog, Bambi, Karl's voice reflects the full, untidy, and deeply human breadth of life. He continues to draw on the rich, decades-long tapestry of his experiences to tell stories that matter, proving that no matter where you live, the human story remains the same.

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