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The Universe As A Consiousness
Computer
by Gregg Braden
We live our lives based in what we
believe. When we think about the truth of this statement, we immediately
recognize a startling reality: Beyond anything else that we may actually
do in our lives, the beliefs that precede our actions are the foundation
of all that we cherish, dream, become and accomplish.
From the morning rituals that we go
through to greet the world each day, to the inventions that we use to
make our lives better, to the technology that destroys life through war
– our personal routines, community customs, religious ceremonies and
entire civilizations are based on our beliefs. Not only do our beliefs
provide the structure for the way we live our lives, now the same areas
of study that have discounted our inner experiences in the past are
showing us that the way we feel about the world around us is a force
that extends into that world.
In this way, science is catching up
with our most cherished spiritual and indigenous traditions, which have
always told us: that our world is nothing more than a reflection of what
we accept in our beliefs.
Belief Code TWO: We live our lives based
on what we believe about our world, ourselves, our capabilities and our
limits.
With access to such a power already
within us, to say that our beliefs are important to life is an
understatement. Our beliefs are life! They are where it begins and how
it sustains itself. From our immune response and the hormones that
regulate and balance our bodies... to our ability to heal bones organs
and skin – and even conceive life – the role of human belief is rapidly
taking center stage in the new frontiers of quantum biology and physics.
If our beliefs hold so much power
and if we live our lives based on what we believe, then the obvious
question is: Where do our beliefs come from? The answer may surprise
you.
With few exceptions, they originate
with what science, history, religion, culture and family tell us. In
other words, the essence of our capabilities and limits may well be
based in what other people tell us. That realization leads to the next
question that we must ask ourselves:
If our lives are based on what we
believe, then what if those beliefs are wrong?
What if we’re living our lives
shrouded in the false limitations and incorrect assumptions that other
people have formed over generations, centuries or even millennia?
Historically, for example, we’ve
been taught that we are insignificant specks of life passing through a
brief moment in time, limited by the “laws” of space, atoms and DNA.
This view suggests that we’ll have little effect on anything during our
stay in this world and when we’re gone, the universe will never even
notice our absence.
While the words of this description may
sound a bit harsh, the general idea isn’t so far from what many of us
today have been conditioned to hold true. It’s precisely these beliefs
that often leave us feeling small and helpless in the face of life’s
greatest challenges.
What if we’re more than this? Could it be
that we’re really very powerful beings in disguise? What if we’re
delegates of miraculous potential, born into this world with
capabilities beyond our wildest dreams – ones that we’ve simply
forgotten under the conditions that have shocked us into the dreamlike
state of being powerless?
How would our lives change, for
instance, if we discovered that we’re born with the power to reverse
disease? Or what if we could choose the peace in our world, the
abundance in our lives and how long we live? What if we found that the
universe itself is directly affected by a power that we’ve hidden from
ourselves for so long that we’ve forgotten it’s even ours?
Such a radical discovery would
change everything. It would alter what we believe about ourselves, the
universe and our role within it. It’s also precisely what the
leading-edge discoveries of our day are showing us.
For centuries, there have been
people who refused to accept the limitations that have traditionally
defined what it means to live in this world. They refused to believe
that we just appear through a mysterious birth that defies explanation.
They rejected the idea that such a miraculous emergence could be for the
purpose of living in suffering, pain and loneliness until we leave this
world just as mysteriously as we arrived.
To answer their yearning for a
greater truth, they had to venture beyond the boundaries of their
conditioning. They isolated themselves from friends, family and
community and let go, really let go, of what they had been taught about
the world. And when they did, something precious and beautiful happened
in their lives: They discovered a new freedom for themselves that opened
the door of possibilities for others. It all began by their asking the
question that was just as bold in their time as it is in ours: What if
our beliefs are wrong?
It’s in our absolute surrender to
such a possibility that we discover the freedom that tells us who we
really are. My personal belief, however, is that we don’t have to live
in a cold, damp cave in the middle of nowhere to find it. I also feel
that personal liberation begins with the individual commitment to know
who we are in the universe. When we make such a commitment, everything
from the way we think of ourselves to the way we love will change. They
must, because we are changed in the presence of these deeper
understandings.
It all comes back to what we
believe.
While it may sound too simple to be
true, I’m convinced that the universe works precisely in this way.

The above excerpt is taken from “The
Spontaneous Healing of Belief,” by Gregg Braden. Published by Hay House
(April 1, 2008) and available at bookstores or
www.hayhouse.com
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