“People like us, who believe in Physics, know that the distinction between past, present and future, is only a stubborn persistent illusion.”
~Albert Einstein
Albert Einstein was one of the pioneers of the new breed of humans called Indigo. One of the main characteristics of Indigos is being a non-conformist. Not following the general rules just because. Another common trait often seen within them is anger. However, their anger is the fuel they need early on to change things. Think about it, if we did not have a certain amount of displeasure at society’s blind acceptance of certain matters and subjects then what would trigger any of us to dive a little deeper and perhaps begin to question “the” answers?
We could begin and consider the life of Albert Einstein. I can’t say, for I did not know him, if he was an angry man, however rumor had it he did anger many of his peers. His views on physics, time and space and the relativity of everything, changed what scientists had believed for two hundred years prior to his views coming to the table. Well, I guess that could upset those that spent their life believing in a particular principle. And so we have a small spectrum of the Grand Illusion.
So here we have one of the worlds most marveled men of recent history and in my eyes a prime example of being grounded deeply to earth, while also maintaining a steady flow to his higher self and his soul’s purpose. As it merged with the curiosity we all have with trying to make the density of the physical world appear or seem separate from the less dense or thinner forms of energy, it brought together an intelligence to compete with fellow scientists on the physical scales of measurement, while always borrowing from the infinite source of all there is. When you combine equal parts of science and the infinite wisdom of something bigger than us, and these two processes come together just right, they birth genius.
The dictionary defines philosophic as ideas of right or wrong especially in a way that is aimless or with little understanding. In most societies, it is expected to just accept proven methods and theories out of blind trust. Indigos tend to look at things from a different place, and from a different view, one they can see and feel, and accept for them selves.
Einstein was a visionary who observed things in the moment. He realized that each moment in time is characterized by the observer and is dependant on how wide your field of vision is but also how well developed your sensing window is. If there is a large solid brown chair in a room, a human sees a room full of objects including the brown chair. If an ant is in that same room nearing the brown chair, most likely the ant may perceive he is in a brown abyss because the chair is fully filling the ant’s field of vision, until he moves past and then experiences something else.
Picture if you can – Einstein standing in the back of a room filled with the most highly prized scientists at a time that would be considered the dawn of a new century and age – watching them all gathered around staring into a huge mirror, nodding and agreeing, marveling at what they all agreed they saw, and from the back of the room imagine Einstein throwing a rock from behind and shattering the mirror, and than saying to his peers…”Now what do you all see?”
If you place all of your awareness and value on someone else’s belief or view, understand you are stopping time and the flow of what you are living. What you believed yesterday may not apply or be true today. When we look in a mirror what are we looking at? Who is looking back? Usually we are trying to see ourselves as acceptable, tucking and tugging, fluffing and pulling, squinting and staring. Is it that we don’t recognize ourselves? Do you think Einstein ever looked in the mirror and said, “Oh my, this hair!” I doubt it. I would imagine he saw his true reflection when he looked at others, as he shared him self, unfettered and unafraid of judgment, accepting a Nobel Prize and shining his Godliness out in to the world. What we see in the mirror can change very easily and at any moment. Our true reflection never changes and is always present. It is how the world views us, not how we view ourselves.
Share your gift you brought to the world, and what will reflect back is the beauty of that gift which will be how you are truly seen. To Albert Einstein, thank you for sharing yourself with the world, it will never be the same…. but then it never was anyway was it?
~Cynthia