avatarDr Mehmet Yildiz

Summary

The article explores the concept of extraterrestrial life and astrobiology through the experiences of Michael Jaco, a retired SEAL Team-6 Chief Petty Officer, and the perspectives of various scientists and researchers.

Abstract

The article titled "How Would It Feel Like Living in Separate Realities?" delves into the topic of extraterrestrial life and astrobiology, with a focus on the experiences of Michael Jaco. The author admits to having limited knowledge on the subject but expresses an open mind and a desire to understand it better. The article touches on various aspects of extraterrestrial life, including remote viewing, intuition, and the search for aliens. It also mentions the work of Dr Ramin Skibba, who emphasizes the need to think of life as we don't know it in the search for extraterrestrial life. The article further explores the concept of the third eye and its role in perception beyond ordinary sight, as well as the experiences of Dr Russell Targ and Dr Steven Greer in this field.

Opinions

  • The author believes in having an open mind and using various resources to understand the subject of extraterrestrial life and astrobiology.
  • The author values the experiences of Michael Jaco and other scientists and researchers in the field of extraterrestrial life and astrobiology.
  • The author emphasizes the importance of intuition and the third eye in understanding extraterrestrial life.
  • The author suggests that the search for extraterrestrial life should

Extraterrestrial & Astrobiology

How Would It Feel Like Living in Separate Realities?

Eye-opening perspectives of the extraterrestrial life experiences via intuition from Dr Russell Targ, Dr Steven Greer, Dr Ramin Skibba, & Michael Jaco

Photo by ArtHouse Studio from Pexels

Let me be upfront. My knowledge on this topic is extremely tiny as I am in the exploration mode. However, I have an open mind; thus, I am trying to understand the subject using various published documents and anecdotal resources.

This is my first piece about space, remote viewing, and extraterrestrial life, so please bear with my ignorance and inexperience.

I like science fiction that energizes actual science by broadening our perspectives and inspiring us to possibilities. I read many fiction books about space and extraterrestrial life. Our imagination never stops working. We are curious creatures. Our cognitive brains distinguish us from other beings on earth.

As a veteran of technology, I dedicated my life to the technology of understanding how our minds work and how we can expand our capabilities in multi-dimensions. This discipline is called cognitive science offering technological processes, tools, and scientific methods.

Cosmology is my childhood dream. I better conceptualized cosmic phenomena with my studies in quantum technologies such as quantum computing, quantum simulation, quantum imaging, quantum sensors, and even quantum cryptography and metrology.

Rupert Sheldrake’s morphic resonance inspired me to think about memory storage in the brain as a biological inheritance. In addition, the interdisciplinary scientific field known as astrobiology has been an interest to me. Astrobiology covers studies related to the origin of life, the progress of evolution, and the future of life in the universe. This multi-discipline also examines the possibilities of extraterrestrial life and how we can detect such life forms.

Reading scientific papers about extraterrestrial life gave me new perspectives on psychology and mental health. Even though these papers bring more questions than answers, they are inspiring to some point. Serious scientists are thinking about extraterrestrial life and looking for evidence from our tiny body of knowledge.

As pointed out in this paper, in Frontier in Psychology, ”most speculations regarding humanity’s reactions to extraterrestrial life, both in fiction and otherwise, have focused on discovering evidence of intelligent life from elsewhere, while less consideration has been given to how we may react to the discovery of extraterrestrial life that is not intelligent, even though we are more likely to encounter microbial life in our solar system”.

There is a constant search to find aliens. Interestingly, a science writer, former astrophysicist, and postdoctoral researcher at the Arizona University, Dr Ramin Skibba, wrote an article titled “to find aliens, we must think of life as we don’t know it”.

Dr Skibba points out that “We need to open our minds to genuinely alien kinds of biological, chemical, geological and physical processes. ‘Everybody looks for “biosignatures”, but they’re meaningless because we don’t have any other examples of biology,’ said the chemist Lee Cronin at the University of Glasgow.”

Skibba mentioned that “the environment on Mars isn’t much like that on Earth, and the exoplanets that astronomers are finding around other stars are stranger still — many of them quite unlike anything in our solar system. For that reason, it’s important to broaden the search for life.”

Leaving further scientific details about astrobiology to other comprehensive articles in the future, in this post, I want to share what I understand from the experiences of Michael Jaco from interviews with him.

I heard about Mr Jaco before on social media and read reviews of his books which attracted my attention. Recently, a friend who knows about my interest in astrobiology, space, and extraterrestrial life sent me a link to a recent interview published on the Gaia website.

As this site required membership, I joined as a guest member for a seven-day trial and watched the video. Watching this interview with Michael Jaco inspired me to write this article. The interview gave me chills, further opened my mind to possibilities, and reinforced my research findings on intuition.

Here is the link to the interview. You may need to create a free membership to be able to watch the video from the Gaia site, as I did.

Michael shared his experience starting from childhood. What was more interesting was he used his spirituality in his navy job for many years.

So the gist of the interview for me was gaining insights into living in separate realities. I call them a worldly reality and extraterrestrial existence. He managed to integrate them into navy spirituality programs.

The key point from Michael’s experience is the ability to have and develop intuition as we desire. As part of my previous studies in cognitive science, I have a strong interest in intuition coming from our subconscious mind. I touched it in several articles related to reality and consciousness from various angles, such as mental health and spirituality.

Related to mental health, I was fascinated by psychoanalysis sessions filmed narrating his childhood experiences, bringing memories from earlier days in his life. I wondered what those memories were made up of and how they were saved in our biological bodies.

It might be easy for some people just to deny these concepts and call them BS or, more politely, pseudoscience. But this approach will not help us explore and understand the mysteries of the world and the cosmos. We are privileged to have the intellect that other species on earth don’t have. This intellect is one of the tools for us to make sense of the world around us.

When we admit we don’t know something, our brains work in an explorative mode. As a result, we can become more powerful, as I discussed in this article: Our Greatness Come from Understanding and Accepting How Little We Know: Misuse of cerebral capabilities adversely affects individuals and society.

Coming from a technology and science background, I don’t understand the stigma and fear around pseudoscience. It is a friend rather than an enemy to humanity. In pseudoscience, thoughts, beliefs, or practices are claimed to be factual, but they are not consistent with the scientific method. In other words, they cannot be proved with the current methods.

Science paves the way. However, nothing is set in stone in science. It constantly evolves as we learn. So many things that were pseudoscience once upon a time are parts of credible scientific knowledge constructs now. Or what was science once turned out to be pseudoscience. So, there is a close relationship between the two. They work like yin and yang.

Once upon a time, we couldn’t explain atoms. Ideas and hypotheses about the atom were considered to be pseudoscience. In ancient times fire was called magic, but it is now a scientific phenomenon.

Some comments on my article titled Why do I believe in angels, a top writer and an avid reader Rebecca Romanelli made eye-opening comments reflecting her subjective experiences starting from childhood: “I felt very different, lighthearted and assured my brother was at peace. Invaluable, mystical, mysterious and profoundly healing. Once these things start happening in our own bodies and reality, we can no longer deny them.”

In the same article, another accomplished writer Mukundarajan V N pointed out that “I don’t expect scientists and rationalists to believe in angels. The least I expect of them is to be humble and open-minded like great scientists who do not dismiss everything they do not know as fiction.”

A top writer in space, Lady Jhershierra has posted several engaging articles about extraterrestrial life reflecting her personal experiences. Her stories were interesting, informative, and insightful as they gave me new perspectives. This article reflecting her unique experience was the most recent one published in one of my publications.

UFOs (Unidentified Flying Objects) have been of interest to society for a long time. There are thousands of scholarly papers and articles written about UFOs. Case studies in anomalistic psychology depicted a tremendous interest in UFOs by people. These created significant social and scientific controversies.

Richard Dolan postulated reviews of exciting evidence we have of human-alien interactions in the book Alien Agendas. Ugur Akinci, Ph.D. has provided an interesting perspective in this featured and viral story in one of my publications, highlighting laws of physics are not the only laws valid across the universe.

In my previous story, I mentioned parapsychology, which some new-age scientists consider pseudoscience. Another exciting aspect of parapsychology is remote viewing, which I plan to post my understanding soon. In the meantime, I recommend watching this eye-opening interview [pun-intended] between Dr Steven Greer and physicist/parapsychologist Dr Russell Targ,

These people are not ordinary pseudo-scientists. The interviewer Dr Steven Greer used to be a biologist and medical doctor in emergency rooms. He retired in 1998 and became a ufologist who founded the Center for the Study of Extraterrestrial Intelligence and the Disclosure Project. Dr Greer is also a trained Transcendental Meditation teacher and served as a director in a meditation organization.

The third eye is an ancient concept known as the Ajna in Indian spiritual culture. In the Western world, we call them the mind’s eye or inner eye. The third eye provides perception beyond ordinary sight.

Dr Russell Targ is the producer of the film Third Eye Spies. “For more than 20 years, the CIA studied psychic abilities for use in their top-secret spy program. However, with previously classified details about ESP (extra sensory perception) now finally coming to light, there can be no more secrets.”

If you missed this remarkably mystic movie with a scientific flavor, you could watch it for free on YouTube. You might also get glimpses into the life of famous physic Ingo Swann with remarkable remote viewing capability.

As mentioned before, what we learned throughout our history is a tiny drop in this vast ocean. If we can tame it, perhaps artificial super-intelligence can pave the way to new discoveries beyond our imagination right now. Or, perchance, we might need to download vast information to our brains as visioned by Elon Musk.

We are still babies who must explore and understand the life forms surrounding us. It is not possible to discover our nature with a closed mind. Possibilities can be perceived only with an open mind and perhaps can be experienced after opening our third eye, giving us an intuitive capability. We are undeniably multidimensional beings.

Thank you for reading my perspectives. I wish you a healthy and happy life.

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