In some ways, this book is too good to be true: Despite its flirtations with
paranormal phenomena, it emerges spiritually wondrous and thoroughly
credible scientifically. Here is the background. In mid-fall 1987, John Jay
Harper loses his best friend to a heart attack. He cannot make himself
believe that his best friend and colleague for nearly two decades, George,
is really dead. He begins speculating: what if his friend's soul is afoot,
perhaps in another dimension where essence and energy never die? Is their a
"fifth" dimension beyond the three of space and one of time? But he casts
that off is merely wishful thinking; it is not logical, at least that is
what he concluded initially. But then seven months later, George appears at
the foot of Harper's bed in a luau shirt and a beachcomber's hat! Is it a
trick of the mind? Is it a joke? Is it a message? Is it, perhaps,
confirmation of man's immortality or an intimation thereof? Harper is not
sure at first, other than he knows it was a genuine perception; it was not
an hallucination brought on by alcohol, drugs, or illness. For more than a
decade, Harper struggles with these questions of life-after-death, embarking
on the toughest emotional and intellectual journey of his life, a trying
spiritual quest of careful reflection and methodical research in "abnormal
physics and paranormal psychology," as he says. This headstrong but
heartfelt effort would plunge Harper into the depths of despair and then
lift him up to the heights of ecstasy over and over again for years. From a
reader's perspective, Harper's trials and tribulations, his pain and
suffering, was well worth it all; it produced an inspired synthesis of great
notions by great people of all ages: scientists, philosophers, and
psychologists. In Tranceformers, Harper offers a new kind of comfort and
reassurance far from the simplistic optimism of New Age authors with whom he
could unfortunately be lumped. His knowledge comes from a deep sense of
"knowing," and that becomes obvious in the opening pages; it rings true. His
offering comes in an unorthodox package that commits the reader to a long,
somewhat discursive exploration of physics and metaphysics. Heady stuff,
indeed, but Harper never loses sight of his objective, never wanders too far
from the catalyst for his brainwork: The essential understanding of the
near-death experience as a shamanic initiation into the fifth dimension of
cosmic consciousness. Throughout, Harper summons an astounding array of
facts that lend credence to his seminal vision for mankind, and he brings
the cherished writings of others to his side: Einstein, Rousseau, Newton,
Jung, Freud, Krishnamurti, Tesla, Jesus. He also draws upon the rediscovered
theories and beliefs of other long-gone but not forgotten civilizations such
as the Mayans and Egyptians, and the schools of thought espoused by
so-called Realists, and Transcendentalists, and Masons. In short, he has
built on a solid academic foundation that spans many disciplines:
anthropology, archaeology, astronomy, physics, psychology, biology, history,
mathematics, and medicine to name but a few. Moreover, this is an
easy-to-read, intelligent, honest, emotionally-freeing book not to be
overlooked as Harper spews scientific theory and salutes spiritual teachings
equally. He sees no contradiction between these two models of reality
anymore. There is an irrepressible faith here in this book and a rare chance
to find solace and peace in a time-of-trouble by reviewing the timeless
truths gleaned from Harper's own communion with the "realm of the dead" and
God. In summary, if you think, you are; and if you are, you will profit from
thinking about Harper's illumination experience and the in-depth revelation
of future world events he outlines clearly and forcefully. Harper views life
as a master shaman should I imagine: He penetrates the dogma that can hold
spiritual and scientific growth in check, looking towards the "end-time"
shift of the ages where spirit and matter meet as two sides of the same coin
of consciousness within the "zero-point field" of the fifth dimension.
So many answers, so well documented. Well worth your time to read. Before reading the book, I asked the question: did you ever wonder how ETs can get from there to here instantaneously with their very physical (in our terms) bodies and craft?
Here is my take on the answer to this question. In the common, current understanding of the universe by our species, time and distance seem important. But, the reality of the universe is that there is no time. It is only an illusion, a convenient mechanism we have invented to justify our perception of reality. All of our universe exists in the now and exist as
manifestations of consciousness.
When we look out from Earth into the Universe, we see past events of space-time, events that have happened, which have resulted in apparently what, where, why, and who we are. But, we never see the instantaneous now. The future only exists as multiple probabilities until a consensus of consciousness is reached on the next instant of now.
Perhaps multiverses exist to fulfill all probabilities, but you and I in this consensual manifestation can only experience one flow of now that we call our time. However, we all can have the ability to travel instantaneously, not just mentally, as many of us have from one point in the universe to another, but physically as well. All locations of space-time in the now are really at the same "place." It is only an illusion that we think
we must travel to some distant location at some velocity that is less than the speed of light.
As such, UFOs and ETs and their interaction with us are absolutely centered in my view of reality. It will be great when we can, as they, go anywhere we wish just by "wishing." That time appears to be coming upon us, but we must prove ourselves first and overcome our ego-centric universal view that keeps getting us in trouble.
Read this book. John's writing reveals the same answer to my question and so much more.