Project Description

Healthy Mental Perspectives

by Lynne McTaggart

This section contains protected content. Please click below to purchase access.

Have you already purchased access to this content? Please log in here.

“I love Lynne and all her insights and experiments.”
~ P.B, New Mexico

Developing your intuition can be a learning process. It’s a matter of honoring the still, small voice in yourself that encourages you to do some things, and to avoid doing other things, seemingly for no reason.

When you embrace your ability to send and receive information, you can improve your intuition, and let it guide you to an intentional existence.

  • Wake up your intuition
  • Know your feelings in every situation
  • Listen with all five senses
  • Enhance your curiosity
  • Notice your own mental state
  • Find your life’s central intention

This section contains protected content. Please click below to purchase access.

Have you already purchased access to this content? Please log in here.

Telepathy is widespread in the animal kingdom, and was evolved primarily as a means of supporting the group, community or herd. Animal telepathy demonstrates that there are deep and simple ways to communicate with our fellow beings, beyond just language.

To develop our extrasensory skills, we need to become exquisitely sensitive to our feelings and trust our intuitive senses, just as animals do. It’s vital that we understand the signs around us and also that we give out the right signals.

The evidence from both animals and humans shows that a well-developed forebrain may inhibit our ability to access intuitive information. The forebrain sees a portion of something and, in a sense, ‘fills in’ the conceptual details to produce a whole.

One way to develop your sixth sense is to work on thinking in pictures. Studies show that language often suppresses visual memory—what is known as ‘verbal overshadowing’.

By the same token, if you work on areas that heighten your curiosity, you can also reinforce and strengthen the neural circuitry relating to anticipation, and your own gut hunches. So, you will not only be sniffing out new things, but be relatively good at anticipating what you will find.

  • How we miss so much of the world around us
  • How to become ‘exquisitely curious’
  • How non-Westerners see the world differently from us
  • How creative people also see differently
  • The common bond between autistics, native people and even animals
  • The importance of our emotions and how they help us see the world
  • Our sixth sense and how we can harness it
  • How to use the alpha, or seeking, state
  • The importance of geomagnetics in determining what we perceive.

This section contains protected content. Please click below to purchase access.

Have you already purchased access to this content? Please log in here.

“I have been meditating for about 10 years now, the last 4 with nightly dedication. I have seen my ability to reach out to someone grow exponentially, with the uncanny effectiveness of concentrating upon a person and asking for them to contact me and then allowing it to take place. It is beautiful, the interconnectedness of it all.”
~ Matt Williamson

What is time and what is our relationship to it? How can we have premonitions of future events?

There is no doubt that we all have those moments of imminent danger – the cancellations for the maiden (and only) voyage of the Titanic, and the absenteeism levels at the Twin Towers on 9/11, are testaments that we do have these abilities.

But how do you harness this innate ability and use it in your everyday life? In this fascinating recording, Lynne McTaggart walks through the extraordinary discoveries that frontier scientists are making into ESP, telepathy, premonition and other precognitive abilities.

  • How to recognize a ‘first sight’ message
  • The characteristics of a premonition
  • The three possible scenarios underlying consciousness research
  • The important role of emotion
  • How to keep a forecasting journal
  • How to use forecasting to solve life problems
  • Picking peak brain moments


 

Lynne McTaggart

Lynne McTaggart is a best-selling author, researcher and lecturer whose work has rightly been described as
“a bridge between science and spirituality”. For the past 20 years she has been researching medicine and its
shortcomings, and quantum physics and what this means for you and the world we live in. She is also co-executive director of Conatus, which publishes some of the world’s most respected health and spiritual newsletters, including What Doctors Don’t Tell You and Living the Field. Her most recent book is The Bond. Her websites are www.theintentionexperiment.com and www.wddty.com.

Lynne McTaggart’s Appearances on The Aware Show


Lynne McTaggart on KPFK



Lynne McTaggart Quotes

“The power of mass intention may ultimately be the force that shifts the tide toward repair and renewal of the planet.”

“The power of an intention multiplies, depending upon how many people are thinking the same thought at the same time.”

“At your next dinner party, try playing the following game. Challenge everyone around the table to produce a single drug that can cure people of an illness, other then antibiotics. If you come up with anything, stop whatever you are doing and call me.”

“Intention appears to be something akin to a tuning fork, causing the tuning forks of other things in the universe to resonate at the same frequency.”

Lynne McTaggart Testimonials

“I have been meditating for about 10 years now, the last 4 with nightly dedication. I have seen my ability to reach out to someone grow exponentially, with the uncanny effectiveness of concentrating upon a person and asking for them to contact me and then allowing it to take place. It is beautiful, the interconnectedness of it all.“
Matt Williamson

“I love Lynne and all her insights and experiments.“
P.B, New Mexico