Your Best Year Yet

Your Best Year Yet

2016

As we embark on a new orbit of the Sun, it not only pays dividends to make plans for the next year ahead but also to reflect on what unfolded in the year just gone.

That was 2015

For me, 2015 was a year of generation where I produced this little lot :

To find out how I managed to create such output, listen to this podcast.

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This is 2016

To hear about what I plan for the 2016 on the back of all of this in what will be a year of consolidation, listen to this podcast.

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Now it’s your turn …

And if you want to bend time, tune into your muse, discover your soul purpose, manifest enough money just when you need it, tap into light bulb moments, connect with your Muse, heal old ‘wounds’, meet the love of your life and much more, then checkout this special offer …

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This World We Could Know

Whole World MetaphorI am really thrilled that my new book, This We Know is seeding new thoughts and forming a new movement.

We know that we know loads more than people say 100 years ago.

We know therefore that our descendants in 100 years will know new and different things that we don’t know.

What we also know is that the things we imagine today are the seeds of this new knowledge.

Accordingly, I’ve started interviewing some amazing New Thinkers about the kind of world they would like to see in 100 years time … or even sooner.
TWK on iPad

Get This We Know for Kindle

Get This We Know in Print

Read the reviews here …

“A little book with a big impact”

“In a category of its own”

“Short, elegant and perfectly formed”
… and find out why a 12 year old boy called it “mind bobbling”

The interviews are posted in reverse chronological order here as, appropriately reversing chronology is part of the mix.

Harun Rabbani on a World of Self Mastery

Pauline Crawford on Smiling and Willing-ness

Christine Miller on Creating a Self-Aware World

The World Francesca Gordon-Smith Would Like to Know

Mark Newey on Slowing Down being the New Speeding Up

What Nikki Turner Would Like to Know

Marie Taylor on Slowing Down and Appreciating More

What Jackie Walker Knows

Sherry Wakeman talking about the acquisition of knowledge …

What The English Sisters Know

Vicki Wusche on a new model for property market

Shelagh Jones on solving the fossil fuel crisis

The Art of Prescience

prescience

The dictionary definition of the word prescience implies it is somehow possible receive fore-knowledge ahead of when things have actually happened.

We can ’see’ this more clearly when we insert a simple hyphen to get “pre-science”.

It could explain how Leonardo da Vinci was able to sketch helicopters and parachutes. Many other scientists and visionaries seem to receive their insights in visions or even dreams.

Newton ’got’ gravity in a split second and took the rest of his life working out the maths of apples falling to earth. The chemist Kekulé dreamt of a snake eating its own tail and then made the intuitive leap to work out the ring structure of the benzene ring which lead to the basis of all organic chemistry.

For mere mortals, making giant leaps of scientific discovery may not be high on our daily To Do lists. However if we are involved in the creative industries, being able to see the ’near-future’ could have its uses. We could ’see’ what is is we need to create, be it the title and words for a book or the scope and shape of a client’s marketing campaign. If you work in the financial sector, knowing what to invest in is obviously useful. Note that there are reasons why we can’t simply get the lottery numbers.

But how do you go about getting into the state where such flashes of insight pop in?

Well the key lies in learning how to enter the meditative state at will – ideally with your eyes open. What then happens is that time and ’The Now’ softens and we find it easier to resonate with both the past and future versions of ’Us’. Rupert Sheldrake describes the mechanism whereby this occurs in his wonderful theories called morphic resonance. By quietening the conscious mind and that inner chatter, past memories become more accessible as do ‘future memories’.

The diagram below shows how an author can tune into the words they have yet to write. If our conscious mind is active, it blocks the flow.

Tuning into Your Future Self

If you don’t know how to meditate and can’t make your mind go blank, help is at hand.

The Manage Your Time with Mindfulness ecourse is designed not only to show you how to stretch time by changing the speed of your thoughts but also how to tune into ‘future memories’.