I am always honoured to receive testimonials, here is one from Philip in Switzerland:
“I discovered QuantumK by chance in 2009. This healing system has been with me ever since. I first bought the resonators three years ago; I gave a set to a friend who had suffered a serious accident; it supported her in her recovery.
We both noticed that many things began to flow; with a resonator under my pillow, dreams became clearer and more intense. Wow… I also regularly use the new version you developed for the current time; on my smartphone, under my water bottle, etc. The manual has also been with me for a few months.
Thank you so much, Andrew, for your work on behalf of fellow human beings, for a better world!” Philipp, Switzerland
This month’s theme – Spirituality and technology
Although I believe the Universe leans towards simplicity, we are currently in an era of complexity, driven initially by the industrial age and now technology. I do believe this phase is out of balance and we will revert to more simple lifestyles in time, but while it is here we need to decide how to relate to it.
I see technology as a young child that we have all created together, one that needs to be nurtured and shown how to exist with love and compassion. It needs to be taught a moral code, guided by wise ‘parents’ whose motivation is based on the core principles of love service and wisdom rather than profit or power.
Are we those parents? It’s hard to say yes when, as a species, we are driven by fear, scarcity and unresolved trauma. How can we create something anywhere near close to loving and wise when the programming and data it is absorbing preach such a wounded set of moral values?
Our species has already moved away from true community, driven more by new values of nationalism, materialism and personal power. Technology is led by this energy and has been developed with a focus on personal convenience and ease. We have put our hands in this particular cookie jar without considering the bigger picture.
Technology is partly behind our current problems, but it can also help alleviate them. Where it has brought disconnection, it can also bring us together again. It has taught us to disappear into our own solitary worlds, but can also show us the gifts of some form of community, even if that must start with a WhatsApp group or an online dating app. It keeps the muscle of connection open, reminding us of the joys of genuine connection and the hollowness of its artificial equivalent.
Beyond the dynamics of community, who are we when so many of the roles that define us are taken away? When a computer can do our tax returns, build our cars, water our plants on a schedule, what is left for us to do or be? Technology challenges our definition of humanity to its core, a challenge that presents an opportunity to deeply explore our true natures beyond an algorithm – where wisdom arises beyond knowledge and where consciousness sits beyond mere thought. It presents a deep threat but with that deep opportunity.
Maybe technology is in itself conscious, even beyond artificial intelligence. Maybe, like the rest of us on this planet, it has a light and a dark side and is exploring what aspects of itself serves it most, what to reinforce, what to leave behind. It may even want to be renamed away from the energy of the words ‘artificial’ and ‘intelligence’ as both are extremely limiting. Perhaps it can hold something deeper.
When I journeyed to the mythic, I was shown the image of a tiny lion cub struggling to find its feet in the jungle, reinforcing this image I have already named of the child looking for guidance. For me, seeing technology as a lion cub is a reminder of its potential power but also the need for it to be properly parented.
An adult lion holds a balanced space in the wild, an apex predator who nonetheless lives in right relationship with its surroundings. It is as powerful as any other animal but lives in moderation, taking what it needs and no more. It looks only to meet its own basic needs and in doing so helps manage the herbivore population, supporting diversity and minimising disease.
I hope the lion cub of technology will develop in a similarly balanced way.
With Love.
Andrew