Thank you and your brilliant team for What the Bleep and reshaping our global consciousness!
I just sat down to enjoy your commentary on your recent newsletter mailing and after finishing it, and as always, having my energy frequency raised by it, I thought its time I contacted you finally about my experience with What the Bleep. I was having some trouble finding your personal email when my 4 year old daughter, Ariana, sat down on my lap and clicked some buttons and brought your email right to the page!
I saw What the Bleep, by pure "chance" at the time, but of course nothing about it was of chance. Since the movie changed my life in many unbelievable ways, I started actually prescribing it, yes on a prescription pad, to my patients!! Yes, my patients often raise an eyebrow at this initially but when they come back, some of them having seen it with their friends and family many times over, they can't stop sharing how the movie has changed their life and yes, health or disease symptoms!
Got to go for now, but thank you, thank you and thank you!! You and your team deserve all the thanks and appreciation of the cosmos!
Yours truly,
Neda Amani, MD
Ottawa, Canada
Dear Neda,
Thank you for your email. I'm confident that those who follow your prescription will benefit in many ways! Aren't children amazing. I have a 19 month old daughter who teaches me something everyday.
Betsy
Dear Editor:
I hope that someone affiliated with the project is talking about string theory because, when you get down to the vibrating energy that is everything, (I'm paraphrasing from the book. I can't find the quote right now.) it seems that that's what's being talked about. I'd love to hear one of the scientists talk about it in the newsletter. It really is everything is the same, nothing is separate from anything else. (Personally, I think that what everything is made of is ultimately consciousness.)
Love the movie, love the book, love the thought process. Thanks very much.
Kathy Kimber
Editor: Check out the December 05 article in the Herald whatthebleep.com/herald9/print/ on Superstring Theory and Hidden Sector Matter!
Dear Editor:
I read a letter to the editor is the last Herald that in part said:"In the movie the section dealing with "Ice Crystals" was a good example of poor science." I can't photograph ice crystals.
But, I did repeat this experiment with flowers and strawberries.
The photos are posted on my website at: zenguidance.com/13018.html The logo at the upper left is a flash photo of the "love" rose at 4 weeks. The hate rose was completely blank. I tried to repeat the experiment with lilies. While I was able to put a lily in a love container, as soon as I picked up a lily with the intent of putting it into the hate container, all the petals fell off in my hands. There is much, much more to this experiment as time went on. But, I have not yet had time to write about it.
Warmest regards,
Dolores Arste
Middle Grove, NY
Dear Editor:
I was thrilled to see your little film. It is grand that such ideas are finally reaching the mass consciousness. What prompted this note was your newsletter. As I was reading all the different articles it struck me that Deepak Chopra‘s name had been listed several times as one of the great thinkers of our time. While Mr. Chopra is very magnetic in his style, his audience is to the mass as a whole and not individual.
It seems to me What the Bleep needs to do some studying or research and give the men and women of the past generations a bit of the credit. These folks were the true pioneers of thought being the prime reason for what transpires in life. They also did it in a time on this planet where having such views could get you hanged, burned-at-the-stake or crucified. My personal favorites are US Anderson on food information; Raymond Charles Barker; Joseph Murphy on the power of your subconscious mind; Emmett Fox, a Catholic writer whose thoughts were dangerous for his time; and Neville Goddard.
One of the most interesting qualities about Neville, is while he was on earth, he used to lecture for free and let people tape record his lectures without charge. The only request was his word never be changed. How many modern day new thought speakers would even consider such behavior? Neville knew why he could do such a thing and still be prosperous.
I am sure my comments will rile up the minds of Chopra followers, but before any condemnation of my opinion may I suggest investigation first.
Sincerely,
Wanda Binkley
Dear Editor:
At some level, I have always known the Truth of what has been presented in What The Bleep. When I wan in high school, some 40 years ago, we had a geometry teacher during one summer who was from Japan . At the beginning of the first class, he asked each of us our names and when we responded replied, "How do you KNOW that is your name?" Well, to say the least to argumentative 15 and 16 year olds this was the beginning of a fun summer.
Now, 40 odd years later, I teach in the MBA program of a growing midwestern university and I routinely ask the students in my class, "How do we KNOW that what we know to be true is in fact actually true?" "What is true?" If we were raised by parents who taught us that the moon was made of green cheese, and every book he had access to taught the same thing, and all of the people in our small community believed the same thing, did that make it TRUE? Obviously, we would be wrong. Leonardo Da Vinci was placed under house arrest for the remainder of his life for trying to convince the leaders of the church that the sun was the center of the universe and not the earth, so how do we really know what is true?
When the mind becomes closed to new ideas and new ways of seeing what is "true" then we are lost without hope of growth. However, opening a mind to new ideas and new ways of seeing the world around them, and learning to ask the "Big" questions is one of the most exciting roles in my life right now. What the Bleep has dramatically increased my ability to challenge others to expand their thinking. Thanks for assisting in awakening the world to a greater "Truth"