Breaching the Speed of Light

In physics we treat the baseline speed of the universe as zero. But the holographic principle was proposed by Nobel laureate Gerard ’t Hooft in the 1990s, and Stephen Hawking’s final theory was that the universe is holographic.

What if the baseline speed of a universe isn’t zero. The baseline or “cruising altitude” (if you will) is the speed of light. We can condense light’s speed all the way down to zero, but it’s a dark-energy zero that wants to expand. Or, we can expand light’s speed all the way out to c^2, but it’s a dark-matter zero that wants to contract. In the former, the slingshot is drawn all the way back. In the latter, the slingshot is sprung all the way forward.

It’s as if the cruising altitude is sea level. If I am below sea level, it may look as if time is slowing down (collapsing). But my brain does not want time to slow down. When it perceives time slowing down, it speeds up methylation.

If I am above sea level, it may look as if time is speeding up (exploding). But my brain does not want time to speed up. When it perceives time speeding up, it slows down methylation.

We have been treating the speed of light as a simple number, like the color green. I believe it can be a simple number (“2D”); but it can also be a complex number, like blue + yellow. When it is a simple number, there is natural balance. When it is complex, one arrow is moving up while the other arrow is moving down.

We believe we are observing frank light, light as light. I believe what we see is more akin to light’s derivatives. Light as light is like a rose that decays at the same rate we decay; we do not see time when we are one with its speed. When we observe a rose decay via time-lapse, it is like when we observe the sun rise and set.

Perhaps we see the sun rise and set because it is faster than we are; our lens is wider. There may be a still yet wider lens for whom our rising and setting appears as “sun.” I believe that wider lens is the black hole.

It is as if we have three rings, each wider than the next. The middle ring can see the movement of the smaller ring. But can it perceive the movement of the wider ring? Perhaps it can only perceive the movement of the wider ring in increments. To fully observe the wider ring, we must be wider than it.

In a holographic universe, perhaps the optimum background is the speed of light. When the background is too cold, light has to be too fast (sun). When the background is too hot, light has to be too slow (moon).

With cancer, perhaps we see only the increased rate of replication; we don’t see that time is too slow. If the dopamine burn rate is too high, we create a state that is akin to dopamine surfeit and dopamine deficiency at the same time. We are deficient in dopamine because we are using too much dopamine.

I treat the baseline as sea level. Instead of being under water, it’s as if the cancerous cell is “under light.” This model treats the body—the universe—as a kind of hydraulic system. Only, instead of water, it’s light.

When I breach the surface (reach sea level), all the pressure is suddenly off me.

To breach the surface I must do so slowly and carefully. To overshoot is like eclipsing the speed of light. My light begins to spin backward, precipitating out of solution. When this happens, I start to get oxalate problems, including crystals in my urine and pain at the site of old injuries. I can also experience the re-activation of old viruses, such as Epstein-Barr. Viral re-activation is something that is known to occur in spaceflight. I believe this happens when the speed of time breaches the speed of light.

The speed of light is homeostasis. If I eclipse the speed of light, I have to slam on the brakes. If I dip beneath the speed of light, I have to slam on the gas.

What if, in Parkinson’s, my brain keeps trying to slow the background down, via dopamine, so light (methylation) can speed up. But each time the background slows down by another degree, it increases the amount to which I need to speed up by another degree.

What if, in ALS, my brain keeps trying to speed the background up, via serotonin, so light (methylation) can slow down. But each time the background speeds up by another degree, it increases the amount I need to slow down by another degree.

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