My favorite things to think about are those things that are least normal. I am not a big fan of normal, and increasingly, I find a lot of adventure in those things least common, especially regarding transdimensional reality, which I think is as common as air. What kind of lifeforms inhabit four-dimensional space, with time being one of them? Because we assume we know things based on the rules of conduct that we all live by, which are measured in length, width, height, and time. And with time, we assume we understand it enough to measure it. But we know that time moves differently for people depending on their relationship to gravity. Time is not a standard unit of measure that is one for one, regardless of our location. And it is within time that many characters reside, which impact our life, as we have come to define it, in the spirit world. And no matter where you go in the world, or what religion you study, there is an attempt to have a relationship to beings we might otherwise call gods, who live in a hyperreality that we might be tempted to call Heaven. But to close the deal on our sanity, we rely on faith to rationalize everything to ourselves. And we say when we die that our body is put in the ground, our spirit goes someplace, and we sort of hope that it all works out in the end. We pray, and we hope, but we don’t actively seek answers in a “normal” way. Well, that’s not enough for me; I want to know more than what’s normal about everything. And it is in the pursuit of that very thing that I ran across what I think is one of the scariest photos I’ve seen in a long time. And I understand and believe it because I have had similar experiences in photos that I have taken myself.

When I see him sometime, I am going to ask Andrew Collins about the picture he took at Skinwalker Ranch in Utah, a place I have been to. My family has camped in that region and understands its high strangeness as more than government experiments for developing military technology. Skinwalker Ranch is one of those well-documented places in the world where paranormal activity is widely acknowledged. Understanding it is another matter, so when Andrew Collins conducted his investigations and took pictures around what is known as Homestead #2, what he captured was quite extraordinary. Collins didn’t see the image that later appeared in the picture, which is a kind of thunderbird-like creature that easily resembles what people might call Mothman or Birdman, a phenomenon common in North American Indian cultures. There are numerous negative emotions that people experience at Skinwalker Ranch, yet the perpetrators remain unseen. This raises the question of what we can see and what we cannot, which serves as a measure for defining reality. But for people who study these things, that measure of reality is not sufficient, and pictures like the one that Collins accidently achieved prove it beyond any reasonable doubt. What is significant about this particular picture, which I don’t think is getting nearly enough attention, is that the excellent, hard object found in the sky was not visible to the naked eye under the accepted reality viewing circumstances, as recorded by our eyes and brains. This raises a point I make more frequently as the evidence becomes increasingly apparent. And I just had a similar experience at the Moonville Tunnel with my family while on a ghost hunt. Sometimes, pictures taken record more of reality than takes place because of the still-frame nature of acquiring the information.


This is why this is important, most cultures around the world use shamans of some kind to deal with evil entities that try to cast spells on people and harm their health from beyond the veil of the living. And I have found that treating these problems with normalized medicine and pharmaceuticals is not nearly enough. There are a lot of voodoo doctors also throughout the American south who routinely deal with medical issues at their root source, some curse that has been placed on a human being’s soul outside of everyday reality. When I talk about the use of psychedelics, such as Ayahuasca, to produce in the mind a hyper reality, I think that the science behind it is not illusory, but the ability to increase the shutter speed of a mind to see more of what is always there. And that the reason we don’t bump into these substantial objects more is because their dimensional reality does not have enough mass to interact with our physical reality, much the way we don’t think about all the Internet signals and remotes to our televisions that pass through our bodies all the time without slowing down to interact with our cell structure. And the reason Andrew Collins’ picture is so spooky is that what he captured was certainly there, yet with their own eyes, they did not see it. This is because cameras usually record video at a rate of 30 frames per second, or for motion pictures, at a rate of 24 frames per second. And the object captured might only appear in one or two of those individual frames, because they live at a different rate of time than we do. And our ability to see them is limited by our frame of perception, which is likely why some people see cryptid creatures like Bigfoot, ghosts, or Birdpeople (as depicted in that photograph), while others don’t.

The reason we don’t see these characters under “normal” conditions is that our minds perceive the world in the same way as video, as individual frames of material that we fill in the gaps with our perceived understanding. When we watch a movie, we don’t see the black spaces between the frames of film because our minds fill in those gaps with our perceived knowledge of reality. But creatures who live in a hyperreality where they exist at a much higher rate of time than we do, and can only be seen by a camera accidently capturing them moving in and out of our current time, have the advantage of interacting with us, but we not so much with them because our frame rate of perception is much slower. So we perceive them as invisible when, in fact, they are living in a hyper-reality. To me, a picture like the one Andrew Collins included in his book, Origin of the Gods, is jaw-dropping proof that is easily explained by science. We might be disappointed by what we discover about these creatures we call gods, that they don’t live up to our lofty expectations. But if you are struggling with a cancer diagnosis or a significant health issue, just speaking from experience, the way to treat it is to visit the hyperreality that these things live in and get them off your back. I would recommend a voodoo doctor from New Orleans, for instance, because usually it is some curse that some political enemy puts on you that is slowly killing you, when in truth, it’s just one of these losers sitting on your soul from beyond the perceptual reality of conscious, terrestrial thought. And for thousands of years, most of our cultures sought to appease these creatures through sacrifice, because they lacked the tools of understanding to deal with them. But we can see them sometimes. And we can deal with them if we know they are there. Which they surely are. And they often try to manipulate us to serve their own needs. And when they are asked to kill us, they do attempt to do so, from the inside out. It’s not bad luck that bad things happen. But bad luck often can be traced to these characters, and to deal with them, you have to reach beyond the veil and kill them before they can get you. I’m saying this for a reason. Don’t let evil characters hide behind a veil of perceptual reality, like assassins from beyond. Reach beyond the veil and kill them where they live, so they don’t kill you. Because they hide their malice beyond the term “normal,” so you can’t see them coming, and they can dispose of you before you even know they are there. Yet they are.
Rich Hoffman

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