On Miracles
I don’t know whether Moses parted the Red Sea or Jesus healed the sick, but I believe in miracles, and try to perform a few small ones myself to stay connected to my power.
A digital computer operates by manipulating zeros and ones. A quantum computer operates across seemingly limitless possibilities. If reality is a kind of matrix, then perhaps the present moment is our access point into quantum space — a field of unlimited potential.
How should we communicate with this quantum space? How do enlightened people perform what we call miracles? If our eyes perceive only a fraction of the light spectrum, how do we activate the “third eye” to see beyond what Rumi called the veil of illusion?
Our two eyes look; our third eye sees.
Our thoughts are electric currents. Our hearts generate magnetic fields. Emotion is simply energy in motion. When we align clear thought with deep emotion, we create an electromagnetic signal that shapes the reality we experience.
The pineal gland, symbolized by the third eye, represents our ability to imagine realities before they exist. As a child, I dreamed of immigrating to America to live a simple life in a place inspired by the beauty of Fallingwater, the calm of Walden Pond, and the impact of Franklin’s Junto. Decades later, that dream has come true at the intersection of Boulder and Gregory Canyon Creek.
Maybe this is what miracles look like: sustained clarity of vision combined with deep belief and disciplined action. We become what we repeatedly think about, emotionally invest in, and work toward. Reality eventually responds to clarity.
The future may not be something that happens to us. It may be something we consciously create. That’s a miracle.
— Sina.