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The introduction feels as if I am reading about my own childhood.
I skimmed a lot the rest as it talked a lot about what I knew and less about dreams... I might revisit it if bored for the part of the visiting beings... the whole book turned into a big messiah complex POV after starting a bit more humbled... yea. not for me. I think this is the last chance I give to one of his books. After The Source Field and Synchronicity is the key, I feel the rest is just rewording his main ideas for continued sales...
I skimmed a lot the rest as it talked a lot about what I knew and less about dreams... I might revisit it if bored for the part of the visiting beings... the whole book turned into a big messiah complex POV after starting a bit more humbled... yea. not for me. I think this is the last chance I give to one of his books. After The Source Field and Synchronicity is the key, I feel the rest is just rewording his main ideas for continued sales...
informative
inspiring
medium-paced
I didn’t realize this was some sort of a self grandeurising biography, I’m really deeply into the metaphysical but this was just painful to read, with little interesting information interspersed between thousands of “Me, my and I’s”
It’s basically autofellatio in book form.
The author says he’s an alien soul(starseed), but also a high priest from Atlantis, the reincarnation of Edgar Cayce, and a great spiritual leader who will lead the masses (I think at one point he compared himself to Jesus)
The rest of the book is spent on complaining about how he had to work minimum wage jobs, crying about having to make reservations while working the front desk at a hotel and whining how it was so unfair since he’s so clearly special.
The only thing of interest for me in this book was the Pyramid Timeline, but I took it with a grain of salt since the theory didn’t seem to account for the fact that we lost 7 years when switching to the Gregorian calendar, in effect throwing all the timeline dates off.
It’s basically autofellatio in book form.
The author says he’s an alien soul(starseed), but also a high priest from Atlantis, the reincarnation of Edgar Cayce, and a great spiritual leader who will lead the masses (I think at one point he compared himself to Jesus)
The rest of the book is spent on complaining about how he had to work minimum wage jobs, crying about having to make reservations while working the front desk at a hotel and whining how it was so unfair since he’s so clearly special.
The only thing of interest for me in this book was the Pyramid Timeline, but I took it with a grain of salt since the theory didn’t seem to account for the fact that we lost 7 years when switching to the Gregorian calendar, in effect throwing all the timeline dates off.
I've always been fascinated with lucid dreaming and I find David Wilcock's work to be interesting. This was very much similar in style to the previous book I have read of his - The Ascension Mysteries - and this one didn't disappoint. In fact, I would assert this book was better than Ascension Mysteries.
It was stylistically similar in the notion that both of them are written almost entirely in memoir form. However, and this is why I give this book a four-star rating, Wilcock presents himself as bring rather cocky and slightly conceited. I will admit I did roll my eyes when he believed himself to be a reincarnation of a dead, popular spiritual leader. However, who am I to say that isn't true and Wilcock is completely full of himself?
At the end of the day, just be nice. Wilcock makes this point quite a bit throughout the book and ensures he penultimately ends with that point. The best ascension, the best awakening one can have, is to just be nice. Be empathetic, compassionate, and kind to all people, even if they irk you, are cocky and conceited, or are difficult to handle.
It was stylistically similar in the notion that both of them are written almost entirely in memoir form. However, and this is why I give this book a four-star rating, Wilcock presents himself as bring rather cocky and slightly conceited. I will admit I did roll my eyes when he believed himself to be a reincarnation of a dead, popular spiritual leader. However, who am I to say that isn't true and Wilcock is completely full of himself?
At the end of the day, just be nice. Wilcock makes this point quite a bit throughout the book and ensures he penultimately ends with that point. The best ascension, the best awakening one can have, is to just be nice. Be empathetic, compassionate, and kind to all people, even if they irk you, are cocky and conceited, or are difficult to handle.