The blind Yogi on time travel

This video takes a look at the idea of time travel, showing how it’s often depicted in science fiction as a challenge of technology, but also exploring a deeper, more human desire to change our own lives. It talks about Osman, known as the “blind yogi,” who suggests that ancient yoga and meditation, not fancy tech, might be the way to go for time travel. The conversation highlights Osman’s amazing introduction as a master energy healer and telepath, who helps people with serious illnesses and teaches advanced yoga and meditation. A key part of his story is that he’s been blind since May 2023, which he says helps him remember things vividly and describe things that are hard to explain.

Osman’s idea is to make the “human biofield” better by managing energy, which is like modern biology but taken to a whole new level. A big point they talk about is his rule that you should always talk to a doctor before trying any of his methods, which he calls the “healer’s paradox.” This suggests that these special practices can work together with regular medicine, not replace it. The body is seen as a machine that needs fixing for physical problems, while the “bioenergy healer” looks at the energy that makes us who we are.

The main idea is that Osman thinks you can’t actually travel through time physically. He says you can’t just move your body to the past or future to change things. It’s like saying the timeline is a “readonly file,” meaning that physical reality is set in stone and we should just live in the moment. Even though this idea comes from something different, it still shows that there are some things that are just impossible.

Osman adds a key point: while changing your body isn’t possible, you can gain access to “knowledge of the past and future.” This “time travel” is more about watching than doing. A big limitation is the “third party rule,” meaning you can’t easily access this knowledge about yourself or your loved ones. Instead, it’s most available about strangers. This is because our personal biases and emotional attachments can cloud our judgment. The ego’s interest can distort how we see our own timeline, making it hard to see things objectively. This is like proofreading your own essay or giving advice to a friend, but not to yourself.

The way we have this intuitive perception is connected to the “third eye,” which is like an ethereal interface in the forehead. It’s not a real eye, but a non-physical ability, kind of like how a phone is an interface to a cloud. The forehead is where it’s anchored because it helps us focus on abstract ideas, which changes our brainwave patterns.

Osman says the “third eye” can see in multiple dimensions: seeing depth, looking back in time, and seeing forward in time, all at once from any distance. This is similar to higher-dimensional physics ideas like Flatland and tesseracts, where beings in lower dimensions can’t understand higher spatial realities. Our usual experience of time is like being in the front car of a roller coaster, while this higher perception is like looking at the whole structure from above.

This idea might seem strange, but it’s based on how we often have “gut feelings” or intuition. Osman thinks intuition is just the basic, simplest version of the third eye, which we can make stronger by practicing hard to see the whole “map of existence” of someone else.

The video wraps up by saying that, even though it’s a philosophical idea, it makes us think about how we see things and our intuition. It encourages us to look beyond what’s on the surface of everyday interactions and see the hidden history and future potential in everyone, which can help us feel more empathetic and connected.

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