Bashar: Channeled by Darryl Anka From "Being Your Natural Self" 4-18-97 Malibu, CA. THE TESSERACT AND REMOTE VIEWING Questioner: When you were talking about the remote viewing... Bashar: Yes. Q: ... and being in that paradox, then... B: Yes. Q: ... the tesseract, and going into the other parallel realities and all of that, then... B: Yes. Q: ... I am feeling, as you were talking about all this, that this is similar but somehow a little different? B: Well, it is a particular or specific manifestation or one particular modality of expressing paradox in a geometric form. Q: Okay, but how is it similar to the viewing? I get that remote viewing is then very similar to it, but going into the tesseract... B: It is a matter of perspective. Q: Perspective. B: Angle. So in this sense, the tesseract is representative of different angles that allow you to peer into different realities, even though it all seems to be the same box that you're looking in. Q: Yes. B: Again, it is holographic, in that sense. Q: So, it's the same as remote viewing. B: It is one way in which remote viewing can be experienced, because it is another analogy of the same technique. And that is simply shifting frequency, changing the angle of view, to allow yourself to see what is actually "here," that you heretofore thought was actually "there." The box, the tesseract, the hyper-cube, is one way to geometrically express another technique for understanding that everything you thought was there is here. Q: Right. B: So, in that sense, it is or can possibly be used as a catalyst for the concept of, what you call, the experience of remote viewing. Q: And if you're doing it from the zero point energy, which is here and now... B: Yes ... well, in a sense, if you're really doing it from the zero point energy, you don't even need the tesseract; because you're at the zero point where everything is. Q: Yes, okay. B: You follow? Q: Yes. B: Zero point is yet another idea. Q: Right. B: Does that help you? Q: Yes.