This blog is about automatic writing. If you are new to this site, please take a moment to read Intro to Automatic Writing. When you go there, you will find My Introduction from the book, Journey Within – Another Dimension Of Life. The introduction is brief, but it gives a good explanation of how this process (automatic or channeled writing) began for me. Please read that before you continue reading here—everything on this site will make more sense when you do.
I said early on that I was going to continue to post my current writings, especially when the message is about channeling. Here is more of what I have recently recorded:
“From that very first thought about the process, human beings have sought to improve their communication skills. As knowledge increased, means of relaying information transformed into various delivery systems.
Try to imagine what it meant when the first communication went beyond speech. The beating of a drum, the blowing of a horn. To gauge distance, intensity, urgency…”
When I was putting the book together, I would take a writing like the one you just read (which is not featured in the book) and merge it with similar writings, and then edit them. Before long, these writings became pages, the pages became chapters, and the chapters eventually became the book. I did this work (compilation and editing) on a computer and it was guided as well. It really was like putting a giant jigsaw puzzle together. It was fun.
Usually the thoughts I hear are tenuous, and if I don’t write them down, they quickly slip away. But there are also times when fragments of poems or sentences come into my thoughts and stay there.
“If one has never been to the mountain top, one should go…”
This was one of those fragments that kept coming back. For weeks, that phrase permeated my thoughts. I heard it at work, I heard it at home during my regular writing sessions, but I hesitated to record it. One day, when it was really quiet, I started recording that message. It came through all at once, and it was one of the most meaningful writings I had ever recorded. In retrospect, I wasn’t ready to receive that complete message until the day I wrote it down. You will find it on the page titled, “Unforgettable Journey,” posted on August 22, 2017.
Another interesting thing that happens is that my handwriting changes. Sometimes the writing is light, other times it is heavy. It can be large or small, or it can slant one way or the other, but it definitely changes. When it changes, the first letter or two of the new style sets the tone for the rest of the writing, or that part of the writing.
There are times when messages overlap themselves, going from one part of the message to another. It feels like the words are piling up and everything is coming through all at once. I try to write down as much as I can—as quickly as I can. There are wide swings in vibrations—sentences, and even paragraphs can be out of place—it gets crazy sometimes.
I even recorded a few pages about how the vibration gets intense. Here, they interrupt a lesson to talk about this phenomenon. The basic handwriting style didn’t change on this page, but the vibration did and I could feel it:
“Yes, just a vibration, do you remember the words?
Lost…valuable information, floating away, like gossamer on a hot summer day. Write Stephen, for in the writing comes the familiar. This is the practice that must be done. <Break>. It is hard to describe, more of a smoother flow than a stronger connection. HOWEVER – you have experienced those times when the vibration goes—BEYOND CONTROL— Exactly! It is like a whipsaw effect, information comes with such speed (actually slow for us), rapid for the one recording. The vibration comes to a climactic end like a bullwhip cracking at the end of a stroke.”
What you just read was a lesson about communication that began on the previous page. The lesson quickly turned into a conversation, and you can see how my thoughts got mixed up with their thoughts. I was writing as fast as I could. This is how it looks in my notebook.
Some of the most profound writings come through when I write fast like this. If I don’t take the time to think about what I am writing, the words just flow. This is what they had to say about over thinking the process:
“The trick Stephen, is to not give it too much thought. The words will come effortlessly of their own volition. Do not attempt to force that which does not flow. It shall happen. Be at peace, be calm, visualize the masters, form an image.”
There really isn’t that much to it. I hear words and I write them down. When I try to evaluate every word that comes through, I lose the rhythm of the writing.
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