"Now the behavior of atoms and molecules is involved here, for again
these are only present within your universe during certain stages.
Their activity is perceived only during the range of particular
vibratory rhythms.
When your scientists examine them for example, they do not examine the
nature, say, of an atom.
They only explore the characteristics of an atom as it acts or shows
itself within your
system.
Its greater reality completely escapes them.
You understand that there are spectrums of light.
So are there spectrums of matter.
Your system of physical reality is not dense in comparison with some
others.
The dimensions that you give to physical matter barely begin to hint at
the varieties of dimensions possible.
Some systems are far heavier or lighter than your own, though this may
not involve weight in the terms with which you are familiar.
Probable actions emerge, then, into matter systems quite as valid as
your own, and quite as consistent.
You are used to thinking in single line thoughts, so you think of events
that you know as complete things or actions, not realizing that what you
perceive is but a
fraction of their entire multidimensional existence.
In greater terms, it is impossible to separate one physical event from
the probable events, for these are all dimensions of one action.
It is basically impossible to separate the "you" that you know from the
probable you's of which you are unaware, for the same reasons.
There are always inner pathways, however, leading between probable
events;
since all of them are manifestations of an act in its becoming, then the
dimensions between these are illusions.
The physical brain alone cannot pick up these connections with any great
success.
The mind, which is the inner counterpart of the brain, can at times
perceive the far greater dimensions of any given event
through a burst of sudden intuition or comprehension that cannot be
adequately described on a verbal level.
As I have said frequently, time as you think of it does not exist, yet
in your terms, time's true nature could be understood if the basic
nature of the atom was ever made known to you.
In one way, an atom could be compared to a microsecond.
It seems as if an atom "exists" steadily for a certain amount of time.
Instead it phases in and out, so to speak.
It fluctuates in a highly predictable pattern and rhythm.
It can be perceived within your system only at certain points in this
fluctuation, so it