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Not everything real is visible, and not everything visible is all there is.
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There was a very famous physicist, his
name was Heisenberg. Then he gave a
brilliant, brilliant metaphor. He said
there was a fisherman who decided that
he wants to determine how many fish are
there in the Pacific Ocean. So he built
this grand net and he put it down into
the Pacific Ocean for a few weeks and
then lifted it up and he had all these
millions of fish. And he said there's no
fish that's smaller than 10 in. And he
became the laughing stock of humanity
cuz in your own living room, you have
fish that are smaller than 10 in. And
then they realized he actually wasn't
lying. The holes in the net were 10 in.
So there were no fish smaller than 10
in. It's It's the tools that we use to
define reality that will determine the
nature of reality that we are going to
define. So now my eyes have a construct
that God gave them. It's the retina.
It's the way we process things. So my
eyes interpret divine energy as
something physical. Just like there are
colors we can't see. Birds can see them.
Those colors exist, but our eyes simply
don't have the receptacles, the sensors
to be able to interpret it. So what do
we say? It doesn't exist. What would
happen if we had actually microscopic
eyes? If I'm looking at this beamer, you
know what I would be seeing? I would be
seeing trillions and trillions and
trillions of atoms. But it's so tiny the
eye can't see it. So the eye makes it a
solid reality and we say this is it. So
the Bal Tanya says if you go even
deeper, if you have a spiritual
microscope, you know what you're going
to see? You're going to see it's all
divine energy. If you would see the
world that way, you would just see the
physical simply as just manifesting
energy. Everything is manifesting
energy. And the moment the eye does have
permission to see, the whole world
essentially is divine energy. It's a
divine flow.