The Honesty Check: What I Know, What I Believe

When you’re exploring the edges of reality, it’s easy to get carried away. To mistake a strong feeling for a proven fact. To let excitement blur the lines of what’s truly known.

But true intellectual honesty demands a clear distinction. It’s about knowing the difference between what you’ve experienced, what you strongly believe, and what’s still an open question.

100% Real (Direct Experience):

These are things I know with 100% certainty, because I’ve experienced them directly. They are undeniable personal facts:

  • Electric waves and euphoria in the body.
  • Energy sensations, especially at the crown of the head.
  • Catching thought loops, seeing the “washing machine” in action.
  • Enhanced intuition with accurate insights.
  • DMT visions, the architecture of reality revealed.
  • Profound shifts in meditation states.
  • Physical confirmations of truth.

99% Confident (Strong Evidence, But Still a Theory):

These are things I’m 99% confident in, based on a massive amount of converging evidence—historical, scientific, and experiential. But they are still a theory, an interpretation of the data:

  • The Global Consciousness Network exists.
  • 8 billion brains are networked at a quantum level.
  • Simultaneous discoveries prove it.
  • GCP data supports it.
  • Questions collapse reality.
  • Consciousness creates matter.
honesty check i know i believe

What’s Not Yet Proven (Haven’t Experienced):

These are things I haven’t personally experienced or seen enough evidence for to claim certainty. They are still in the realm of speculation or future exploration:

  • Full out-of-body experiences (OBEs).
  • Remote viewing or astral travel.
  • 100% brain activation (as seen in the DMT vision).
  • Complete Kundalini rising (the full, sustained experience).
  • Advanced abilities some claim (like telekinesis).

This isn’t about doubt. It’s about clarity. It’s about knowing the difference between what you’ve experienced, what you strongly believe, and what’s still an open question.