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Posts Tagged ‘transforming’

Understanding Enhanced Vision is a Life Transforming Key to Success

December 11th, 2008 by Admin | No Comments | Filed in Uncategorized

New advances in neuroscience and medicine have discovered and shown that the perception of vision is based in the brain, not they eyes.

One of the implications of this discovery is that a person’s vision and even life can be changed and even transformed by adding new visual information to the brain.

The eyes transmit impressions of light to the brain. That accounts for ten percent (10%) of the vision process. The brain then decodes these received impressions by comparing them to may previously stored visual memories. This occurs so quickly that it seems to be instantaneous.

A person whose life experience has included being visually exposed to many different people, places and things has a larger visual reference, and thus functional visual intelligence. We actually better see, and notice more… and then more when we have prior visual references for a person place or thing.

In the Twentieth Century advertisers learned that a product needed rand recognition to become successful. Many campaigns for new products were and are based on creating this recognition rather than acquiring sales, as sales follow recognition.

Although it was understood that sales follow recognition of a product the fuller recognition of the fact that people are almost blind to new products was not understood. The brain needs visual memories of a people place or thing to decode and actually see more of it. The more memories, the better a person can see a product.

This understanding can also be used to understand social relationships and how they are fostered and maintained. The more a person sees and relates to someone, the closer one feels, even if that person is not actually appreciated or liked! The more an actor or politician is seen the better the chances their films and shows will be watched or that they will be elected.

The brain can also be trained to see more by purposefully looking at new people, places or things. This can be done in person or through images in printed or online media. While viewing the latest toothpaste may not be the most brain enhancing, studies have shown that viewing people from different cultures, who one is not usually exposed to helps one learn to see and actually distinguish their faces more readily. This is looking for the sake of looking, just as one does when one visits and art museum or galleries.

Although art lovers, and certainly patrons and collectors tend to be on a higher economic basis, and are thus thought to be more intelligent, which came first the chicken or egg conundrum begins to apply. Clearly people who regularly visit art museums, galleries and look at people. Places or things are busy increasing their visual intelligence and ability.

Art can also be purposefully used to expand or enhance one’s ability to see more, thus increasing visual and actual intelligence. Actual intelligence is improved as memories, including visual ones are actual things. The more different memories one has the more one actually physically expands one’s brain. The more different kinds of visual memories one has the greater the chance that the brain can decode a new impression of a person, place or thing, making one more functionally intelligent.

The more different kinds of visual memories one has the greater the chance that the brain can decode a new impression of a person, place or thing, making one more functionally intelligent.

Post Conceptual UnGraven Image are is unique as it reveals the energy that the eyes see but the brain has few, if any visual memories of to use. Seeing this art one begins to build visual memories that are eventually used by the brain, creating an enhanced vision.

There is even a book about this, The Art of Seeing The Divine , which includes a series of Exercise/Experiences created to help the reader easily and quickly create more energy seeing visual memories.


Sag Harbor Bridge Sunset

Genesis Sunset Sunrise series

Apparently when one has enough visual memories of energy the brain begins to decode prior memories of emotion, including unwanted or negative emotion that pop up, usually unconsciously, during the ongoing visual decoding process as simply more energy. The viewer experiences fewer feelings of unwanted anger, fear, hurt, etc., which were previously triggered during the visual decoding process, but are now decoded as just more visual energy. This does not mean the feelings are resolved, it means that during the day they are not constantly restimulated.

This new scientific understanding about the brain’s dominant role in vision also explains why people who read more are better readers, and can be applied readily to other aspects of education. A person can apply it when attempting to learn anything new, because knowing that at first one needs to keep looking, building visual memories, means greater tolerance and achievement through the natural learning process. Visual repetition can be a key to success.

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Divine Eyes and Ayes – Transforming Vision

October 31st, 2008 by Admin | No Comments | Filed in Uncategorized

The word Divine has two i‘s in it.

The aural pun and reference to the words eyes and ayes is intended and meaningful.

Yesterday this blog moved from another software and site to be hosted through The Art of Seeing The Divine web site and host using WordPress software.

Since the spring of ’08 the new web host has always provided excellent technical assistance. They helped set up the Art and Inspiration blog for Post Conceptual UnGraven Image, which also uses WordPress.

However yesterday, the very nice and helpful tech person mispelled the word Divine as Devine.

After I had listed the new site with technorati, I actually looked at it today and noticed the misspelling!

I was so busy yesterday configuring and recoding and creating the theme, adding widgets, moving posts, etc., that I assumed I knew what I was seeing. My eyes actually know the word, Devine as it is the last name of actor Andy Devine, so they did not alert me to the problem — until this morning.

As a writer, I have a difficult time catching my own typos until days, even weeks later. I love spell checking!  I tend to see what I think I see or wrote. The old proofreaders trick of reading the piece out loud fails me as I will read aloud what I meant to write, at least for the first day.

Anyway having the title misspelled for a day gave me an insight.  There are two letter i’s in the word Divine.

Visually if you look at the word it kind of resembles a nose -v- (the letter V) stuck between the two eyes (letter i’s).  If those i’s were rotated 45 degrees the effect would be obvious.  Here is how the eyes would look on their sides:  ._  ._

Unfortunately the text formatting will not allow me to configure the V between those eyes, but you can imagine that easily.

The visual image of that nose and eyes indicates both a sense of The Divine looking at us through the word — or us, being enables to look though the Divine. The idea of having Divine vision can actually be seen as embodied in the word divine.

This is meaningful to me since I am all about helping people see the Divine essences.

The I realized that the play of sounds in English — eye and aye are pronounced the same — adds another level of positive or affirmative information.

Seeing more, even in something as simple as a word is how we learn.

The more meaning something has for us — the more perceptual references — the more we actually physically perceive it.  Perceptual references expand oyr brains, and we gain the capacity to think smarter. We can form or recognize good ideas and “see” relationships or connections. This helps empower us and bring success in life.

That is what The Art of Seeing The Divine is about and what the visual information and exercises help a person successfully accomplish.

This kind of learning — brain growing, empowering and perceptual is fun, or at least interesting.  It can change your life.

From now on when you look at the word, Divine, you will have the memory of this blog, and the visual information of the “nose (V) and eyes (i’s) tucked into the middle of the word. The word will have new meaning.

I will never see the word Divine in the former way again– or mistake Devine for Divine!

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