According to P.M.H. Atwater, an investigator into near-death experiences, future memory allows people to “live” life in advance and remember the experience in detail when something triggers that memory. Atwater explains the unifying, and permanent, effect of that experience is a “brain shift” which she believes “may be at the very core of existence itself.”

The Fourth Mind is the first book ever to explore the anatomy, brains, genetics, beliefs and capabilities of the unknown entities the author refers to as “the visitors.” He maintains that they have a set of abilities he describes as a “fourth mind” that include such powers as telepathy, levitation, the ability to move heavy objects without machinery, and many others.

In John J. Prendergast’s decades of experience as a psychotherapist and spiritual teacher, the area of the body that’s most difficult for people to connect with, given our survival fear and trauma, is our physical and energetic ground. This area in the lower belly and at the base of the spine corresponds with the root chakra in the Indian subtle body tradition, the lower dan tien in Taoism, and the hara in Japanese martial arts. While most spiritual traditions focus on opening the mind and the heart, they tend to avoid or undervalue the opening of the ground.

Welcome to a world where participants in psychology experiments respond to pictures they haven’t seen yet… where physicists influence the past behavior of a light beam by measuring its photons now… and where dreamers and writers literally remember their future. This landmark text explores the principles that allow the future to affect the present, and the present to affect the past, without causing paradox.

Extraordinary Human Experiences (EHEs) include the near-death and out-of-body experience, extrasensory perception, synchronicities, reincarnation, spiritual awakenings, effects from psychoactive drugs, altered states of consciousness, and interactions with unidentified aerial phenomena and non-human intelligences, among others. The meaning and implication of EHEs have not been addressed by the scientific community, yet, they have impacted millions who consider them “realer than real,” facilitating the enduring fascination and curiosity of the unexplained and the boundaries of human consciousness.
