Consciousness Expert and award-winning documentarian Caroline Cory, whose film “Among Us” was a core source of the information provided in Part IV: Unveiling the Phenomenon of the Sotto Voce texts, has produced another documentary that was just released in 2020.

“SUPERHUMAN: The Invisible Made Visible” is based on the jaw-dropping experiences of individuals with extra-sensory powers that seem to defy the laws of physics known to man today. Once again, Cory provides tangible and measurable proof of seemingly miraculous phenomena revolving around consciousness and the human mind.

Through a series of groundbreaking scientific experiments and demonstrations, Cory connects the dots about the true nature of your own consciousness, the relation between mind and matter, and whether individuals live in a simulated matrix or if they can have control over their physical reality and create a fulfilling human experience. The film ultimately shows that once the invisible worlds are made visible, this attained higher awareness will transform humans into superhumans.

The first of the film’s five sections reiterates our understanding of reality as explained by theoretical physicist John Hagelin and Princeton researchers Adam Curry and Dr. Jahn in Part I of the Sotto Voce texts. Dr. Dean Radin, chief scientist at the Institute of Noetic Sciences, Harvard Medical School neurosurgeon Dr. Eben Alexander, Harvard Smithsonian astrophysicist Dr. Rudy Schild, and physicist Dr. Tom Campbell provide an introduction into the research in the field of parapsychology, the intersection of consciousness theory and theoretical physics, and drive home a few familiar points: that everything is energy, consciousness is primordial, and all emergent reality stems from the field of consciousness. The physical world is, in fact, a product of the consciousness world. Everything emerges from this fundamental, proto-substance of consciousness that exists before space and time in the unified field; from that can emerge the aspects of the physical world, first in the form of superstrings and then into the particles of matter and force, and humans are just consciousnesses plugging into avatars in the physical world.

“Superhuman” provides a brief history of psi research, which includes a familiar list of credible institutions and world governments that have dedicated a wealth of resources and funding into projects like MKUltra and the CIA-funded remote viewing program led by physicist Russell Targ of the Stanford Research Institute, but the film then goes one step farther by introducing a first-time subject to the practice of remote viewing. After a few hour crash course to train her subconscious mind, actress Rachele Brook Smith tries her hand at remote viewing with surprising results, successfully identifying numerous details of her target in her first attempt at remote viewing.

The film goes on to showcase numerous experiments in which the power of the subjects’ consciousness shines, suggesting that: the physical body can react emotionally to a photo before it’s physical observed; significant changes that can be made to the pH of water through thoughts alone, as measured by neuroscientist and quantum biologist Dr. Glen Rein of the Stanford Medical School; the frequencies from sound waves can be transferred non-physically, suggested by researcher and ex-FBI agent, Ben Hansen; and psychokinesis can be performed by first-time experiencers and over great distances with very simple equipment that you can use to try yourself.

All of these segments are both so absorbing and intriguing that you may find yourself wanting to dive in and try some of them yourself. However, these advancements, which are thoroughly entertaining and certainly worth further study, may actually be life-changing for some individuals, as in the case of a woman who, after losing much of her eyesight to a incurable, genetic, degenerative disease half a lifetime ago, regained her ability to read after tapping into her unbounded field of consciousness.

The film wraps up by illustrating what the future may look like when more people have begun to embrace and tap into these superhuman abilities with a demonstration of kids reading, playing, and practicing skills of extrasensory perception while wearing blackout blindfolds. The children, many of whom started to tap into these skills at a young age, can run and jump and throw a ball as seamlessly within the physical world as if their eyes were wide open. Even more excitingly, we see that these same skills can be learned by anyone at any age.

Give a try for yourself, and let us know the results! The documentary is available on several cable and digital platforms, including Prime Video HERE.

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