Beyond Belief Movie Trailer
Posted in belief, Connection, Videos on 03/01/2011 05:50 pm by adminMovie Trailer Excerpt from the transformational film Beyond Belief www.beyondbeliefthemovie.com
Movie Trailer Excerpt from the transformational film Beyond Belief www.beyondbeliefthemovie.com
by Joe Vitale
I love gadgets.
The smaller, the better.
The more powerful, the better.
The more unique, the better.
When my four-year-old Fujitsu Lifebook started to get too sluggish, I started thinking about a new one.
I love my Blackberry 8700C for getting email and answering phone calls, but trying to view web sites on it requires a microscope. I wanted one of those new ultra-light warp-speed too-cool “laptops” to carry on planes and use out by the pool.
I looked at the new OQO long and hard. It’s under one pound and does everything but transport me from here to your house. But the website is poorly done, the model is back ordered for almost three months, and the device isn’t much bigger than my Blackberry, anyway.
I then considered the new Fujitsu Lifebook P1610. It’s about 2 pounds and can come as a double-duty tablet screen PC as well as a regular screen Windows unit.
I also knew there are lots of other makes and models out there. Trying to decide which one to get for me was getting confusing.
I bought a few gadget magazines.
I poked around online doing research.
I even went into a retail computer store, which amazingly didn’t have a single ultra-light to show me.
“They’re all on our site,” the clerk told me.
Yea, but I’m in your store, I thought, and I have money in my pocket to spend right now.
So I wrote to Fujitsu and asked them which model they would recommend from their giant catalog of products.
I also wrote to Dynamism popular gadget site that’s been around for nine years. They specialize in selling Japanese products to the US market. I wanted to know what model they would suggest, too.
Fujitsu never replied.
That was over a week go and they still haven’t replied. Very disappointing. I was a Fujitsu customer and was all set to be one again. But they ignored me.
Dynamism wrote back quickly.
They suggested the Panasonic R6. It’s 2 pounds and has an 8 hour battery life.
I bought it.
It arrived yesterday. I had some questions about operating it, so I called Dynamism. They answered the phone every time. There was never a wait. Never put on hold.
And when I asked one tech guy there if I could ask a few more questions, he laughed and said, “You can ask me anything you like. I’m here for you.”
Last night Nerissa and I went out with our friend Mark Ryan. The Mississippi waitress who took care of us had off the charts high energy, Southern charm, and a smile that made my heart sing. We loved her and her spirit.
When we asked her what kept her so happy while she served people, she said, “I’m trying to make a small difference in people’s lives.”
She ended up sitting with us at our table, after dinner, and talking to us for almost an hour.
That’s service.
That’s love.
And whether it’s from a computer store or a waitress, we all want it.
Are you giving it?
Dr. Joe Vitale is author of way too many books to mention, including the bestsellers “TheAttractor Factor,” “Life’s Missing Instruction Manual” and the head spinner: “Zero Limits.” He’s also one of the stars in the hit movie “The Secret.”Find him at http://www.MrFire.com
Joe Vitale is one of the experts featured in the documentary Beyond Belief: www.beyondbeliefthemovie.com
Excerpt from Beyond Belief interview with Timothy Freke:
What I hear at the heart of every single spiritual tradition which I’ve had the privilege of studying is essentially the same message, and it’s this, and that is things are not what they seem to be, and that we’re not who we think we are. Because this moment, this strange experience we’re having, this flow of colors and sounds, its like a collective dream, and we can wake up.
And what I’ve seen in my own experience is that waking up is comparable to the experience of lucid dreaming. So, when I dream normally I’m completely engrossed in my dream. I think I really am the particular character I happen to be dreaming myself to be. But when you dream consciously you recognize that you’re dreaming, so you are still dreaming, but you are conscious that you’re dreaming. So when I dream lucidly I recognize that, ah ha, things aren’t what they seem, and I’m not really this person in this dream world. There’s a deeper level to my identity, actually I’m Tim, who’s dreaming, and in that sense the whole of the dream is in me, and I’m one with the dream, the whole thing.
This waking up which the mystics from every time and place have talked about is the same only it’s right now while we’re awake, and that’s why I call it lucid living, because it’s just like lucid dreaming. You start to become more conscious. You start to recognize that things aren’t what they seem to be.
And that there is a deeper level to our identity, and that deeper level to our identity is much more than just Tim. And that, the life dreamer, the dreamer of this dream of life if you like, there’s one of us, there’s one of us dreaming itself to be everyone and everything and then meeting itself in all these different forms.
So the waking up happens when we become conscious of this deeper self, which Hindus call it the Atman, the Buddists call it the Buddha Lecha, the Christians, the Gnostic Christians they called it the Christ, and each one of us calls it I. We each give it the same name, and we write it like a one (1) which is kind of cute because there is 1 of it.
So here we’re separate in this dream of life and then if we become more conscious we realize there’s another element to our identity, where there’s one of us. And that I think is what spirituality at its deepest heart has always been about: waking up to that.
When we’re lost in the dream of separateness, its terrifying. It becomes a nightmare. It doesn’t look good for this. I mean look around you, it doesn’t look good. There’s illness, there’s old age, there’s death, and if we are really identified with the separate self, and we’re not terrified, we’re in denial.
And there’s a loss of, to cope with that there’s a numbness. We become more unconscious. If we don’t lighten up we tighten up. We become stuck in our story about who we are, and we start to even forget we’re really alive. Once we begin to pay attention to the moment, then you can reverse that process. You start to wake up, and you come to life. For me its very much like I remember, I’m alive. Oh, I forgot that I’m here at all.
And when you do that suddenly the colors are richer, the body is pleasurable, just to breath can be such a fantastic experience. And you are aware of the miracle of your own existence, which you don’t even notice when you are asleep in the dream, you don’t even notice the most obvious thing about our predicament which, that a life is this awesome, breathtaking mystery. But pay it attention, and all that comes into focus.
Timothy Freke is one of the experts featured in the documentary Beyond Belief. Get the DVD at: www.beyondbeliefthemovie.com
by Sandra Anne Taylor
Balancing the activity of the heart and mind is a very important factor in your energy projection and an important step in changing what you attract to your life. So many people live their whole life in their mind, always analyzing, thinking about their problems, and worrying too much. If this is the type of energy your mind engages in most, it’s time to make a shift to a heart-centered consciousness.
The function of the mind is to contemplate and analyze what is or could be valuable in one’s life, yet the function of the heart is to experience value and appreciate all the value that’s already present. The heart feels joy while the mind spends much of its time searching for it, and wondering why it always seems so elusive. This is the constant schism in which we find ourselves. We’re always so busy worrying about how to be happy that we’re dismissing our power to find happiness in our heart right now.
But you can break this pattern and start to develop a joyous, heart-centered consciousness, one that will create a much more positive and magnetic vibration in your life. An easy technique can shift your negative mental focus almost immediately. Try this process and you’ll see a real difference in how you feel – and soon you’ll find a real difference in the results you’re attracting, too.
When you catch yourself worrying about something or when you’re annoyed or dissatisfied, use your power of choice to shift your consciousness from the anxiety of your head to the peace of your heart. Take a deep breath, close your eyes, and relax your muscles. Visualize your problem lifting up and floating away like a cloud on the horizon.
Take another deep breath, and as you inhale, sense the energy of your mind quieting down; feel your awareness slowly dropping down into your heart center. Just relax, keep letting go of all concerns, and focus your consciousness on your heart.
Then, as you continue to loosen up, let yourself think about something that makes you happy, that you appreciate. Whether it’s a bright memory, a person you love, or a beautiful place that you’ve visited, let yourself picture that now. Visualize all the details, and put yourself right in the center of the picture. Bring it up close, and make it vivid and colorful, immersing yourself in that happy situation.
Feel the joy and let yourself smile. You’re so relaxed, happy and peaceful. This is the state of heartfelt appreciation, the warm feeling of grateful acceptance. Hold on to it. Know that its ultimate form is loving your life, and when you go back to your daily activities, choose to find gladness and peace in all that you do.
Joyous appreciation is the heart’s most magnetic vibration. It is such an important energy that it can’t be overemphasized. It brings serenity in the release of striving and allows you to rejoice in what you already have – opening your heart to receiving even more. Every moment spent in this resonance creates a highly attractive vibration and a powerfully creative consciousness. Along with self-honoring, it’s one of the most life-changing things that you can do!
I often tell my clients that there’s more than one meaning to the word appreciate. The one we’re talking about here is in the present moment – in your heart right now. But when referring to commodities such as real estate, the term means “to increase in value” – which is an absolute energetic truth. Your life will have greater worth when you choose to appreciate it. When you create a real consciousness of the quality of your days, you bring more value there. And choosing to experience joy in the present moment means that your jubilant energy will magnetize much more to enjoy in the future.
Affirmations for Heartfelt Appreciation:
Sandra Anne Taylor is one of the experts featured in the documentary Beyond Belief. Get the DVD at:www.beyondbeliefthemovie.com
by Jonathan Ellerby Ph.D. (part two)
Of all the things that people have in common around the world, stress and suffering rank at the top of the list. Regardless of how much you make, your age, looks, culture, or job, you likely do not escape frustration and aggravation with ease – it’s a part of being on planet earth. Fortunately, we also share the ability to rise above these things, and in many cases we can even learn to heal the stress and suffering in our lives. Spiritual traditions have long been the refuge from stress with simple techniques and philosophies that can transform daily life.
It is easy to feel that stress and suffering are unavoidable or that somehow you are doomed to face them again and again. This helpless feeling stems from the mistaken assumption that our emotions need to drive our decisions and our lives. The strong emotions that create suffering are rooted in either hurts of the past or unfulfilled expectations of the present.
A spouse, friend, or boss that talks to you the way a parent did while in a cruel or impatient mood will trigger the same old feelings, as if you were a child encountering the hurt again. If you have an expectation that people should always be polite or that airplanes should always be on time or that traffic should not be heavy when you are late, then you will consistently encounter the stress of that disappointment.
A spiritual perspective says that emotions like anger, anxiety, and sadness are normal and need to be felt, but when it comes to making decisions and taking action, we need to look deeper. It is possible to be less driven by old hurts and release the tight grip on unrealistic expectations. Learning about the power of perception and the mind-body connection can turn everything around. Here are six timeless techniques for managing or ending stress and suffering.
(continued from part one..)
FOUR: Learn from Everything
Another common spiritual perspective that transforms hard times is to look for the lesson in each situation life presents. Even the most unpleasant and unexpected situations can offer you a great chance to learn what to do better next time or what to avoid or heal in your life. This is about the power of optimism and the ability to take a disappointment and turn it into something that makes you a better person.
Failed relationships can teach you things like the importance of having clear boundaries, the importance of good communication, the importance of trust, or how to let go of self-doubt. A loss of work can open a door to find new opportunities, refine your focus on what gives you joy, or show you where you have things to improve.
People who learn from each situation are always bettering themselves and bettering their chances at not running into a wall again. They understand that you will always be happier and less stressed if you learn to define your situations, instead of letting your situations define you.
FIVE: Set Inner Intentions
One of the biggest hooks that catches most people in life is attachment to outer goals and desires. Spiritual traditions have long been warning people about how dangerous it is to place all your hopes and intentions on wealth, sex, beauty, a dream house, and clothing. These things come and go and are based on things we cannot always control. Even the most wealthy find that possessions can be taken away at a moment’s notice, and the desires of life often go unfulfilled.
An inner intention is a goal that is based on the type of person you want to be. It is about growing your character. It is about being more balanced and mature. The desires to be peaceful, loving, kind, or patient are all examples of inner intentions. If my goal is to love myself or be kind, then, no matter what happens, I can practice working toward that goal. In contrast, if my goal is never to be alone, I might fall apart every time a relationship ends. Inner intentions are goals we can take responsibility for and influence through choice. Outer intentions are like traps waiting to go off in our lives. Learn to let go of expectations about things that are beyond your control! Commit to one inner intention for the week. Try being grateful, non-judgmental, or kind.
SIX: Commit to a Spiritual Practice
A spiritual practice is a regular time out from life to do something that helps you to feel at peace, learn about yourself, and connect to a sense of what is important. It is a time apart from stress and helps put pain and loss in perspective. It could be taking a daily walk in nature (without cell phone), meditation before work, prayer before bed, yoga, Tai Chi, bible study, volunteering at the hospital, or working in a garden. The key is to make it regular, intentional, and a non-competitive, non-work related activity. It should last long enough that you get a real break from the rush and demands of life.
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About the Author: Jonathan Ellerby, Ph.D., Spiritual Program Director for the highly acclaimed Canyon Ranch Health Resorts, has a doctoral degree in Comparative Religions and has traveled throughout the world, studying with spiritual teachers from more than 40 cultural traditions. He is the author of a new book published by Hay House, Return to the Sacred: Ancient Pathways to Spiritual Awakening. Jonathan Ellerby is also an interfaith minister and leads workshops, retreats, guided travel journeys, and trainings.
Jonathan Ellerby is one of the experts featured in the documentary Beyond Belief: www.beyondbeliefthemovie.com
by Jonathan Ellerby, Ph.D.
Of all the things that people have in common around the world, stress and suffering rank at the top of the list. Regardless of how much you make, your age, looks, culture, or job, you likely do not escape frustration and aggravation with ease – it’s a part of being on planet earth. Fortunately, we also share the ability to rise above these things, and in many cases we can even learn to heal the stress and suffering in our lives. Spiritual traditions have long been the refuge from stress with simple techniques and philosophies that can transform daily life.
It is easy to feel that stress and suffering are unavoidable or that somehow you are doomed to face them again and again. This helpless feeling stems from the mistaken assumption that our emotions need to drive our decisions and our lives. The strong emotions that create suffering are rooted in either hurts of the past or unfulfilled expectations of the present.
A spouse, friend, or boss that talks to you the way a parent did while in a cruel or impatient mood will trigger the same old feelings, as if you were a child encountering the hurt again. If you have an expectation that people should always be polite or that airplanes should always be on time or that traffic should not be heavy when you are late, then you will consistently encounter the stress of that disappointment.
A spiritual perspective says that emotions like anger, anxiety, and sadness are normal and need to be felt, but when it comes to making decisions and taking action, we need to look deeper. It is possible to be less driven by old hurts and release the tight grip on unrealistic expectations. Learning about the power of perception and the mind-body connection can turn everything around. Here are six timeless techniques for managing or ending stress and suffering.
ONE: Breathe
When stress rises, the body moves in to a reaction mode: the body tightens, the mind races, and it is hard to gain a better perspective. Try taking some deep breaths. Breathe in through the nose, and instead of puffing your chest out, try imagining that you are sending the breath into your belly – push your stomach muscles out. Then, notice where you are tense or tight, and imagine you are breathing it all out your mouth, slowly and easily. When you are in a difficult moment, take at least 2 full minutes to be with your breath.
TWO: Stick to the Facts
One way we create our experience of stress and suffering is through emotional ideas like worry and regret. Instead of keeping our attention in the present moment and focusing on the limited truth we know for certain, too often we spend our energy on worrying about things that haven’t happened, or we dwell on the past we regret. Remember, “sticking to the facts” doesn’t include judgments like “she’s wrong” or “he’s a fool” or “what if I lose my job?” Those are emotional ideas, not facts.
A fact sounds like this “all I know is that he is late, but I don’t know why.” An emotional idea sounds like “he is late because he is selfish and doesn’t care. I must be a pushover.” A fact sounds like this “lots of people are losing their jobs these days, and some fall on hard times, and some find new work.” An emotional idea sounds like this “I am so worried every day I go into work. What if I lose my job and then cannot pay my bills and car payment – I cannot concentrate.” Learn to limit those thoughts, and stick to the facts.
THREE: Forgive
The cornerstone of most spiritual philosophies lies in learning to forgive. Forgiveness does not mean that you pretend you are not hurt by someone or something, nor does it mean you condone a cruel or harmful act. Forgiveness does mean that you are committed to letting go of the energy, stories, and actions you have become caught up in. Forgiveness means that you are committed to letting go and moving on. It doesn’t start with a feeling; it starts with a decision. Start by changing the way you act and think, and then, eventually, the feelings will follow.
For example, if you have been hurt by a coworker or a romantic partner, you can invest a lot of time in complaining to friends, gossiping, and reviewing the offense in your head. Or you can say that being hurt once is enough, see that each time you replay it you are only hurting yourself again, and learn to change the topic.
Each time we encounter stress or hurt there is a small chance to practice forgiveness. The quicker we forgive a situation and accept it for what it is, the quicker we end our suffering and move on to better things.
TO BE CONTINUED in Part Two…
Jonathan Ellerby is one of the experts featured in the documentary Beyond Belief: www.beyondbeliefthemovie.com
Following is an excerpt from interview with Maisha Hazzard for the documentary Beyond Belief
Well if I give you a little background about my life, I began life in the home of a United Methodist Minister, who was actually a scientist turned minister. So from the very beginning of my life I lived with parents who consistently talked about science. My father talked about microbiology all of the time. He talked all the time about us being light. That you don’t really see me, that I am light, that everything is energy, and what you see are really light rays coming from my physical body. He talked about how mass is really light compressed to the point of visibility, or the point of materiality.
So my life began with an awareness that there is something magnificent taking place in each and every one of us, and each one of us is a unique and glorious emanation of the divine. He also told us that within each and every one of us was an intelligence. That there was nothing that we could not do. That it was possible to do everything because at the very center of our being, there is this intelligence that is aware of everything in the universe. Every idea that has ever come into humanity, come to this planet earth through humanity, has come from this intelligence.
As I went through school I became aware that I could tap into this infinite intelligence and I could consciously actually ask for information and get it. My education wasn’t really from books, it wasn’t about what teachers were giving to me or imparting to me, but it was what was being drawn forth from within me.
As a teenager when I moved to California I ran into Dr Joseph Murphy, author of Power of Your Subconscious Mind and that meeting with Dr Murphy coupled with what I learned from my parents brought me to a new understanding about what is possible for human beings.
So as I went thru school, I would have a meditation everyday. Matter of fact, for every hour of studying I did, I had at least 20 minutes that was meditation, and 40 minutes of reading.
And if it was a really tough subject, something that I wasn’t grasping very quickly then I would reverse it and it would be 40 minutes of meditation and 20 minutes of actually reading the subject matter.
And my meditation focused on the fact that there is an infinite intelligence that knows everything there is to know about everything in the universe, and is available to me. My mind is the mind of god, that every mind is the mind of god, every individualized aspect of mind is really part of the one mind. So in my meditation I would say infinite intelligence knows everything there is to know about this subject, and reveals to me everything I need to know, as I need to know it. And I would add that infinite intelligence even knows what it is the professor is going to ask and the answers they are looking for.
Because anyone who’s gone to school knows, you can study for many hours, you can read everything that you were told to read, and on an exam you may not come up with the exact answer that the professor was looking for because you didn’t quite know what their area of greatest interest was within any particular subject.
So I ask, as I sit, infinite intelligence reveal to me everything I need to know about this subject, everything this professor is going to ask and everything this professor really wants to know about so I can get my A.
And I began to discover that it worked. That just before I would go to class to take the exam or just before I sat down to write paper, that an idea would kind of drop down into my conscious reasoning mind and I would follow through with it. Sometimes I would get the message to go back and read certain passages and I would go back and invariably when I would show up in class that’s what the test would be!
Maisha Hazzard is one of the experts featured in the transformational documentary Beyond Belief: www.beyondbeliefthemovie.com
The producers of Beyond Belief are proud to announce that Beyond Words Publishing is now distributing Beyond Belief media products, and will be at the International New Age Trade Show (INATS) on June 26, where Julia Cameron will be appearing, along with Gary Zukav, Denise Linn, Marianne Williamson, Joan Borysenko, Lisa Williams and John Holland.
Beyond Words Publishing has distributed films such as The Secret, The Living Matrix, Hidden Messages in Water, and promoted transformational leaders such as Michael Beckwith, John Assaraf, Wayne Dyer, Dr Masaru Emoto, and many more.
Beyond Word Publishing is a ‘partner in transformation’ and works to inspire people to gain wholeness, to learn, grow and find solutions, with many books published in over 40 languages, including many bestsellers, in addition to their DVD and CD distribution.
Present Course Media, LLC. is grateful to be in partnership with such a powerful community of transformational leaders.
by Rev. Greta Sesheta, Minister at Agape Intl Spiritual Center
(excerpt from interview for the documentary)
To awaken to your life’s purpose is an opportunity. to awaken, to listen, to do what we call lowly listening. To get still, to get quiet, to move into a place of serenity, and actually, listen. Sometimes this involves asking a question. And it’s important to ask the right question; the questions that will get you the results that you’re hoping for.
So the questions would not be for example, “Why is this happening to me?”, which then just brings up all of the justifications, the excuses, and keeps me in the place of a victim, but the question might be, “What is it that’s happening now? What is it that’s wanting to be experienced by me? What is it that’s wanting to express itself as me?”
And then having asked the question, listen, and be aware of the ways that the question might be answered. It might be something that I hear, it might be just a sense that I have about things. There might be a sign or a symbol somewhere, even in a bumper sticker. The signs are all around us. Listening, asking the questions, being aware, being open, being receptive to the answers that you get.
To move out of judgement about what the answers might be, or my preconceived ideas about what a good answer is, or what the answer wasn’t that I was looking for, but to be open to the divine wisdom, guidance, and direction that is within me and is all around.
I think that meditation, having a time of quiet reflection and contemplation is like it’s a requirement for the day. Start the day with it, end the day with it. Take a couple of moments, it doesn’t have to be hours and hours. It can just be, on the breath, an inhalation, and exhalation, breathing in the breath of god, a meditation.
And reflective reading, reading things that inspire and uplift me and support my ideas and stretch my imagination in terms of what is possible for my life.
I think that being of service is very importaint in the community. Wherever it is that I am, where I can support someone, that I can offer, that I can give a smile, that I can share something of myself, that I can volunteer my time. Any way of being in service to some greater good, within community is the idea of come unity, people coming together. Like minded people coming together to grow and to share together. Those are very important tools.
Greta Sesheta is one of 24 experts featured in the inspiring documentary Beyond Belief. To see the trailer and get the DVD go to: www.beyondbeliefthemovie.com
by Amit Goswami
There was a revolution in physics at the beginning of the last century, consisting of the discovery of quantum physics. The message of quantum physics is this: the world is not made of matter neither is it determined entirely by material causation.
To be sure, the mathematics of quantum physics predicts objects and their movements not as determined events (as in Newtonian physics) but as possibilities. And yet when we look at a quantum object, we don’t experience it as a bundle of possibilities, but as actual localized event much like a Newtonian particle. How do the possibilities become actualities of experience simply by our looking at them? This is the mysterious “observer effect.”
In quantum language, the model translates like this. Possible movements of elementary particle make up possible movements of atoms, make up possible movements of molecules, make up possible movements of cells, make up possible brain states, make up consciousness. Consciousness itself then is a conglomerate of possibilities, called a wave of possibility.
We Create Our Own Reality, But . . .
It was in the nineteen seventies that the physicist Fred Alan Wolf created the evocative phrase “we create our own reality.” The images the phrase evoked led, however, to many disappointments. Some people tried to manifest personal automobiles, others vegetable gardens in desert environments, and still others at least a parking space for their cars in busy downtown areas. Everybody was inspired by the theory of quantum creation, no doubt, but the results of their efforts were a mixed bag because they were unaware some subtleties.
We create our own reality, but there is a subtlety in consciousness. We do not create reality in our ordinary state of consciousness, but in a non-ordinary state of consciousness. This becomes clear when you ponder the paradox of Wigner’s friend. Eugene Wigner was the Nobel laureate physicist who first thought of the paradox.
Imagine that Wigner is approaching a quantum traffic light with two possibilities, red and green; at the same time his friend is approaching the same light from the perpendicular road. Being busy Americans, they both choose green. Unfortunately, their choices are contradictory; if both choices materialize at the same time, there would be pandemonium. Obviously, only one of their choices counts, but whose?
After many decades, three physicists at different places and times (Ludwig Bass in Australia, myself at Oregon, and Casey Blood at Rutgers, New Jersey), independently discovered the solution of the paradox: consciousness is one, nonlocal and cosmic, behind the two people’s local individuality. They both choose but from this nonordinary state of one consciousness (which I call the quantum self) where there is no local individuality or selfishness so contradiction can be avoided. This allows the common sense result that in many such crossings, Wigner and his friend each would get green fifty percent of the time; yet for any individual crossing, a creative opportunity for getting green is left open for each.
So the new paradigm of reality based on the rediscovery of consciousness within science is not only giving us back our free will, but also is identifying the source of that free will as the spirit within us, the oneness that spiritual and healing traditions have always propounded. The new paradigm is showing us great promise for integrating science and spirit. It is also promising a breakthrough integral approach to medicine that integrates conventional and alternative medicine. Read my book, The Quantum Doctor, for the latest development on this.
Amit Goswami appeared in What The Bleep Do We Know, and is one of 24 experts featured in the powerful film Beyond Belief. To see the trailer and get the DVD go to: www.beyondbeliefthemovie.com