Time Travel Experiments with The Stephen Gibbs HDR
Time Travel Experiments with The Stephen Gibbs HDR
Published on January 11th, 2010 @ 07:08:37 pm , using 1530 words, 904 views
Although it will be difficult, I'm determined to do a series of tests of the Steven Gibbs HyperDimensional Resonator (HDR) that I bought some years ago, along with a couple of his books on how to use it. That's not going to be easy to do, since it doesn't fit very well into ordinary life, but I'm going to try it anyway.
What I have, as you can see in the photo here, is a weird black box. When it arrived, there were no labels on any of the controls or switches, only an instruction book that has to be one of the most garbled things I've ever read, full of ramblings about Jesus and intermittent strings of technical information that might sometimes apply to this machine. So the operating method is not clear, and the designer of the machine says it could be dangerous if you don't get it right. Not the sort of thing that inspires confidence.
Since I'm an electronics technician myself I'm not scared of black boxes. Looking at the circuit diagram is enough to show me that there's nothing unusual here except the electromagnet, which is wound to produce a cycling EM field at about 8 Hz. That's the magic vibrational frequency for a lot of interesting mental things, except this is a field strong enough to feel. Makes sense if the machine is
supposed to produce physical effects. But the rest of it is pretty normal, except that in real terms it doesn't do anything. The control circuit is just some components lined up in a row, with knobs that you turn but which don't actually affect the circuit. That's radionics for you. It's only symbolic technology, like the headset/headband of the HDR which is a coil telephone cord you wear around your brain. Supposedly it picks up brainwave emissions and feeds them to the machine. I don't believe that, either.
On the other hand, there's a lot of strange stuff I do believe and I see that reflected here as well, so I'm going to give it an earnest try. That's means a series of trials, since even for experienced users the thing only works about ten per cent of the time.
Here's the operating procedure I used last night (actually it's wrong, so I'll be changing it next time -- been awhile since I did this):
Plug the device in, sit on the floor in front of it with the headband on, and look around the room carefully to make sure all the computer gear is turned off. Weird things have been known to happen with the HDR and I don't want to blow up my equipment.
Flip the switch I've labeled "Clear Witness Well" to the On position. That makes the red light on the front panel come on, and so far as I can tell that's all it does do. There's a little compartment in the front panel with a double terminated quartz crystal in it, which is called the Witness Well. You're supposed to activate this switch for a couple of minutes to clear the crystal of any previous intention you placed in it. Easy enough to do, and I often forget to turn the switch off during the rest of the procedure. It makes me feel like the machine is on because the light glows.
Follow up:
The next switch is the multi-dimensional stabilizer. That's supposed to hold a gateway open once it forms, or something like that anyway -- it's hard to figure out from the instructions I received, so I turn it on just in case it's important. Electronically that a part of the circuit that seems pretty decorative in electronic terms.
Somewhere along in here you're supposed to find the setting on the control knobs by rubbing a fingertip across the blank portion of the front panel until your finger sticks. At the same time you slowly turn a knob, stopping when the finger sticks to the panel. OK, this is ouija board stuff, and ouija has never ever worked for me. My numbers are usually either .001 or 9.999 if I use this method, so if I don't have a number string in mind I'll just use a random number generator on the computer to punch one up. This time I'm using a string of numbers I received a few weeks ago in a dream. I hoped they were winning lottery numbers, they turned out not to be, so I'm trying them here.
Next stage is actually turning on the HDR (the top switch). You can do that with the other switches on, or with either or both of the other switches off. Apparently you should turn off the Witness Well clearing switch, and the MDS should be on -- but I've never been sure of that procedure due to the cluttered logic of the manual.
The first time I ever did this I was scared. Lots of people have written about how they think the HDR is too powerful to be safe -- Art Bell comes to mind immediately. The HDR Gibbs sent him is still in a closet someplace, untested. The machine is featured in the movie Weird Science, where it's portrayed as exceptionally painful, and there are all sorts of strange stories about how it causes odd things to happen in surrounding electrical circuitry, sometimes even levitating off the ground.
I've seen none of that happen. In fact, when I turn mine on I'm never sure it's on. The only way I know for certain is to hold a magnet close to the EM device. Then it's obvious the thing turns on and off, because it is truly powerful at least up close, and it vibrates at that critical frequency like a pit bull chewing on your wrist. But, if you place up close to your body center (the next step) you don't feel anything more than an odd warmth, very gentle. There's no pain, and it actually feels pretty good. There's probably just enough iron in a person's red blood cells to physically react to the field -- what I feel from it is a very slight, almost subliminal vibration.
After three to five minutes of sitting focused on the target intention (in this case a string of numbers that has no meaning to me at all except that I picked them up while remote viewing Ukraine) you simple shut the machine down, turning off all switches and unplugging the unit from the AC outlet.
The next phase is what I usually can't do -- relax and rest and let things happen. Without the physical structure of a portal the HDR is said to enhance the chances of an astral projection or out of body experience. It isn't direct physical teleportation through time, unless you have the required architecture for that. Usually when I've tried the machine out, I haven't had the opportunity to give the process a chance to unfold.
Today, I got up after sleeping for about five hours and hooked up to the HDR, going through the whole procedure before going back to bed. I looked for anything unusual during the whole sequence and saw nothing at all to report. But while sleeping I did have an interesting dream, though it's not an unusual thing for me anyway. This particular type of dream is connected to the effects of some other old meditational systems I know and have successfully practiced. Without that prior experience I wouldn't have recognized it as anything special.
In the dream I was getting ready to go someplace in a car, but the only road available was a driveway with a small circular parking lot at the end where I started, a rough dirt track leading uphill to another even rougher turnaround with no exit. It was just a back-and-forth road. You couldn't do anything more than drive to the one end, turn around, and drive back. I did this several times, looking for a way out, and found nothing.
The last time I did this, at the top of the hill I found a place that looked just barely passable, with a few tracks in it to show that someone had gotten out that way before. There were deep dunes of gravel in that spot, loosely piled over very muddy ground. I gunned the engine and plowed through to a highway, running a stop sign at the intersection because if I had stopped I'd have been stuck there.
Suddenly I was in a very clear experience, with a very physical perception of my surroundings: a two lane paved road in hilly country, green growth scattered here and there among the winter killed grass on the slopes. I did not recognize the area, but kept going awhile to explore a bit. I didn't go far, just down into a valley past another intersection, without encountering any structures or signs.
So it was interesting, but not very productive, and the only thing that happened that was at all unusual.
I'll give this another try soon and post the results here.
Links:
http://www.spacetimetravel.org/wurmlochflug/wurmlochflug.html

