Look at this interesting thing I noticed. Imagine there are ancient Egyptians — and they’re already somewhere in the future — but we come into contact with their history: artifacts, pyramids. And do you realize that there is now a past, but not our past from when we were born — there’s now a past of a new civilization that will come after us and will find my books? But that past is not the future. They will think I’m Aristotle or Homer or someone like that. Can you imagine? So it turns out I’m already influencing both the future and the past — and they are already reading this not only in the future, but also in the past. Do you see how? That’s the kind of thing I saw.
And another interesting thing — when I was watching the series “Smallville,” there was something about butterflies, that they live very briefly, and then there was a person who had turned into a kind of spider, and the temperature in his room was different. And that’s exactly an interesting point — that temperature is rhythm, tempo, and that all these insects, all these animals, they all live on entirely different rhythms, and their perception of life cycles is different. And to us it may seem sad that a dog lives only 15 years, but for the dog those 15 years might feel like 150 — you see? I’ve written about this before. It’s just that here it’s interesting how it ties specifically to temperature — how we can link it, who has what ideal temperature, or what the body temperature is not for humans but for insects or animals — they have different temperatures, so that means our future standard temperature shouldn’t be 36.6°C, but something else. Because if it stays the same, we’ll remain in this world. But we’re supposed to be in a different one later — so our temperature must be different. Just a theory.
P.S. And when you’re sitting with someone in the same room, and one of you is cold and the other is hot — what does that tell you? You’re from different worlds!!!