Monday, November 4, 2013

be a chess master

"The chess master sits at the board. Now this is a metaphor. The board represents the puzzles and realities of life which we are going to call 3D. You live and you walk in the 3D. And the puzzles are based upon gravity, height, width, depth and time. All of these things are your reality and this is how you work. You have got to fit into all of them. And you do. And it’s the chess board of life. And before you make a move, as a chess master, what are you going to do? You are going to evaluate the potential reaction of your move. And there may be five or six of those depending on the puzzle before you: how many people are involved, sitting in a chair, talking to your boss; what is it?

Now the chess master is not done, for he will look at the highest potential of what that might be the reaction and plan the move around that reaction. Now he is up to two moves. He is looking at the potential future of what might happen based on his projections and experience and intuition. He is calling upon an innate ability that not many have - a mind that computes future potentials. Now he is on his third move. What would happen if this took place and that took place, and he moved here and there? What would that cause from those players around him on the puzzle? What might they do? What is the highest potential? What if they did nothing and gave him another potential? What would he do then? He's up to four moves.


Do you see where this is going? You are not a chess master unless you've got five moves ahead. You have got to look at every potential that might occur. And what that opponent, the one who has to interface with you might do. Up to five moves. Can you imagine the brain power it takes for this? And then he moves his piece. The chess master has a certain amount of time to compute that. He does and he sits there. You can watch his brain move, as he looks around the board and examines life.”
He knows the future projection of the choices.


Learn more when you listen to Lee Carroll's presentation "Conceptual Consciousness" in Kansas City on July 27, 2013.