I’m not crazy. Here are the facts:
Studies show 84% of people report “meaningful coincidences.” The 1998 Weizmann Institute proved observation literally changes quantum reality. Recent neuroscience confirms all perception is “controlled hallucinations” - your brain constructs everything you see. Carl Jung and physicist Wolfgang Pauli spent decades documenting synchronicity. The Journal of Cosmology published papers showing consciousness shapes physical reality.
The research exists. It’s just scattered across different fields because nobody’s connecting the dots.
Here’s how I connected them: If consciousness creates perception (neuroscience), and observation changes reality (quantum physics), and meaningful coincidences happen to most people (psychology), and consciousness interfaces with physical systems (Frontiers in Psychology, 2022), then we’re not passive observers. We’re active programmers of our own experience.
This isn’t a new idea. Philosophers have been saying this for centuries. Berkeley argued reality only exists when consciousness observes it. Kant showed we can never know reality itself, only our mental construction of it. Hegel said the universe is consciousness knowing itself. Schopenhauer declared “The world is my representation.” William James proved consciousness actively shapes experience rather than just receiving it.
These brilliant minds knew we were creating reality. They just didn’t have the internet to test it. They didn’t have neuroscience proving perception is “controlled hallucination.” They didn’t have quantum physics showing observation changes matter. They didn’t have studies documenting that 84% of people experience meaningful coincidences.
I have all of that. Plus I can document everything in real time and test it immediately.
Everyone’s freaking out about AI taking over. They’re missing the point. We already control reality. We just don’t know how to use it.
I’ve been testing this for six months. Something changed. Reality started responding faster. Ask your friends. They’re all having these experiences too.
Thursday, on an uber ride to Chateau Marmont I joked to my friend, Ari, about getting mono from someone named George. Six minutes later, another friend texts: “I heard John has mono, do I have it?” I get out of the car at the hotel. I tell Anya, at the door, everything feels like a fever dream. I look left. John walks up. With his mono.
In coding terms: I sent a query (“mono + George”). The system upgraded it (“John has mono”). I added a debug comment (“this feels like manifesting”). The program executed (“John.appear”).
Two hours later, I’m with a friend talking about Tom. How we missed him. We walk to the nightclub bathrooms talking about Tom. Ten doors, all occupied and locked, red lights. The door right in front of me goes green. Opens. Out walks Tom.
In coding terms: I sent another query (“missing Tom”). I specified location parameters (“bathroom”). The system found the target (“Tom”) and executed delivery (“door.open, Tom.exit”).
That’s not coincidence. That’s programming. Twice in one night.
This happens to me every day and the examples have become more brazen as I recognize them.
Studies show 84% of people report “meaningful coincidences.” Scientists proved observation changes quantum reality. Your brain creates all perception, neuroscience calls it “controlled hallucinations.”
We’re not crazy. We’re finally paying attention.