It takes a high level of commitment to learning or improving one thing at time. For example, if you committed to chess you could spend nearly every waking hour engaged in chess. When you sleep you continue the engagement while you sleep, its not simply dreaming about chess but that would happen too. Your brain will be adjusting itself physically (rewiring itself) to improve the pathways that generated more rewarding thinking on the subject while you were awake and also improving the pathways that struggled. Kinda like releasing a limiter. It works for most anything, I would wager this great awakening changed a lot of people dramatically on the anon side in regards to research and digesting information, visualizing details in a bigger picture. Interesting subject to theorize on -- and also to theorize on whether that was one of the intentions all along, and a possible reason just ripping the band-aid off was not the ideal course of action. The labor of waking up was necessary.
Agreed. I see it in action right now, with my new language learning project. But I remember very well when I was younger and used to learn new skills regularly, that the same thing you struggled to do all day, would come much easier the next day after a good nights sleep. Almost any computer game player has noticed this easily.
I think in the night time, not only are the pathways created by the learning process refined and made more efficient, but the brain simulates the moves in the sleep so you get further practise.
As for GA changing the way people learn - absolutely. However, unlike most people, I dont think ripping off the band-aid was not on the table, not because of the labour of waking up (it was one factor) but because the enemy had to be tricked into driving us to the Precipice believing they won, but further, the Precipice is the collapse of the financial system (which are the invisible chains in our slavery). That could not happen without making sure it was a controlled demolition - or else the world would be in chaos much worse than great depression.
"Maybe this world is another planet's hell."
Sauce for that: https://s9953.pcdn.co/wp-content/uploads/2019/02/maxine-waters.png
I hear talks about artificial wombs every now and then.
As for sleep-learning, well when the sleeping normies wake up finally, they will be amazed by how much they had been learning all this time.
It takes a high level of commitment to learning or improving one thing at time. For example, if you committed to chess you could spend nearly every waking hour engaged in chess. When you sleep you continue the engagement while you sleep, its not simply dreaming about chess but that would happen too. Your brain will be adjusting itself physically (rewiring itself) to improve the pathways that generated more rewarding thinking on the subject while you were awake and also improving the pathways that struggled. Kinda like releasing a limiter. It works for most anything, I would wager this great awakening changed a lot of people dramatically on the anon side in regards to research and digesting information, visualizing details in a bigger picture. Interesting subject to theorize on -- and also to theorize on whether that was one of the intentions all along, and a possible reason just ripping the band-aid off was not the ideal course of action. The labor of waking up was necessary.
Agreed. I see it in action right now, with my new language learning project. But I remember very well when I was younger and used to learn new skills regularly, that the same thing you struggled to do all day, would come much easier the next day after a good nights sleep. Almost any computer game player has noticed this easily.
I think in the night time, not only are the pathways created by the learning process refined and made more efficient, but the brain simulates the moves in the sleep so you get further practise.
As for GA changing the way people learn - absolutely. However, unlike most people, I dont think ripping off the band-aid was not on the table, not because of the labour of waking up (it was one factor) but because the enemy had to be tricked into driving us to the Precipice believing they won, but further, the Precipice is the collapse of the financial system (which are the invisible chains in our slavery). That could not happen without making sure it was a controlled demolition - or else the world would be in chaos much worse than great depression.