Just because we can't fully observe something does not mean that it isn't here. Humidity can have you dripping in sweat before you make it from the house to the car. Freezing temperatures literally turn liquid to solid. Wind shows its presence by what it moves out of its way.
Yet somehow when we're talking about the forces of evil, it's easy to dismiss those who are fighting invisible battles. Imagine if the hoards of dark beings existed in the third dimensional physical plane. People would be in awe of someone keeping them at bay. Others would rally around them. Reinforcements could be sent.
Little of this exists for those taking on the darkness and cunning of the beings that dwell in the fourth dimension. They're unseen just like the wind. Therefore they must not exist. How erroneous. If anything, operating out of our primary sight strengthens their manipulation of the third dimensional.
Those facing them head on are dismissed, by and large, as crazy. Our perception of the world is questioned. Doubt seeps into even our own minds. It mustn't. What we're up against is stronger than gale force winds.
Recently, my ghost friends placed in my path a video of Carl Sagan in which he explains the second, third, and fourth dimensions and their interrelated nature. Ghosts, the benevolent and malevolent kind, primarily spend their time in the fourth dimension. Aliens and demons move through our world occupying that space as well. Galactics have a harder time navigating it.
Much of our galactic support is coming from dimensional space that our minds cannot fathom. Go ahead, explain the 27th dimension to me. Even if we comprehend it conceptually, it's hard to grasp how one would live or function in that plane of existence. To bridge the gap between the 27th and the 4th dimension is equally challenging for our galactic friends. They forget some of the limitations we live with by residing on this planet.
On the other hand, the aliens and demons and jerky ghosts are well versed at existing in these lower dimensions and leveraging them for manipulation. They've been practicing for centuries. Their influence is more acute now than at any previous time.
This is where Sagan's explanation comes into play. He beautifully clarifies an aspect of human understanding that often remains elusive. He compares the presence of an apple in the two dimensional existence of Flatland, the 1884 novella by Edwin Abbott Abbott, to the way in which we in the third dimension perceive those who exist in the fourth.
There's actually a whole theory that I've worked out regarding why the forces of darkness have such a stronghold on the fourth dimension and, more specifically, technology. In essence, what we refer to as Fallen Angels are actually aliens come to Earth. They're the ones who seeded the electronics the we use — and that use us — today. This gets into a whole conversation about the Watchers and the Nephilim and prematurely introducing the human race to technology beyond our scope of readiness. It's not that what we were given was inherently evil, but it acted to push us past where we were evolutionarily.
With some timely manipulation from other planes, those who control the technology skew toward the side of evil — Google, Meta, Amazon, and the list goes on. Not to mention the scourge of porn and the dark web. None of this is accidental. The dark forces residing in the fourth dimension are using the bandwidth of our electronics to wreak havoc in our lives. They get really grumpy when I state that (and by grumpy I mean they attack relentlessly).
To counteract their elaborate infrastructure, we combat it with webs of critical thinking and creativity. We see inspiration and connections in everything we touch. We get excited about something and share it in a way that brings further light to it. We enrich those around us and are in turn brighter for the ideas that they introduce to us. The network of darkness cannot stand up to nodes of light.
But to get there we have to cut through all of the noise and doubt and frustrations that accompany perceiving the "invisible" forces that exact their will on us. Back to Carl Sagan. In his explanation of the fourth dimension he marvels —
Let us imagine that into Flatland, hovering above it, comes a strange three-dimensional creature which, oddly enough, looks like an apple. And the three-dimensional creature sees an attractive, congenial looking square, watches it enter its house, and decides in a gesture of inter-dimensional amity to say hello.
"Hello!" says the three-dimensional creature, "How are you? I am a visitor from the third dimension."
Well, the poor square looks around his closed house, sees no one there, and what's more has witnessed a greeting coming from his insides, a voice from within. He surely is getting a little worried about his sanity.
In essence, we are the square.
Standing in the third dimension, we hear voices and feel the influence of the fourth dimension. The shadows it casts into our plane of existence are present even if the entirety of the those beings does not reside here.
Our perceptions are not insanity.
That said, maybe it takes a little dose of crazy to fight these battles and remain standing. So on the 27th anniversary of the launch of the Think Different campaign —
Here's to the crazy ones. The misfits. The rebels. The troublemakers. The round pegs in the square holes. The ones who see things differently. They're not fond of rules. And they have no respect for the status quo. You can quote them, disagree with them, glorify or vilify them. About the only thing you can't do is ignore them. Because they change things. They push the human race forward. And while some may see them as the crazy ones, we see genius. Because the people who are crazy enough to think they can change the world, are the ones who do.
Remain in good company.