I found this on an ad on ld4all.
don’t link directly to sellers. google quantumjumping if you like.
What do you think of this? A scam? or something truly amazing and real?
I personally think it may be true, or may not be
I found this on an ad on ld4all.
don’t link directly to sellers. google quantumjumping if you like.
What do you think of this? A scam? or something truly amazing and real?
I personally think it may be true, or may not be
What is this exactly? Has anyone tried the “free” access? Because all I could understand from there was that it is “extraordinary”.
I made an e-mail address, and I’m going to look at the first part right now.
I can delete the e-mail address at any time, just in case it turns into spam.
But if this does work…
…it will be amazing.
Personally, I don’t like it. It’s advocating a good message: try new things to change your life, improve your attitude by learning to love what you have, etc. But those are things I could do on my own.
I wouldn’t need a program to to tell me to pick up a new hobby. I don’t want a random program to make important decisions for me. I suspect anything that says “well, geniuses have come up this this idea! Like Steven Hawking!” and “it was forced to be a secret.” Nothing is forced to be a secret unless it’s a threat to national security. I’m sure the feds have more important things to do than keep a feel-good program down. I mean, the guy even claims that he got it from a sci-fi flick. The Fi stands for Fiction. (But hey, who am I to get down on sci-fi? It’s the best genera ever!) Also, bringing in what science experts have said about alternate universes shouldn’t be relevant. That’s called an appeal to authority, and it’s one of the basic logical fallacies that we learned about in 10th grade english class.
In a nutshell, I think this whole this is just a way to make you realize that you need to have goals to work towards before you can do anything. That’s basic motivation 101. Our high school band instructor said the same thing: “Begin with the end in mind.” This program, with it’s alternate reality yous, is really just a way to make you realize that you could do so much more if you had self-confidence.
It says it’s free, so at least check it out, but if I were you I’d set up a spare email account so that you don’t get whatever spam comes along with this. And don’t give it your address or phone number or full name or anything. There’s no such thing as a free lunch.
[color=green]EDIT: My bad. I didn’t see your last post. Good approach. [/color]
So… I’d say check it out, but don’t put too much weight on it.
If they start asking for personal info or money, forget it and do some proper free-formed meditation. You don’t need to spend $167 plus shipping for something that looks iffy.
(Plus, you can usually tell how legitimate something is by the layout of its website. For example, public universities have organized websites. They have tabs for undergrads, grads, admissions, staff, etc. which are further divided up into more and more specific pages. The lucid dreaming guide on our very own page is divided into different aspects of LDing. It looks neat. It’s organized. It’s legit.)
(However, this guy has just 3 pages, which are practically a mile long. That makes it next to impossible to get straight answers and it shows that this guy doesn’t have a logical, concise argument arranged. He leaves you confused, wanting to hear the short answer. So he shows you a few CDs you can buy for $100+ and you’re game.)
My point is, if this were legitimate, this guy would have hired a webmaster to organize his page so that it was more straight-forward. Either this guy hasn’t thought through his idea enough to explain it concisely, or he’s being intentionally misleading.
They want you to pay at least $97 for it.
when I could probably download all the files for free if I looked hard enough on google.
I’ll research it.
It’s just Alpha programming.
Nothing special.
Sounds like a scam to me. I should send this to my friend, he’d probably go for it .