Tuesday, 2 June 2026

We are the witness consciousness, anyway it is better to be aware of an happy mind than a miserable mind for compassion toward the jiva

 YTC

But I see the atoms and molecules. I see the absorption of light and reflection of other frequencies. I see photosynthesis I see plant structure. I see it's biology. I see it's struggle for survival and procreation. I see how it dies and ends. I see everything Now tell me something I don't know

A


We can only pretend to be non entangled. Energies and machine aren't independent. They have to be entangled.

NEGH BANERJEE

 A

Rain seeding in Calcutta (1950s) — what actually happened?

In the early 1950s in Kolkata (then Calcutta), there were early experimental attempts at artificial rainmaking / cloud seeding in India.

The key figure linked to this period is:

Sudhanshu Sekhar Banerjee (also referred to as S.K. Banerji / “Megh Banerjee”)


🌧️ What was done in the 1950s?

Around 1952, Banerjee experimented with early forms of cloud seeding over Kolkata.

Reported methods included:

  • Silver iodide dispersal

  • Dry ice experiments

  • Balloon-based release systems (hydrogen balloons)

  • Early atmospheric testing inspired by US cloud-seeding research

The goal was simple:

Trigger rainfall by introducing particles that help cloud droplets form and grow.

Some accounts describe successful induced rainfall events, though results were not consistently controlled or scientifically standardized by modern standards.


🧪 Why Kolkata mattered in this history

At that time:

  • India was facing drought concerns in multiple regions

  • Global cloud seeding research had just begun (post-1946 US experiments)

  • Kolkata became one of the earliest Indian testbeds for adaptation of this science

Banerjee is often described as:

  • One of India’s earliest meteorologists working on weather modification

  • A pioneer who tried to localize foreign techniques for Indian monsoon conditions


⚠️ Important scientific context

Even today:

  • Cloud seeding is not a reliable “rain-making machine”

  • It only works when suitable clouds already exist

  • Results are probabilistic, not guaranteed

So in the 1950s:

  • Experiments were exploratory

  • Measurement standards were limited

  • Success claims are historically interesting but not rigorously comparable to modern climate science trials


🧠 Big picture

The Kolkata experiments were part of a global wave of post-WWII science exploring:

  • weather control

  • atmospheric physics

  • early “geoengineering-like” ideas

They represent early experimental meteorology, not fully proven weather control.


If you want, I can break down:

  • how cloud seeding actually works physically (step-by-step in clouds), or

  • whether modern India still uses these techniques today.

MENTAL CHATTER SAYER X LISTENER

 A

There isn’t actually a “two-person system” inside your mind with a fixed speaker and listener. What you experience as mental chatter is better explained as a single brain generating thoughts, and another part of the same system monitoring and evaluating them.

But it feels like a conversation, so let’s break that illusion down.

1. “Who is talking?”

The “voice” you hear in your head (internal speech) is your brain simulating language using the same systems used for speaking externally—especially language networks in the left hemisphere.

It’s not a separate entity. It’s more like:

your brain producing language in thought-form instead of sound-form

So the “talker” is simply thought generation in verbal format.


2. “Who is listening?”

The “listener” is not a separate self either. It’s what we call:

  • metacognition (thinking about thinking)

  • self-monitoring systems in the brain

This part evaluates:

  • “Is this thought useful?”

  • “Is this true?”

  • “Should I act on this?”

So the “listener” is your brain reviewing its own output.


3. Why it feels like two separate entities

Because the brain runs different processes in parallel:

  • One system generates thoughts quickly (automatic, emotional, associative)

  • Another system slows down and evaluates (reflective, analytical)

When these interact, it creates the illusion of:

“I am talking to myself”

But it’s really:

one system producing patterns + another system inspecting them


4. Mental chatter itself

Most “chatter” comes from:

  • memory replay

  • prediction of future scenarios

  • social simulation (“what will they think?”)

  • unresolved emotions looping

A lot of it is driven by the default mode network (DMN), which activates when your mind is not focused on the external world.


5. The key insight

There is no separate “you listening to you.”

There is only:

a brain generating thoughts
and the same brain becoming aware of them

The sense of “observer” is what consciousness feels like when the system becomes self-aware.


If you want, I can connect this to why “pausing when triggered” actually works at the neural level—because it interrupts this automatic loop between generation and reaction.

ANENDOPHASIA

 A

Yes—what you’re referring to is anendophasia, the absence (or extreme reduction) of an internal monologue.

Most people assume everyone has a constant “voice in their head,” but research suggests inner experience varies a lot. Some people think primarily in:

  • words (internal speech),

  • images (visual thinking),

  • sensations or abstract concepts,

  • or a mix of all three.

What anendophasia means in practice

People with anendophasia typically report:

  • No continuous verbal narration in their mind

  • Thinking happens without “spoken sentences” internally

  • Decisions and reasoning still happen normally, just not in word-form

So instead of thinking “I should reply to this message,” they might experience:

  • a feeling of inclination,

  • a visual impression of outcomes,

  • or an abstract sense of choice.

Important clarification

It’s not a disorder and not linked to lower intelligence or lack of self-awareness. It’s just a variation in how the brain represents thought.

Why this is interesting in your context

Your earlier idea—“Never respond when triggered”—is often taught through self-talk (“pause, don’t react”). But for someone with anendophasia, that same regulation might happen without words—more like a felt pause or a shift in emotional state rather than an inner sentence.

If you want, I can connect this to neuroscience models of thinking styles (verbal vs non-verbal cognition) or explain how meditation research relates to reduced internal speech.

A

There’s no single known “cause” of anendophasia. At this point, it’s better understood as a natural variation in how human cognition is organized, rather than a condition with a clear origin or pathology.

Here’s what current psychology and neuroscience suggest:

1. Cognitive architecture differences

People differ in how their brains represent thought:

  • Some rely heavily on language-based thinking (internal speech)

  • Others rely more on visual, sensory, or abstract pattern-based thinking

  • In anendophasia, the brain simply doesn’t default to verbal narration

This is likely tied to individual differences in neural processing styles, especially in language networks vs non-verbal networks.

2. Reduced reliance on language systems

Internal speech is associated with activity in language-related brain areas (like Broca’s area). In people with anendophasia:

  • These language circuits may be less involved in day-to-day thinking

  • Or other systems (visual-spatial, emotional, associative) may dominate cognition

3. Developmental and learning factors (hypothesized)

Some researchers speculate it may be influenced by:

  • Early language development differences

  • How much internal “self-talk” is reinforced growing up

  • Cognitive strategies learned over time (e.g., visual thinkers not using verbal rehearsal)

But this is still not well established scientifically.

4. It’s not a disorder or deficit

Important point:

  • No evidence shows it is caused by trauma or damage

  • It is not linked to reduced reasoning ability

  • It is part of normal human cognitive diversity (like being more visual vs verbal)

Key takeaway

Anendophasia likely arises from how your brain naturally organizes thought, not from a single cause or event. It’s more like a “thinking style profile” than something that develops due to one reason.

If you want, I can also explain how scientists test for internal speech vs no internal speech—it’s actually quite fascinating and not as straightforward as people think.

MENTAL CHATTER X his-story. Its a story told to keep you in your mind so you do not see the now

Shiva is symbol of meditative mind , so anyone can be shiva.