
In sequence, the KGOD shows run:
- Doom Scrollin’
- After Midnight
- Late Night
- Late Night Vanity
- Late Night Russell
- Late Night Quiz
- Late Night Community
- Late Night Dictator
- Late Night Ballroom
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The Whole Universe Happened At Once
One of the ideas I’ve been trying to bring to life lately is the concept that the whole of creation — including all time — actually is a single moment.
Not a long duration.
Not an infinite process.
Not an endlessly unfolding sequence.
A single total event.
What we experience as “time” is consciousness moving through that totality one fragment at a time.
In other words:
The universe is not unfolding at all.
It already exists in its entirety.
What changes is not the universe itself, but our viewpoint moving through it.
That’s a strange thought at first, because human beings are built to experience reality sequentially. We move from breakfast to lunch to dinner. Yesterday becomes today. Today becomes tomorrow. Language itself forces sequence. Every sentence arrives word after word.
But certain experiences seem to hint that this ordinary sense of time may not be the whole story.
People occasionally report moments where all time appears present simultaneously:
during deep meditation,
psychedelic experiences,
dream states,
moments of shock,
near-death experiences,
creative inspiration,
or sudden flashes of intuition and déjà vu.
The common report is remarkably consistent:
Everything and every time was there, all at once.
Not metaphorically. Actually there.
Mystics have talked about this for thousands of years. Modern physics has brushed against it from another direction. Einstein himself hinted that the distinction between past, present, and future might be a persistent illusion. He was right.
Consciousness is not creating reality moment-by-moment. Consciousness is navigating through an already-existing structure, creating the illusion of time.
A useful metaphor came to me while thinking about KGOD Radio.
Imagine a radio station broadcasting a complete concert.
From the viewpoint of the station, the whole performance already exists as a complete electromagnetic transmission.
The receiver experiences the music sequentially:
note after note,
word after word,
moment after moment.
But the broadcast itself is already whole and complete.
The DJ sends it to the listener. The receiver merely converts the stream of data into a time-stream, which is very close to what human consciousness is doing all the time.
Perhaps the entirety of existence already exists “outside” our ordinary perception of time, and what we call living is simply tuning through the signal.
That would explain why intuition sometimes works.
Why synchronicities happen.
Why sudden knowing appears.
Why certain moments feel strangely familiar.
Why artists sometimes feel they are rediscovering rather than inventing.
It may also explain why certain mystical experiences feel so overwhelming. The ordinary filtering mechanism briefly weakens, and consciousness catches a glimpse of the larger structure all at once.
Like suddenly seeing the entire tapestry instead of one thread at a time.
Eternity does not mean endless duration. Eternity means simultaneity. Singularity. Everything present. All at once.
And Death is not annihilation, but simply stepping outside the receiver format we currently call our body, living in linear time.
In that sense, the universe is less like a machine assembling itself moment-by-moment, and more like a vast completed broadcast already transmitting through eternity.
We are simply tuning through the signal.
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Hooray, here’s the Bardo bus!
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See You At The Top!!!
gorby

