
I think the most significant creative activities of our or any other human culture – legal and ethical systems, art and music, science and technology – were made possible only through the collaborative work of the left and right cerebral hemispheres…we might say that human culture is the function of corpus callosum.- Carl Sagan
There are moments when something internal shifts—not just mentally but in a way that resonates through your entire being.
That happened to me during a class-assigned Transdimensional Mapping (TDM) session. It was as if my brain—left and right hemispheres—stopped operating separately and were busy developing a new language that felt more integrated and effortless than anything I had experienced in my usual waking state.
Brain Dancing Moments
I’ve spent years teaching intuition, but this gathering experience differed. My intuitive mind typically retrieves information as if it were “going to find it” somewhere beyond my waking awareness. But with TDM, it was as if I had entered a natural state of knowing—one where intuitive and analytical faculties weren’t just cooperating but had formed a beautiful exchange of perception and interpretation. It was like a brain dance.
At the beginning of the session, the ideogram I sketched was initially simple—a quick, light movement. Then I probed deeper; sensory words arrived quickly, and I went with them: light, arch, spirit, disappears, structure. Then, I began to sketch and flowed with what my senses brought to my attention.
My logical mind watched, listened, and recorded, while my intuition placed me directly into a space of recognition. It was like an incredible internal guide was so happy to be seen and ready to play.
A New Kind of Knowing
As the mapping experience continued, instead of reaching for insight, it felt like insight arose naturally, forming within me rather than being sought after. My hand drew symbols and shapes that felt like echoes of something vast, timeless.
My mind cycled through senses of hands, movement, something coming and going, a structure standing tall yet holding secrets underneath. There was no strain in this brain dancing process—only a quiet comfort that I was accessing something intrinsic rather than external.
I didn’t initially identify the location. When given what it was, I was surprised. It wasn’t until I deconstructed the session that I recognized how incredible my findings were. Later, I thought of having AI blindly analyze the details.
AI’s Analysis of Mapping Notes
Wow, from the deconstruction notes, AI chose GoBeckli Tepe as its top pick for the location I had remotely mapped. That revelation was astonishing. Understanding that my subconscious had led me to perceive elements of an ancient site without conscious knowledge accurately made the experience quite profound.
The information emerged through a whole-brain process; I could have been remote-viewing an acorn or a rock band in New York City!
What Whole-Brain Thinking Feels Like
This wasn’t just a cognitive process—it was embodied. It was neither forced nor fragmented. There was no struggle between intuition and analysis—only fluidity.
Imagine trying to solve a problem, not by piecing together evidence but by allowing the understanding to emerge on its own. That’s what it felt like.
A seamless integration of logic and intuition, pattern recognition and spontaneous insight, structured thought, and open-ended perception.
Why This Matters for Human Consciousness
We often hear that we use only a fraction of our brain’s potential. But what if our next stage of collective evolution isn’t about intelligence as we currently define it but about developing a new form of cognition—one that embraces the natural integration of both hemispheres inviting a life style of whole brain experiences?
Transdimensional Mapping suggests that such an expansion is possible. And the more you map the more you develop an integrated state of mind. When we cooperate fully with our brains, we’re not just perceiving reality—we’re engaging with it in a way that could redefine human awareness.
This way of experiencing life is like uncovering a deeper, more organic way of being that has always existed but has remained largely untapped.
Making this shift raises essential questions: Could this form of cognition help us understand the complexities of time, consciousness, and reality? Could it provide new ways of accessing and preserving knowledge? Could it, in some way, be a crucial factor in human evolution?
The Future of Expanded Consciousness
The experience I felt while mapping wasn’t just a personal breakthrough in finding a new intuitive process—it felt like a glimpse into what’s possible for all of us.
If we can learn to refine this ability, study its mechanisms, and understand its implications, we may step toward a future where consciousness evolves.
Imagine a teacher giving her young students a blind mapping assignment and gathering from their experience how their senses access their inner wisdom.
The teacher would gain valuable insight into how each child learns and could complement their learning environment to meet the child where they are wisest and all knowing.
Investing in this methodology for gaining insight isn’t about proving remote viewing or Transdimensional Mapping as “real” in conventional terms—it’s about acknowledging that human perception is capable of something far greater than we’ve traditionally recognized in Western culture.
As we move forward, it’s inspiring to consider what this could mean for humanity. Could we be on the verge of unlocking a new stage in our cognitive evolution, where knowledge is accumulated and accessed in ways we’ve yet to comprehend fully? The possibility is worth exploring!
In future musings we can explore some fun ways to explore creative methods that can convey a profound experience of whole-brain synchronization.
I have Birdie Jaworski to thank for this experience. TransDimensional Mapping is a methodology she created after decades of experience in remote viewing. You might enjoy watching Birdie demonstrate a mapping session.

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