Our brains are capable of storing an unlimited amount of information, almost indefinitely in our Long-Term Memory database, however not all long-term memories are available to us consciously.
The hippocampus area of our brains operates independently of our consciousness and manages the consolidation of information from short-term to long-term memory and is capable of making decisions about the information we acquire from learning and experiences, without any awareness on our part. Put another way, the Hippocampus is self-aware.
When I am near a location that is associated with important events in my life, [4] my hippocampus gets triggered and wants to re-experience those memories.
I was not aware of why Hunter was pulling me down Ventura Boulevard until he turned right on Louise, and I recognized the island in the middle of the street. [5]
Hunter and My Hippocampus: The Real "House Hunters" is the recent article headlined at OpEdNews about Hunter taking me to the address where my girlfriend lived in 1970. My Hippocampus was triggered subconsciously by her thoughts when I was driving west on Ventura Blvd near the street where she lived with her first husband. The address where she lived on the street did not exist in my long-term memory, therefore, my hippocampus connected with hers and then directed Hunter to take me to the address at 22542 Dolorosa. [6]
The 3 Tele's Hypothesis: Schuylkill Drive is a Trap Street
I found scientific research that supported my conclusion that telepathic human and animal communication is possible, so I formed the hypothesis; Hunter can only find a location that either I knew consciously or subconsciously, or someone I was connected to, knew consciously or subconsciously.
To prove my hypothesis, I designed a "find location" experiment that could be duplicated.
I directed my daughter to use Google Maps to find a random address out of the 1500 houses in the Greater Mulwood neighborhood in Calabasas. She texted me the independent variable, 4199 Schuylkill Drive (4199). 4199 was not part of any knowledgebase in my brain: I didn't know the people that lived at 4199, didn't know anyone that knew the people that lived at 4199 nor did I have any idea of how to walk, drive, or fly to 4199.
In other words, I came up with an experiment to test the null hypothesis that Hunter would be unable to find the location, in order to prove that he could only find a location that was in my long-term memory or in the long-term memory of someone I knew.
The experiment was really:
double blind because when my daughter randomly selected the location using Google Maps neither of us was could have known that the location did not exist. The 4199 Schuylkill drive address was a trap street address: fictional addresses inserted on a map to prevent cartographic plagiarism. [7]
(Note: You can view every article as one long page if you sign up as an Advocate Member, or higher).