Letter From The Editors

For May of 2026

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THE MAGIC BETWEEN THE COVERS    
  



  
The editorial this month was to be a debate between Karra and myself about the effects on consciousness between reading and visual media. She ended up bringing me over to her side so we wanted to put the conversation out there to the group. To start the conversation we will begin with a boy wizard with a tragic back story. For those who have read the books and watched the movies, the difference becomes dramatic. In both cases you step into the shoes of Harry Potter but the scene around him as you read each page is formed in the imagination of what the words describe. In the movies the scenes are laid out and becomes cliff notes of the fuller and richer experience buildup in the imagination when reading through the series. Inner thoughts round out the characters personality and character descriptions paint a picture of the people involved. Visual media almost force-feeds the story but has advantages over books in several ways. Days of reading are condensed into a couple hours of watching. The story comes alive from a visual perspective instead of the one imagined. When reading the books through after watching the movies there are now visual images that replace those built up previously. Finally, movies can sometimes spread a message that affects the collective consciousness of the world. We have two perfect examples.

When Star Wars came out in 1978, it was a life-changing experience for those seeing it for the first time on a big screen. This first example opened on a star field that suddenly overwhelms the senses with two ships doing battle is something hard to forget. Then came the force and the story of the Jedi who kept the peace in the galaxy. By the time you are stepping into the cockpit with Luke Skywalker, you can relate to someone who has found an inner power that should be possible now. The Star Wars movies may provide the images that trigger memories of lives lived elsewhere than on earth. Of lives lived where that inner power is harnessed to defy physics. No books preceded the movies in 1978 and no imagination was needed when reading the books later in life. The characters came fully formed. What ended up changing was a new vocabulary that included words like moisture farms and storm troopers. Once there was a place on earth where psychic powers were used on a daily basis. The Star Wars series might also bring back memories of a life led in Atlantis when trips to the whole planet of Sirius were still taking place. The end result was that people began to believe they were special in ways they had not considered before. The second example got people to look at nature in completely new ways.

It was 2009 and a new movie had come out from James Cameron with a huge budget and a lot of buzz. Again, without a book or a series of books to proceed it, Avatar was a visual feast that needed to be seen to be appreciated. Then there was the message behind the movie about living with the planet instead of exploiting its resources. One minute you're rooting for the company and then the Na'vi are the heroes of the story. Then there is the Tree of Souls where the Na'vi have a neural connection to their mother goddess of the planet and thus the creatures on it which come to save the day. The analogies are many but what the main one is that when a world is taken out of balance, that world has ways to bring things back into balance regardless of the humans on its surface. In both Star Wars and Avatar, those books were written as every second of the movies were watched. Later the books were edited in real-time during reruns as new details that were missed the first time fill out the story. As the sequels and prequels were released in the case of Star Wars, the stories grew and became mental libraries that included facts and trivia learned after the releases. What does the future hold going forward now that artificial intelligence has changed the landscape?

A new medium built on AI has changed the landscape and is fast replacing both books and movies as a go to form of entertainment with the result being that what appears real has to be constantly questioned. It's an exciting future and one that inspires the imagination to go with the new tools to bring those thoughts into being. This follows the same trend is set with Star Wars and Avatar that the experience supersedes the needs for books ahead of time. What is created is just there to be experienced as if in a museum of moving images and stories. The debate centers on whether one is created will have the same consciousness changing effects of the two examples above. Short of that, books still win out over movies and AI in spurring the imagination and sparking exploration. With the push away from written media, the challenge is in maintaining the desire to continue reading and researching ways of improving the self. Be it fantasy or philosophy, reading brings with it keys to exploring the full potential of what is possible with an expanded consciousness. We still hold out hope for AI to assist in that exploration.

    
In love, light and wisdom as one,
Russ and Karra