Dreaming of Eden Part 3: What Do Voices of the Future See Coming?
The invitation
Prophecy is not fate—it is invitation.
When we listen carefully, we notice that different streams of foresight (e.g., mystical, psychic, and analytical) often begin to echo one another. They don’t predict identical details, but they gesture toward the same patterns: a period of increasing centralization, followed by a turning point, and then the rise of communities living closer to the earth. In researching whether others were seeing the same potentials I was, I came across two individuals reporting on what their own or others remote viewing was postulating.
Remote Viewer Lyn Buchanan: Mid Century there is a Pivotal Moment
Remote viewer Lyn Buchanan sees collapses happening involving several countries leading to establishment of a one-world government but, then, things will move back to local governance again.
He states, “Local government will come back into effect, we’ll have a lot of agrarian societies because we will have less people, we’ll have the greater technology, were we can make our own food, make our own tools and all that, and we will become as families, and family groups more self-sufficient, and actually life will end up being better…” (Episode 398, Through a Looking Glass Darkly, YouTube).
The decentralized future he describes is not a return to the Stone Age. Technology still exists, but in forms that empower communities rather than entrap them. He has spoken of new forms of power emerging, as well as practical innovations like roads that can charge vehicles as they travel (which is interestingly something I think Bill Gates talked about in his book on Climate Change). In this vision, people live in smaller, self-reliant communities, but with technologies that make life easier and more sustainable.
For Buchanan, mid-century becomes a pivotal moment when this shift takes hold: communities rediscover not only cooperation and local resilience, but also ways of weaving technology into daily life that align with freedom instead of control. People will simply get tired of living under control. He also mentions that an understanding of the Law of Supply and Demand will help the process (utilizing boycotts and other peaceful forms of resistance). He also mentions these communities will make their own tools (perhaps even 3D printing them).
Stephan A. Schwartz: Social Change from the Ground Up
Stephan A. Schwartz likewise (from analyzing the data of many remote viewers, see video here») describes a future where centralized systems stretch themselves too far— environmentally, socially, and ethically. He points to the decades between 2045 and 2060 as years when people have “had enough” and begin to withdraw from failing top-down structures. What emerges instead is a grassroots rebirth: communities that value compassion, share resources, and live more simply.
But like Buchanan, Schwartz does not envision this as a rejection of technology. In his view, technology continues to play a role, but it is humbled and redirected. Instead of being an instrument of surveillance or profit, it becomes a servant of community— tools that enable cooperation, renewable energy systems that free people from grids, medical technologies that support wellness rather than exploitation.
Schwartz emphasizes that social change is not only structural, but spiritual: it is about choosing to live more intentionally. Technology is not abandoned, but integrated into a way of life where compassion and cooperation matter more than profit or control.
Dreams of Eden
Since 2011, I’ve had numerous dreams of the future. Some are closer to our current timeline and others are farther out. In the ones that are closer, I see events happening that drive people off-grid to deal with various realities such as disasters, escape from persecution, power outages, and wars.
Where I’ve had dreams where I’m shown further into the future, it seems people are living in smaller communities. The world feels lighter and people seem to be more caring and empathic/telepathic. They are dressed in white, living in what look like geodesic domes (which the explanation was that the dome shape protects against a windier climate). I was shown community members using barter and trade but not in a regressive way. There was a feeling of having transcended a consumer-driven model of society.
One of the messages I have received since 2011 is that we need to start seeing the Law of Supply and Demand as a crucial part of the Law of Attraction (taking responsibility for what we are manifesting as consumers), and when we realize this fully, it will help change the world and how we manifest in it.
A Convergence of Timelines
Though these voices come from different sources, they converge in striking ways:
Community as salvation: the solution lies in turning toward one another, not away.
Local resilience: food, energy, health care, and shelter drawn from the land and shared resources.
Technology reimagined: not abandoned, but liberated from central control. New forms of power, roads that can charge vehicles, renewable systems, and tools for health and cooperation all remain part of daily life, but now serving people rather than enslaving them.
Timing: the mid-century decades appear again and again as a turning point.
Invitation: none of these visions are fixed fate; they are possibilities strengthened by our choices now.
When mystics, remote viewers, and even AI data models (see part 2 here» where I discuss AI predictions) begin to point toward the same horizon, perhaps it is less a prophecy and more a pattern. The message is clear: the Garden is possible. And in this Garden, technology still shines, but as a servant of life, not its master.
The Law of Polarity and Balance
One reason these patterns of collapse and renewal may reveal themselves is through a universal law: the Law of Polarity, or Balance. When the pendulum swings too far in one direction, it inevitably triggers a swing back toward the other. Back and forth it moves until some place of harmony is found.
We see this in ourselves: when there is too much yang energy (i.e., striving, conquering, outward expression, speed, high octane energy), it eventually brings exhaustion, illness, or a call to rest, lowered energy, reminding us of the need for yin: receptivity, stillness, and renewal. I think the Buddha was touching on this phenomenon when he spoke of the Middle Path and avoiding extremes, finding balance.
Right now, the world feels caught in an excess of yang. Speed, dominance, and endless productivity create a race we cannot win. Debt, both personal and systemic, pushes us into a constant cycle of doing more and making more just to survive. Politically, environmentally, socially, we see the same burnout: systems pushing too hard, collapsing under their own force.
In such moments, the feminine inevitably rises. She returns through nature—through the Schumann resonance of the earth, through the quiet language of seasons and symbols, through the longing people feel to step away from high-powered jobs and reenter simplicity. She calls us to community, to gardens and slower rhythms, to relationships that heal rather than extract.
The Law of Attraction (if you can read it backwards from the fruits to the seeds they grew from) reveals to us this same process: that when we turn away from Nature and the Feminine (from the living, the natural, the simple), and we start witnessing life itself diminish. When we stop noticing or connecting with life around us, consumed with lifeless apps and gadgets, life has a way of disappearing. But when we return to Nature and fostering a true connection (both in ourselves, our communities, and our world), balance restores, and what looked like collapse becomes the ground for renewal.
Closing: Becoming Voices of the Future
The future is not written by one voice, but by a chorus. Remote viewers, mystics, and even the quiet calculations of AI all point toward a horizon where communities awaken, technology is reclaimed, and life returns to balance. But these are not destinies handed down, but invitations waiting for us to answer.
Each of us, in our own way, is also a voice of the future. With every choice we make, every seed we plant, and every dream we dare to name, we shape which reality grows stronger. The Centralized Tower may rise for a time, but it is the Decentralized Garden that endures.
So may we choose to water the Garden. May we remember that resilience and compassion are stronger than fear. May we build communities of trust, weave technology into harmony, and leave behind patterns that no longer serve.
And may we, together, become the voices that call Eden back into being.
The Gravine Project
For those interested, Desmond Silva of Ottawa, is going to be part of a symposium where he will be presenting on his Gravity Power Project (Gravine Project). If interested in learning more about Gravity Power, see his website GravineProject.com. He will be running an Indiegogo Crowdfunding project to fund the building of his prototype soon!
Symposium on Society and Government – You’re Invited!
We’re excited to announce that the Gravine Project will be presenting at the upcoming Symposium on Society and Government. Join us on October 5th, 2025, as we share our vision for safe, fuelless, eco-friendly power and connect with community leaders and advocates.
Be part of the conversation about building a sustainable future. Your support and participation make a real impact!
Read full event details and register:
https://www.gravineproject.com/event-details-registration/symposium-on-society-and-government


