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What conditions were the most conducive to manifesting positive results? Was it intention, the power of the group or altruism? I think it’s a little of all of these. We’ve found that larger groups do not have a larger effect, which brought about the “power of eight” concept. I’ve discovered all that’s needed is a group, whether it’s eight or 8,000. In a group, we seem to lose our sense of individuality and separation from the world. We experience an overwhelming sense of oneness with the other intenders, which may be why our influence then becomes more powerful.


How did the act of sending positive intentions affect the senders? I was most surprised by the rebound effects reported by par- ticipants, whom I started surveying after the Sri Lankan peace experiment. Thousands of extraordinary comments related not only how participants felt during the activity, but also afterwards; they were experiencing major shifts in their rela- tionships, health, careers and well-being. All they had done was sit individually in front of their computer holding an in- tention, yet they experienced the altered and mystical states of consciousness described by psychologist Abraham Maslow as “peak experiences”. Life University, a large chiropractic university in At- lanta, worked with us to study the brainwaves of partici-


pants in six “power of eight” groups and found that senders had decreased activity in their frontal and parietal lobes, which govern the sense of self. It was like the boundaries between participants were dissolving into a state of oneness. To me, this partly explained the sense of oneness, compas- sion and love they experienced. Andrew Newberg, director of research at the Marcus Institute of Integrative Health, in Philadelphia, recorded similar effects in Sufi masters, and nuns and monks engaged in prayer and meditation, but only after years of learning certain techniques. My participants, all novices, were primed only by watching a 13-minute YouTube video of me explaining how to send intention in a group. Group intention appears to be a fast-track to the miracu- lous—no experience necessary.


Why does “groupthink” have such a powerful, multiplicative effect?


I think a huge part of it has to do with the power of getting off of yourself and setting an intention for someone else. An- other is the connection created in a group. When we engage together in an activity like praying or setting altruistic inten- tions, we create a powerful virtual circle that proves healing to both the receivers and senders.


Connect with April Thompson, in Washington, D.C., at AprilWrites.com.


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