Monday, June 13, 2022

Titan and Titanic (Imagination Creates Reality)


 Titan and Titanic
(Imagination Creates Reality)

 Today is yesterday’s fiction and imagination. Your strong imagination today shall become tomorrow’s fact.

Do you know the story of the Titanic that sank in 1912, was written 14 years before 1912 in a fictional story called “Futility” by Morgan Robertson in 1898? His fiction became fact 14 years after the book was published.

Here is a quote from Neville Goddard about the Titanic, (taken from one of Neville’s speeches)

“Do you recall seeing on TV, a dramatized version of the sinking of the Titanic? Do you recall it? Have you read the book. “A Night to Remember”? Well the book itself is by Walter Lord (A Night To Remember is a 1955 non-fiction account of the Titanic, but it also compared the Titanic to a fictional ship in the novel ‘Futility’ written in 1898): but 14 years before the actual harvest or that frightful event of the sinking of the Titanic a man in England wrote a book (here, Neville refers to the book “Futility” 1898 by Morgan Robertson).

He conceived this fabulous Atlantic liner and there he built her just like the Titanic, (only the Titanic was not built for 14 years) but he, in his imagination, conceived the liner of 800-ft. She was triple screw, she carried 3000 passengers, she carried few lifeboats because she was unsinkable; she could make 24 knots; and then one night he filled her to the brim with rich and complacent people, and on a cold winter night he sunk her on an iceberg in the Atlantic.

14 years later the White Star Line builds a ship(Titanic). She is 882 ft., she is a triple screw, she can make 24 knots, she can carry 3000 passengers, she has not enough lifeboats for passengers but she, too, is labeled unsinkable. She is filled to capacity with the rich, if not complacent, but the rich, because her passenger list was worth in that day, when the dollar was one hundred cents, two hundred and fifty million dollars was the worth of the passenger list. Today it would be a billion dollars. All the wealth of Europe and the wealth of this country was sailing on that maiden voyage out of Southampton. Five nights at sea in this wonderful glorious ship and she went down on a cold April night on an iceberg.

Now that man wrote a book either to get something off his chest because he disliked the rich and the complacent, or he thought it might sell or he thought this is the means of bringing him a dollar as a writer. But, whatever was the motive behind his book which, by the way, he called “Futility” to show the utter futility of accumulated wealth, but the identical ship was built 14 years later and carried the same kind of a passenger list and went down in the same manner as the fictional ship.

Is there any fiction? There is no fiction! Tomorrow’s world is today’s fiction. Today’s world was yesteryear’s fiction – the dreams of men of yesteryear.”

In Robertson’s novel in 1898, he named the ocean liner “Titan”, the largest and most luxurious ship in the world. The full title of his book was “Futility – The Wreck Of The Titan”!

We live in in a world of infinite probable realities! Create a new thought in your mind now with vivid imagination, and your path will be linked to match such a reality if you persevere! Bear in mind that each thought that you think is a probable reality in some unseen future dimension. Where are you heading? What are you creating? You have this wonderful NOW to choose a future you desire.

Similarities between Titanic and Titan:

Unsinkable
The Titanic was the world's largest luxury liner (882 feet, displacing 53,000 long tons), and was once described as being (nearly) "unsinkable".

The Titan was the largest craft afloat and the greatest of the works of men (800 feet, displacing 75,000 tons), and was considered "unsinkable".

Lifeboats
The Titanic carried only 20 lifeboats, less than half the number required for her passenger capacity of 3000.

The Titan carried "as few as the law allowed", 24 lifeboats, less than half needed for her 3000 capacity.

Struck an iceberg
Moving too fast at 23 knots, the Titanic struck an iceberg on the night of April 14, 1912 in the North Atlantic 400 miles away from Terranova.

Also on an April night in North Atlantic 400 miles from Newfoundland (Terranova) , the Titan hit an iceberg while traveling at 25 knots.

The Unsinkable Sank
The unsinkable Titanic sank, and more than half of her 2208 passengers died.

The indestructible Titan also sank, more than half of her 2500 passengers drowning.

*****

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