![]() ![]() Spend a few minutes with a chronic complainer who uses all sorts of negative terms, and you’ll feel your personal energy bottom out. Yes, even the words of others can easily affect our personal vibration. Words are extremely powerful tools that we can use to uplift our personal energy and improve our lives, though we’re often not conscious of the words we speak, read, and expose ourselves to. With a renewed perspective and a higher, more positive energetic vibration, we stand a much better chance of bringing good into our lives, rather than bitterly repeating old mistakes. If we’re feeling down about something, we can choose to reframe the situation and raise our own spirits. What that means for us is that if we stay conscious of the energy we contain, based on the emotions we feel, we can make deliberate choices that alter our frequency and create the realities we desire. There has been a great deal of research in recent years as to whether the universe we live in is actually a holographic experience, and it seems that this is very close to the truth.Īnd so, it seems life is more of an energy flow than a collection of solid things. Nobel Prize winning physicist Werner Heisenberg once stated, “Atoms or elementary particles themselves are not real they form a world of potentialities or possibilities, rather than one of things or facts.” This energy vibrates at an infinite number of subtle frequencies that cause it to appear as all the different creations we see in our world. Quantum physics long ago determined that physical matter doesn’t really exist, that everything is just energy in different states of vibration. Just say the word “fire” while barbequing, or in the workplace, or in a crowded theater, and you’ll get three completely different but powerful emotional and energetic reactions. Their power arises from our emotional responses when we read, speak, or hear them. Their meaning crystallizes perceptions that shape our beliefs, drive our behavior, and ultimately, create our world. The bottom line is that all of the facts of an automobile accident must be evaluated by competent, qualified individuals. Just looking at the police report is not always going to give you the true cause of the crash.Figure of Speech: How the Words We Choose Shape Our Lives In addition, the police officer formulated his opinion that the taillight wasn’t working based on the fact that it was not working after the accident-after the car had been rammed from behind. It is very likely that the taillight was working before the accident but the force of the impact broke the filament in the brake light, which is why it didn’t work after the accident. The police report’s conclusion regarding fault was not accurate. What must be remembered, however, is that the police report is not the final word regarding fault. The Scott Ray Law Firm was recently contacted by an individual injured in an automobile crash where the police report indicated that our client was at fault because one of his taillights was not working. A closer look at what happened revealed that the driver that rear-ended our client was not looking where he was going when the crash occurred. Thus, whether the taillight was working or not wasn't relevant since the at-fault driver wasn’t even looking ahead, so he would not have seen the taillight had it been working. ![]() ![]() ![]() The police report is also used by insurance companies to help them determine how the accident happened. Thus, if the police report indicates that the accident was your fault, the defense attorney and the insurance company that employs him will make up their minds that the accident was your fault and will not offer to pay for your damages (or offer very little). The first thing to understand is how the police report is used. The police report is not admissible in evidence at a trial. It is hearsay. It does, however, give the attorneys some of the information that the police officer gathered at the scene of the accident when conducting his investigation. From that information, the attorneys (for both sides) can reconstruct how the accident happened and whose fault it was. ![]()
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