The Science Museum in London has really excelled with its engaging interactive experience in The Equinor Gallery. If you enjoy playing with Quantum-Touch techniques then the Wonderlab is well worth a visit.
If Quantum-Touch created an exhibition to bring to life the QT techniques then it would probably look a lot like the Wonderlab.
I walked around like a kid in a candy store feeling even more excited than my two young children.
What does vortexing actually look like?
For example, there were two ropes that could be spun at different speeds. When they turned at a really high speed you could visually see the Quantum-Touch vortexing technique in full effect.
In Supercharging we learn about playing with the velocity, state, and texture of energy. How do different sensations produce a different speed for the energy to flow through when we move it through our body? Does the energy slow down or get quicker when we use the slope breath with different velocities of energy?
In the Wonderlab we got to experience this friction in real-time as we slid down different slides. Each slide had a different speed depending on what it was made with. Suffice it to say that Simon and I were the only adults that had a go – for Quantum-Touch research purposes 🙂
With infinity mirrors that brought to life the infinite possibilities that exist in any given moment, magnets pulling other magnets that couldn’t be seen at a first glance and many other exhibits, this was a delightful way to play and take the imaginative imagery we use in healing, into reality.
If you are in London and fancy a day out that gives you a chance to embrace being a big kid whilst interactively playing with the kind of scientific phenomena that QTers love, then the Wonderlab will be sure to enhance your Quantum-Touch practice.