Toroidal fields and the webs we weave
- Debbie Denison
- Apr 18
- 6 min read
Updated: Aug 16
What if we could access all of the knowledge of this world, including memories of a cave painter from 40,000 years ago or the knowledge of a Siberian shaman 10,000 years ago? Imagine being able to communicate with stars or planets, and being able to heal our bodies in new ways. These things could be possible, if we can accept that our consciousness is a complex energy field pattern, rather than just a product of physical processes.
This thinking flies in the face of some scientific theories that presume our memories are stored in our brains, and proposes instead that our brains are actually more like a smartphone - capable of receiving and transmitting information to a “cloud”, a virtual information field. Think for a moment about the implications of this. In science fiction movies and video games, we have seen instances where people upload their consciousness to a machine, but this is not about machines, but an energy field or fields, where our identity, who we are, and where we “go” after death align more closely with Indian spirituality and certain occult philosophies, but are supported by scientific theories as well.
This concept could explain why consciousness and memory seem to operate beyond normal physical limitations. Just as cloud data isn't limited by your phone's storage capacity, consciousness and memories might not be limited by brain capacity because they exist in a broader field. It might help explain several puzzling phenomena that traditional brain-storage models struggle with:
Cases of maintained memories after significant brain trauma
Shared or inherited memories that some people have reported
Our vast capacity for storing memories despite limited physical neural networks
The holographic nature of memory (how memories seem distributed rather than localised)
Near-death experiences where people report accessing extensive memories while their brain activity is minimal
I have been thinking about this for some time, looking at different scientific theories and also spiritual ideologies, and what seems to keep coming up is the concept of a torus field that can be applied at both a microcosmic and macrocosmic level. Torus fields are ring-shaped patterns that move through the center, out the top, down the sides, and back through the bottom in a continuous flow. Toroidal systems organize around a central axis or point. In humans, some suggest this aligns with the heart's electromagnetic field as measured by magnetometers. In cosmic systems, we see this in the organization of galaxies around central points.
At the human/microcosm level, toroidal patterns are found in DNA coiling patterns, cellular energy processes and blood circulation patterns. At the cosmic/macrocosm level, we can observe similar patterns in phenomena like galaxy formation and rotation, solar magnetic field behaviour and black hole dynamics.
This framework suggests that rather than operating in isolation, both cosmic systems and natural systems (humans/animals/plants) operate with constant energy exchange through a self-organizing, dynamic flow pattern that maintains itself through continuous motion. Interestingly, this coincides with some spiritual or occult concepts around the web of interconnectivity and how energy flows. Far from being woo woo or pseudoscience though, the toroidal flow framework actually goes a long way to validating those potential connections between human and cosmic energy dynamics.

Traditional materialist views see consciousness as solely emerging from physical brain processes. However, if we consider consciousness as a field phenomenon, we can understand how the brain would act more like a transceiver or interface with consciousness fields.
Working with the toroidal pattern framework, we could even reimagine death as a transformation of energy patterns, rather than an ending of consciousness (which has never been my personal belief but there are many who see life as a “one and done” exercise). What I find most interesting about this, though, is that working with toroidal fields could enable us to access “hidden knowledge” - knowledge and memories that exist within the energy field but are not readily accessible. Finding that knowledge would take some effort, of course, similar to trying to find information online that is not indexed by search engines (or is buried on page 20 of the search results!), but with this framework, we may be able to utilise sleep, meditation, liminal spaces, and altered states of consciousness to access different layers of information and potentially retrieve what is considered “lost”.
It also means that because we are communicating and storing information on both local and non-local energy fields, we are in fact able to connect and share information with others of our own species, other species, and also cosmic entities. Wow. It is what I believe our ancestors already knew, as they lived closer to nature and were not distracted by modern life and technology. Ancient tribes may have actually communicated with stars, plants and animals, rivers and planets, and this is something that we have lost the ability to do. All of the information is there, stored in these information/energy fields, but we have lost the map, we cannot locate where the information is. I was thinking initially of cave paintings from many thousands of years ago, which have been chronicled in great detail but poorly understood. The story of those paintings, the memories of the people who painted aurochs or reindeer in caves 40,000 years ago still exists, but archaeologists are unable to tap into the source data, as it were.
Ancient Indian texts describe consciousness and memory as existing in layers or fields (koshas), with the physical body being just one layer of interface. The five koshas exist together and are encased, or nested, within each other. Working with the kosha enhances awareness of your inner world and supports the mind, body and spirit connection. Toroidal patterns also feature nested hierarchies. Our cells are nested in organ fields, which are then nested within whole body fields. Planets are nested within solar fields, which are also nested in galactic fields. If these energy patterns enable us to connect our mind, body and spirit through toroidal fields, we should be able to also connect with cosmic mind, body and spirit fields.
There are already established scientific concepts that demonstrate micro-macro relationships, such as fractal patterns found throughout nature and the golden ratio, which appears in both cosmic and biological structures. Even at the system level, cosmic and biological patterns exhibit similarities. Stars, for instance, have clear life cycles from “birth” in nebulae, through various stages of energy expression, to eventual “death” in supernovae or white dwarfs. The matter and energy from "dead" stars feeds back into the cosmic system, forming new stars and planets. Galaxies also go through cycles of formation, active periods, and eventual transformation or merger with other galaxies.

Life cycle patterns exist in plants where there is energy gathering, expression, withdrawal and transformation. Even our skin and blood cells go through cycles of death and renewal. The dynamics of birth, energy expression (growth), decline and transformation applicable to cosmic systems and biological systems may either reassure you about our own life cycle or scare the crap out of you, depending on your personal beliefs.
This torus field model also has interesting implications for how we understand the nature of identity (are we the device or the data?) and our understanding of the relationship between individual and universal consciousness. It might also help our understanding of how different states of consciousness, such as sleep or meditation, involve different layers or levels of field access. Maybe this is why, in fact, our dreams can seem so alien and strange at times, because we are not accessing our own memories, but those of another time and place, or of another being. I recall my husband one night was speaking a different language, it sounded tribal and old, it certainly wasn’t English or European. I hesitated to wake him but I did in the end out of sheer curiosity and he said he was talking to a tribesman, he seemed to have a knowledge of this person and view him with a fondness that suggested they had experienced something together. I have also experienced things like this, being in another place and time in dreams, speaking with beings I do not recognise. We don’t always dream of familiar places! And the toroidal fields may be the reason why, but this is of course just speculation at present, science cannot prove or disprove that theory.
Some of the key takeaways from my research into toroidal fields and consciousness are:
Our brain could act like a transmitter rather than a storage unit, accessing information locally that is stored in a “cloud” (energy or information field)
Multiple points can access the same information field, and access to different layers could be achieved in different states of consciousness
Consciousness could exist even if the transmitter is damaged or destroyed (memories and knowledge would also be stored in the cloud after we die)
The transformation of the body after death might involve shifting from localised (physical body-based) to non-localised (field-based) expression
The "quantum" aspect is particularly relevant to a discussion of torus fields and consciousness because quantum physics demonstrates non-locality, instantaneous connections across space, and entanglement, where particles remain connected regardless of distance. Quantum principles support the possibility that consciousness and memory could operate as field patterns rather than being solely confined to brain tissue. There is so much more to explore in this space, and I have more questions than answers, but hopefully this initial piece gives you some food for thought on how the “webs we weave” are connected through time and space.
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