THE CIA DECLASSIFIED A DOCUMENT IN 2003 CONFIRMING HUMANS CAN LEAVE THEIR BODY AND GATHER INTELLIGENCE.
THEY CALLED IT GATEWAY.
HERE’S WHAT NOBODY TOLD YOU. 🧵
In 1983 US Army Lieutenant Colonel Wayne McDonnell wrote a classified report for the CIA analyzing a program called the Gateway Experience.
The report was declassified in 2003 and sat unnoticed for 17 years until it went viral in 2020
The Gateway program was developed at the Monroe Institute in Virginia.
It used specific sound frequencies called Hemi-Sync to synchronize both hemispheres of the brain and induce a state where consciousness could separate from the physical body entirely.
Apple defaults your $1200 camera to a quarter of its actual resolution.
I changed 7 settings last week and my photos instantly looked professional.
Here's what Apple doesn't tell you:
1/ Shoot in 48MP Instead of 12MP
Settings → Camera → Formats → Photo Mode → Select "HEIF Max (48 MP)"
Apple defaults your $1200 phone to 12MP. The sensor does 48MP. You've been shooting at a quarter of what your camera can do since the day you bought it
2/ Turn Off Auto HDR
Settings → Camera → Turn OFF "Auto HDR"
Auto HDR overprocesses every photo. Halos around objects. Skin looks plastic. Skies look fake.
Turn on Smart HDR instead. Same processing, more natural results. Your photos stop looking like AI generated them.
Your phone storage is full and you don't want to delete your photos.
Do this instead.
10 hidden tricks that freed 47GB on my iPhone (without deleting a single memory) 👇
1. Kill the WhatsApp media graveyard
- Open WhatsApp → Settings → Storage and Data → Manage Storage
- Tap "Larger than 5 MB"
- Sort by size
- Select videos/GIFs you'll never rewatch → Delete
WhatsApp silently hoards every meme, voice note, and group chat video forever.
Most people free 5-15GB here alone.
2. Nuke Messages attachments (the silent killer)
- Settings → General → iPhone Storage → Messages
- Tap "Review Large Attachments"
- Delete old videos, GIFs, voice messages
Then set auto-delete:
- Settings → Messages → Keep Messages → 1 Year
iMessage attachments can eat 10GB+ without you knowing.