Holographic Principle
Imagine our everyday world as a flat movie screen (2D). Everything we see—people, cars, buildings—looks fully real and three-dimensional to us on that screen. But the real action is happening in a deeper, higher-dimensional “projector” space we can’t directly see. Think of it like this: just as we live in three dimensions (length, width, height) plus time, there could be extra dimensions beyond what our eyes and brains can sense — kind of like how a fish in a pond has no idea about the air and birds above the water, or how ants living on a flat tabletop can’t easily conceive of the space above them. These extra dimensions aren’t “far away” in space; they’re woven into the fabric of reality itself, but we only experience a thin slice of them.
To understand this from our own point of view, picture fish swimming in a shallow pond. The fish are alive and active in what feels like their complete world — they move forward, backward, left, and right. You, as a 3D human, can stand on the bank, see the whole pond at once, drop food in, or reach your hand into the water. To the fish, your hand suddenly appearing feels solid and real, coming from a mysterious direction. Or imagine ants crawling on a tabletop. They are fully alive, busy exploring their flat world. You can look down from above, see everything they’re doing, and gently touch or move them. To the ants, your finger appears as something physical from a higher dimension they don’t normally experience. In both cases, you are effectively “interdimensional” to them — you exist in a higher dimension and can interact with their reality in ways that seem impossible from their limited viewpoint.
A UFO or UAP could work the same way in reverse. It is like a higher-dimensional object or being “casting a shadow” or being projected into our lower-dimensional world. It appears fully physical here because the information and energy from the higher dimension are encoded onto our reality’s “boundary.” The craft or being interacts with our air, ground, and radar — it feels solid, moves through our sky, and leaves traces — because it is a genuine projection of something real from elsewhere.
From a human perspective, when you encounter one: You would see a solid-looking craft or entity with clear shape, lights, and movement. If close enough, it would feel firm and material under your touch. You’d hear sounds as it interacts with our air. You might even smell traces created by its presence. It behaves like a fully physical object while projected here.
From an NHI perspective, when they encounter you (a human): They primarily exist in the higher-dimensional space but can perceive and interact with our lower-dimensional “screen.” To them, you might appear as a projected or shadow-like being — perhaps less detailed than their native reality, but still very real. They can see you, touch or manipulate things in our world, hear our sounds, detect smells, and sense other interactions. The link allows two-way sensory experience.
Interdimensional means exactly that: these higher-dimensional things or beings can quasi-project into our world, act physically while here, and then retract. This is roughly how David Grusch described it using the holographic principle when discussing interdimensional UAPs. It is not magic or pure illusion — it is physics where information on a lower surface creates the volume and matter we experience. Scientists are still exploring if this matches real UAP reports, but it offers a way to explain seemingly impossible maneuvers and sudden disappearances without breaking known laws.
How do crashed UFOs and captured beings fit? In this model, the craft and its occupants are projections that carry real mass and structure in our world while the connection is strong. A crash could happen if the projection link becomes unstable — for example from interference, malfunction, or damage. When the connection weakens, the object suddenly has to obey our full 3D physics (gravity, inertia) and can fall or break apart. Captured beings could become temporarily “trapped” in our dimension if their projection link is severed. They remain solid and biological enough to be held, but may lose some of their higher abilities and have to deal with our physics and environment, which could be difficult for them. Crashes and captures don’t disprove the model — they are what you would expect when a higher-dimensional projection has a problem maintaining its connection to our slice of reality.
Some people suggest that extreme events — such as an atomic blast, powerful electromagnetic pulses, high-energy radar, or other intense energy sources — can disrupt or break the projection connection. When this happens, the UAP or being can become temporarily or permanently stuck in our reality, leading to crashes or captures. The connection is like a fishing line holding a lure in the water: as long as the line is intact, the lure (the projection) can move freely and be pulled back easily. If the line breaks (due to interference or overload), the lure is left behind in our “water,” now fully subject to our physics. It is not like the tabletop itself breaking — the higher-dimensional space remains fine. It is the link between dimensions that fails.
The “link” between dimensions is thought to be based on quantum entanglement — the mysterious quantum mechanical phenomenon in which particles can remain deeply connected even across large distances, so that what happens to one instantly influences the other. In the analogy, the fishing line (or your arm reaching down to the ants) represents this quantum entanglement link. As long as the link is strong and stable, the projection works perfectly and can be withdrawn at will. When the link is disrupted — for example by extreme energy such as an atomic blast, powerful electromagnetic pulses, or high-energy radar — the projection can no longer be easily pulled back, leaving the craft or being “stuck” in our reality.
In some discussions, this quantum entanglement link is sometimes described using more familiar terms like a stargate or portal — a temporary or controlled opening that allows higher-dimensional information, energy, or objects to cross into our reality. In the analogy, it is like briefly opening a window or doorway between your 3D room and the ants’ tabletop world. When the link is stable, the “portal” functions smoothly and can be closed at will. When it is disrupted by extreme energy, the portal can fail, leaving the projected object or being temporarily stranded on our side.
When the UAP “leaves” normally, it simply shifts or withdraws back into the higher-dimensional space, like pulling your hand out of water. The projection disappears instantly from our screen. It was never fully stuck in our 3D rules to begin with; it was always connected to a bigger reality.
Time while on Earth always moves forward for both sides — it doesn’t go backward or stop completely. However, the rate and feeling of time can differ depending on which side of the projection you are on, similar to how a movie projector works. From our 3D human perspective, the UAP might appear suddenly, hover motionless for minutes, accelerate instantly, or vanish in a flash. From the higher-dimensional NHI side, the same event could feel perfectly normal and smooth — like us casually reaching down to the ants on a tabletop for a few seconds or dipping our hand into a fish tank briefly. The beings controlling the projection can adjust how fast or slow the event appears in our world, almost like changing the playback speed on a video. This is why some witnesses report objects that seem to “freeze” in mid-air or move at impossible speeds. Time itself isn’t broken; it is simply experienced differently through the dimensional “screen.”
The Holographic Principle is just one theoretical way to think about these quantum and higher-dimensional effects. We are still really early in understanding it — we are basically just dipping our toes in the water — while more advanced beings would obviously know far more about how these connections and time experiences actually work.
