“If They Only Knew” is about the interesting world of the metaphysical and the author’s beliefs and personal experiences with it. Daulton delves into issues of ascension, such as dimensions and levels of consciousness, the Mayan Calendar and December 21, 2012, creating one's own reality and a lot more. The book's message is clear - Open your mind to new ideas and know that there is more to our life than only what we can see, feel and touch!
This book was very comforting and wonderful read. Sharing a very personal sacred experience as this one is always to me , so brave , so amazing and truly magical . Darren is truly magical
I was on a flight from LAX to Honolulu two days after Christmas to read about Darren Daulton's experience of higher consciousness and spiritualism through astral worlds and out-of-body time travel experiences. I've heard of his stories before from various interviews in the past, but I figured I'd give it a shot on a five and a half hour flight.
Let's ignore the fact Dutch can't form a sentence in his book and focus on his experiences at hand. When Darren hit a homerun at wrigley field inside the line, he felt "as if someone else was swinging for me." This somehow began his journey to the astral worlds of multiverse time travel after winning the 1997 World Series and retiring from Baseball to explore more spiritual journeys in an ascension to get away from the real world.
Maybe his spiritual journey in the Baseball Diamond helped elevate the miracle Marlins to win the World Series that year, but the book left me more confused about interstellar dimensions and time travel journeys than I'd come to expect out of Dutch. There's more questions I have to ask about his experiences that I think are left out on his 150+ page book. Questions based on his experience if he went to a specialist to explain how he traveled to different worlds or having help when he's on the Field for his 14 years with the Philadelphia Phillies and the Florida Marlins. How could he measure his experiences in an EKG machine? Something else more in depth besides the locker room pep talk he's rendering to us in this book.
It's interesting to note Christopher Nolan is directing a similar movie called Interstellar that fits Darren Daulton's metaphysical experiences. Maybe he might give us a more visual insight to Darren's experiences than this book.
I'm sorry Darren, you were my favorite baseball player growing up but I could not finish this book. Perhaps the number one way to make people think you're crazy is to rant on and on about how people think you're crazy but you're not.