When the cell is clocked back, the linear flow of time is broken. One floats into the spiral timeline. The projection of the usual chronology number is overruled.



Okay, so I do understand that our current understanding of physics doesn't support "clocking back" cells. However, it is also true that research in areas like quantum mechanics does explore the strangeness of time at very small scales.



As of now, with our current general understanding, the spiral timeline could represent a subjective experience of disorientation. And this happens when a traumatic event or intense meditation disrupts the usual sense of time. However, with the spiral cell illusion, it is not really a disorientation. The linear time sequence is deliberately manipulated by clocking back the cellular spiral.



This is a meeting grounds for the subjective and the objective experience.





This also has the effect of disrupting the usual personal growth so common to linear time experiences. But then, this doesn't really guarantee any apparent journey of self-discovery. So the question is why do it at all? It keeps you in Trishanku heaven.



Depending on the phase of experience, it has the potential to be a powerful source of creative inspiration. It could be a starting point for a story, a piece of art, or even a philosophical exploration.



The process is very simple if you have a mind that unlearns fast. And this adds another interesting layer to the experience! Unlearning is that which changes the perception. The idea of needing to "unlearn" means we might have to shed some preconceived notions about time. This "unlearning" could be a form of open-mindedness, a willingness to entertain concepts outside the norm.



The more you can unlearn quickly, the better.



We know that children have this ability to learn quickly, and also unlearn and adapt their understanding of the world. Our experience requires a similar childlike openness. This is just more than meditation and even more than a willingness to cultivate a state of "beginner's mind," where the approach to experiences is without preconceptions.