A Thoughtform is a coherent, holistic informational form assembled by a person or a system from perception, experience, knowledge, and context. It represents a "snapshot" of reality, but not exactly a copy: a Thoughtform is always created from a specific point of assembly and, therefore, inevitably includes a subjective aspect.
A Thoughtform can contain:
Images;
States;
Memories;
Structures of objects;
Processes and the dynamics of change.
Unlike scattered information, a Thoughtform possesses internal coherence and can be held as a single entity. It can be static (a fixed snapshot) or dynamic (a process, a story, or a change over time).
Thoughtforms are used:
To transmit information, experience, and complex meanings non-verbally;
For collective thinking and design;
As a foundation for further densification and manifestation into material or other forms when directed by attention and Consentis.
A Thoughtform is not an intention or an action. It is a structured snapshot of the thought-stream—a form of information ready for use, transmission, or transformation. A unit of content.
It can be:
Transmitted directly (mentally);
Visualized using a relay/translator (as a hologram);
Sealed within a crystal—temporarily or permanently, including access protection (e.g., restricted to a specific individual);
Rewritten—in this case, the Thoughtform becomes new, undergoing a process of re-evaluation.