I watched the movie the Moses Code last month and was surprised that I had seen it before. I remember it making an impression on me at that time, but not like it did this time. In the docu-movie, James F Twyman, talks about the phrase, "I am that I am" how we've heard it before, and changes it to "I am that, I am." In doing so the emphasis is quite different and much more specific and suggestive. In hearing or saying I am that I am, to me, it simply means I am who I am, not changing any particular idea of who I am. The theory behind the coma, is part of the acceptance that we are all one, being all one we have everything within us. We simply have had different training and experience giving us different talents and skills. Using the shift caused by the coma, we can change our perception of our abilities. For example, if I see a person who has a trait that I admire but I do not feel strongly in myself, I think of that person and say "I am that, I am". This allows my "being" to accept that I have those qualities in me and allows those qualities to grow and surface. I feel using this simple technique is allowing me to expand and be open to gaining skills and opportunities I did not see before. I think it's worth the viewing.
Wikipedia: The film builds on the principles espoused in The Secret contending that Moses was given a "code of creation" by God. The movie suggests spiritual and emotional uses for "The Moses Code" rather than the material ones implied by The Secret.