The apocalypse suggestion is a predictive programming scam, a bad joke told to your soul.
March 27, 2020
Maat
The constant suggestion of ‘end’ tells the subconscious that beginning & end, life & death, off & on, and the threat of existence & non-existence are to be feared.
The apocalypse... what a farce!
As a poorly created predictive programming scam, the apocalypse suggestion is one you can feel good ignoring.
What variety of apocalypse bedtime stories have others been trying to program you with?
Sometimes you dream, in ways that lucidity floods your world.
Somehow, from somewhere... dark thoughts pass through. You shake and wake in sweat, wondering if you had a dream or a vision.
‘How come it seemed so real?’ you ask.
Well ease back would you, and make yourself a nice hot toddy, because I’m here to tell you that the apocalypse bedtime story is a bad joke meant to program the listener through predictive programming. Yet, in it’s glee to program, it still fails at predicatively programming!
Identify, reject and remove predictive programming from your life.
The apocalypse is a bad joke, an attempt to distract you from critical thinking. Nothing really happens… and if it does, so what!
The real apocalypse is the binding of spirit, not any destruction of what certain vantages call ‘world’. The ‘nature’ of the planet isn’t going to change. Without souls to perceive they’re on a world, the 'consented to' experience of such loses its playground essence.
The fear that this conditioning wields exists in the future.
If you’re in front of yourself, you’re not in the present.
If you’re not in the present, and here, then maybe you’re already dead
; ) Just saying.
Move beyond the mutually arising implications of life and death, existence and non-existence.
Life and death are not what they appear.
Part of the scam is to make believe that the end is nigh - which is nothing but a distraction from reaching your mastery. The constant suggestion of ‘end’ suggests to the subconscious that beginning and end, life and death, off and on, existence and non-existence are actually real.
In this image, the character ‘X’Tzu’ from ‘11:11 El Luchador Gauntlet’ finally rejects all of the apocalypse suggestions, knowing that those who haven't examined this belief are married to duality.
Declaration
Add a little honey into that whisky and lemon juice, and repeat after me,
‘Any belief that I didn’t create, critically view, or consciously accept that’s showing off in my head; I now cast aside, ignore, and walk away from. I am sovereign. I choose my drinks and my death in the way I want, or decide to dissolve death completely by moving into my Absolute-self at my volition.’
Then after, dump your TV in the garbage, cancel your subscription to major media, and head over to the Alchemy Lounge