In this series of posts, I want to share what I see as the key skills we need to possess (or start developing in a hurry!) in order to withstand the crucible of World War III and emerge free, healthy, and victorious.
A few caveats before we begin:
I believe that we entered WWIII proper at the start of 2020.
I believe this is a war for the souls of man and for the soul of the planet.
I believe it is being waged on all of mankind (and much of nature) in the form of spiritual warfare and information warfare. With slavery of the body next on the evil agenda for those who survive.
I believe that those of us who are working towards enlightenment (or self-realization, individuation, on the spiritual path, etc.) chose as souls to incarnate at this time in history — because we wanted to save the world.
All of these premises are arguable on many levels, for sure. But that’s how I see it, based on a lot of study and (number 4) based on 15+ years of working with hundreds and hundreds of sincere, kind people who hired me to help them connect with their soul’s purpose and clear personal and ancestral trauma patterns.
I decided to start with the mental plane, since that’s where most of us spend most of our time. So, what are the key mindsets or mental skills we need to be able to withstand a massive onslaught of stupidity and evil and come out on top?
How do we take back ownership of our minds?
The true understanding is that the mind includes everything; when you think something comes from outside it means only that something appears in your mind. Nothing outside yourself can cause any trouble. You yourself make the waves in your mind. If you leave your mind as it is, it will become calm. This mind is called big mind.
- Shunryu Suzuki
Meditation is the most obvious answer to the question of how to own one’s mind in an environment (current world society) that has been specifically designed to fill our minds with the thoughts that will cause us to obey the cabal that wishes to exert total control over the realm and its inhabitants.
In the passage from Zen Mind, Beginner’s Mind, Suzuki is talking about a practice of perception that makes life itself a form of ongoing meditation.
He says that waves are the nature of the mind and that if we will just watch the waves until we can do so without attaching to them, until we can see a big, gnarly wave rolling in and not make a big deal out of it, then we realize that thoughts are just mind waves. And as we realize that, it gets easier to stay detached and to experience the sea of the mind as calm — or stormy — without upset.
Over time, a meditation practice gives us the repeated experience of being able to watch the thoughts in the mind until they thin out and slow down to the point we can actually examine them with curiosity — rather than reactively embracing them or judging and then suppressing them.
The mental, emotional and physical benefits of meditation are well-documented. Here are two of the benefits of a regular meditation practice you may not be as familiar with. Both are especially important for surviving — and thriving in — this unprecedented state of global information warfare:
Knowing that you possess the skill and know-how to calm your thoughts and change the tone of your mental realm whenever necessary gives you a sense of integrity and agency. Rather than being at the mercy of the monkey mind, you know yourself as the boss of your mental space. This self-knowledge builds confidence and self-esteem.
Meditation shows you that most of what you have claimed as “my thoughts” are actually just bits of mental detritus flowing through (or clogging up) your mind space. So many of the painful or energy-draining thoughts in the mind don’t actually belong to us — except for the fact we have been tricked into claiming them as ours. Where do these thoughts actually come from? A few good starting points for exploring that question might be: shit my dad said, ideas about who I am that I inferred from my mother’s contempt, stories about the world I learned in school, thoughts that my friend, partner, or coworker runs through her mental projector all the time, thoughts generated by the shadow projections of my partner or family member, media programming and government mind control.1
Healing core trauma
I hear a lot of talk from the woke generation about trauma-informed this or that. Unfortunately, many of the people talking about trauma-informed therapy seem to understand it mainly as a way they can bolster their victim credentials in a society where achieving “oppressed minority” status has become the pinnacle of ambition for many.
But at least they are acknowledging an important fact. Which is that we are all the walking wounded.
I side with Alice Miller (The Drama of the Gifted Child), who said that the way we rear children in Western society is basically institutionalized child abuse. Sure, some people got decent parenting this time around, but not nearly as many as think they did. But we are all born into the global system of slavery run by the same families who are funding and orchestrating the COVID-19 genocide, the “climate emergency” PSYOP, and the Great Reset.
A commitment to healing core trauma is crucial for taking back sovereignty over your own mind because until we heal the wounded places inside the self, we are incapable of sustaining the amount of energy required to consistently think for ourselves.
Why is this? Because you can’t keep a calm and focused attention — or even think your own thoughts on command — when you’ve got a boatload of pain squashed down into your unconscious.
Shame, often accompanied by physical and emotional abuse, is the primary means by which we are domesticated into society. Shame is the most hideous emotion; people will do almost anything to avoid feeling it.
The toxic shame that is used to turn us into good little boys and girls — and later, into good little order-followers — is especially painful because it is shame that was implanted into us rather than shame we earned by our own wrongdoing.
Because we don’t understand this core toxic shame, we decide as young children that there must be something seriously wrong with us. The toxic shame put into us by parents, teachers, abusers, and media and religious programming gets woven into the fabric of our self-image.
The defective self image is too painful to remain fully aware of in childhood, so it is eventually repressed into the subconscious. Where it lurks to this day, waiting for a mean comment or media trigger to activate it. Then it pops up above the surface and projects its filmstrip of trusty fear images or its audio stream of negative self talk.
This is one main reason the mass mind control tactics employed in the Corona PSYOP have been so wildly successful: most people unconsciously believe themselves to be filthy, repugnant, infectious, sick, weak, and harmful to others.
Because they have neither faced their core trauma nor developed a long-term mindfulness practice, most people are unaware that the voices in their head telling them they are pathetic, stupid, fat, ugly, weak, or unloveable are not really part of who they are but are in fact the tape loops of their trauma playing endlessly beneath the surface of the mind.
On the surface, these people may appear to be sane, responsible, optimistic and put-together. But guess which part of the mind the mind is targeted by the mind control imagery and hypnotic messaging employed by the Mockingbird media?
Yep. The subconscious mind.
If people were able to analyze the messaging about any of today’s hot topics — COVID, domestic terror, vaccine mandates, “climate emergency” — they would quickly see through all of the lies and circular logic. And they would withdraw their consent and their energy and the whole machine would grind to a halt.
Meditation/mindfulness and trauma healing modalities such as inner child work, somatic releasing, hypnotherapy, and emotional freedom technique work in complementary ways to empower us to take back our minds and withstand the unprecedented storm of mind control programming coming at us not only from the governments and corporate media but from our brainwashed fellow humans.
Those of us who have already developed these skills are probably going to be increasingly in-demand as late awakeners realize they need help in developing some capacity for psychic self-defense.
If you’re just starting out, all I can say is, make it a priority. To quote former presidential candidate and A Return to Love author Marianne Williamson:
“The only bad meditation is the one you just didn’t do.”
People often think of meditation as sitting criss-cross applesauce and intoning a mantra or observing the breath. But meditation, in my way of thinking, is any practice that enables you to tune in to what is actually happening in the mind and by so doing, improve your experience of mind.
People born under the sign of Gemini often have hyperactive mind patterns. I often advise my Gemini clients to not even try sitting in Zen meditation because — while that practice would probably be beneficial if they kept at it long enough — it usually just leaves them extremely frustrated. For people with highly active minds, walking or tai chi or qui gong — forms of meditation in motion — can be much more fruitful than sitting meditation.