DWQA Questions › Tag: consciousnessFilter:AllOpenResolvedClosedUnansweredSort byViewsAnswersVotesIs the severing of cords in healing really a stopgap measure? Isn’t the ultimate goal the healing of the negativity that the cord is transmitting? Doesn’t that negativity still need healing even if the cord is successfully severed? Will karma still involve the victim in future efforts to heal that discord, or is the victim truly free of future involvement?ClosedNicola asked 4 years ago • Karma414 views0 answers0 votesYou have told us in answer to a recent question: “What is needed here is a fuller understanding and mechanistic description of human intention being launched to have an interplay with the divine realm and how that brings about changes, big and small, through divine interaction.” Can you help start this learning with a tutorial about the mechanism of human interaction with the divine realm? If a human outreach went to the collective unconscious repository of human thought to await a response, it would not be private. Does the intention to speak to the Almighty create a special cording to Creator that persists until the reason for the outreach is satisfied?ClosedNicola asked 4 years ago • Karma422 views0 answers0 votesWhat else will help us understand the phenomenon of cordings generated by anger towards God?ClosedNicola asked 4 years ago • Karma414 views0 answers0 votesThe Lightworker Healing Protocol has a section for dissolving energetic cords and healing their karmic consequences. Is it possible to have both positive and negative cords to the same person, place, or event? Or is the energetic connection itself neutral, and what is transmitted or conveyed over it determines the cord’s negativity or positivity?ClosedNicola asked 4 years ago • Karma387 views0 answers0 votesCan Creator share how Empowered Prayer and the Lightworker Healing Protocol can help us deal with removing, or maintaining, these energetic connections in a manner that is highest and best for all involved?ClosedNicola asked 4 years ago • Karma384 views0 answers0 votesDestructive habitual thought patterns and mindsets are commonplace, such as defeatism, shyness, low self-esteem, aggressiveness, hostility, arrogance, and egotism, and these are reinforced with many misguided and self-limiting beliefs stored within cellular memory. Negative characteristics such as this, often seen as personality traits, have much to do with impaired progress and success in school, in establishing and advancing a career, and maintaining healthy interpersonal and love relationships. Is it true that cellular consciousness becomes a part of the personality through its experience and influence?ClosedNicola asked 4 years ago • Karma607 views0 answers0 votesAnyone who takes more than a passing interest in multicultural spiritual topics will inevitably encounter the writings of Carlos Castaneda. Wikipedia has this to say about Dr. Castaneda: His … “books were ethnographic accounts describing his apprenticeship with a traditional ‘Man of Knowledge’ identified as Don Juan Matus, allegedly a Yaqui Indian from Northern Mexico. The veracity of these books was doubted from their original publication, and they are now widely considered to be fictional.” Yet for anyone who takes serious time to study his works, it seems almost impossible to draw that same conclusion. What is Creator’s perspective on Castaneda and his life’s work?ClosedNicola asked 4 years ago • Non-Local Consciousness463 views0 answers0 votesIt seems incredible, to live our western secular lives, and be almost completely ignorant of the extraordinary spiritual heritage possessed by American indigenous peoples. Castaneda’s mentor, Don Juan Matus, is a most mysterious figure indeed. From the time of the Spaniard Cortez, indigenous shamanistic traditions have been brutally suppressed and pushed into the background. Castaneda writes of Don Juan in The Eagle’s Gift: “He told me that if I wanted to fly, I had to summon the intent of flying. He showed me then how he himself could summon it, and jumped in the air and soared in a circle, like a huge kite. Or he would make things appear in his hand. He said he knew the intent of many things and could call those things by intending them.” All this sounds extraordinary, but we know Jesus could do these things. The Hindus have a word “siddi” to describe these capabilities that we regard as “miraculous.” The message was that these abilities were obtainable by anyone with access to a knowledgeable mentor, and who was willing to dedicate themselves fully to the pursuit. What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 4 years ago • Non-Local Consciousness397 views0 answers0 votesIt seemed the key and focus of learning to perform miracles in the waking state was to learn to first do these things in the dream state. Without mastery of the dream world, there could not be mastery of the physical world. Nearly all of Castaneda’s training was focused on gaining mastery of the dream world, or the “second attention” as Don Juan called it. It is assumed that the second attention is a synonym for our intuitive faculties. Our waking state is the first attention. Mastery of the second attention or intuitive faculties was the principal pursuit of the shaman and the source of his knowledge and ability to be used in service to his people. The sorcerer, on the other hand, is one who works to attain the same mastery, but only to serve the self and the pursuit of power and control over others. What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 4 years ago • Non-Local Consciousness354 views0 answers0 votesCastaneda wrote: “The power that governs the destiny of all living beings is called the Eagle … The Eagle is devouring the awareness of all the creatures that, alive on Earth a moment before and now dead, have floated to the Eagle’s beak, like a ceaseless swarm of fireflies, to meet their owner, their reason for having had life … for awareness is the Eagle’s food.” This seems like an incomplete description of the Creator of All That Is. Accurate to a point, but missing the quality of love, and the desire on the part of Creator for partnership with his creations. This is further reflected in this passage: “The Eagle, that power that governs the destinies of all living things, reflects equally at once all those living things. There is no way, therefore, for man to pray to the Eagle, to ask favors, to hope for grace. The human part of the Eagle is too insignificant to move the whole.” As powerful as he was, was Don Juan missing the forest for the trees? What can Creator tell us?ClosedNicola asked 4 years ago • Non-Local Consciousness372 views0 answers0 votesCastaneda wrote: Don Juan “said that there is nothing more dangerous than the evil fixation of the second attention (or evil mastery of the intuitive faculties). When warriors (or seekers/seers or shaman/sorcerers) learn to focus on the weak side of the second attention nothing can stand in their way. They become hunters of men, ghouls. Even if they are no longer alive, they can reach for their prey through time as if they were present here and now.” How big is the problem of dead evil sorcerers? Are these some of the human hybrid spirits that seem to have partnered with the fallen angelics? If they were particularly adept sorcerers when alive, might their powers even exceed that of some of the fallen angelics, similar in the way that Anunnaki spirits manage to control and repurpose the fallen angelics for evil aims?ClosedNicola asked 4 years ago • Non-Local Consciousness386 views0 answers0 votesCastaneda wrote: “… all archaeological ruins in Mexico, especially the pyramids, were harmful to modern man. He (Don Juan) depicted the pyramids as foreign expressions of thought and action. He said that every item, every design in them, was a calculated effort to record aspects of attention that were totally alien to us. For Don Juan, it was not only ruins of past cultures that held a dangerous element in them, anything which was the object of an obsessive concern had a harmful potential.” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 4 years ago • Non-Local Consciousness435 views0 answers0 votesCastaneda wrote: “Your compulsion to possess and hold on to things is not unique, he (Don Juan) said. ‘Everyone who wants to follow the warrior’s path, the sorcerer’s way, has to rid himself of this fixation.’ My benefactor told me that there was a time when warriors did have material objects on which they placed their obsession. And that gave rise to the question of whose object would be more powerful, or the most powerful of them all. Remnants of those objects still remain in the world, the leftovers of that race for power.” For a tourist to pick up such an object found in ancient ruins and take it home, can be dangerous in the extreme. What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 4 years ago • Non-Local Consciousness378 views0 answers0 votesCastaneda wrote that Don Juan said, “… the ultimate accomplishment of a warrior (seer, seeker, shaman) was joy.” Sounds like everyone’s after the same thing, the bliss of divine communion, divine partnership perhaps, with Creator and Creator’s infinite love? What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 4 years ago • Non-Local Consciousness403 views0 answers0 votesCreator has said repeatedly, that life force energy flows from the divine realm to keep all of us alive at a bare minimum. Castaneda wrote that “Life force flows to us from the south, and leaves us flowing to the north.” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 4 years ago • Non-Local Consciousness399 views0 answers0 votes