DWQA Questions › Tag: divine helpFilter:AllOpenResolvedClosedUnansweredSort byViewsAnswersVotesAfter reviewing Karl Mollison’s channeling of James Randi and Whitney Houston about their experiences with being stuck in limbo after they passed, it seems clear that the experience is not always “uniform.” Indeed, the experience and intensity of the negativity can vary from individual to individual. We’ve learned in the past that some human lost soul spirits actually attach themselves to the energy field of living humans and find some genuine protection and sanctuary from predation there. After encountering the séance results above, about “spirit groups” working together in what still appears to be limbo or the lower astral plane, is it the case that like-minded spirits band together and form “in limbo” teams or communities? Given the otherwise very negative nature of the lower astral plane, especially the fact that it is home to nefarious spirits of all kinds, banding together would seem to make some sense. In the same way it’s safer to walk through a bad neighborhood with a group of people rather than alone, does the same hold true for the lower astral plane and those stuck in it? Is there safety in numbers? Do such groups or teams or communities exist, and if so, how do they help to alter or make lower astral plane living more palatable, if at all? What can Creator tell us?ClosedNicola asked 4 weeks ago • Divine Realm77 views0 answers0 votesIn the book, An Atheist in Heaven, Paul Davids writes about interviewing “arch skeptic” Dr. Michael Shermer, executive director of The Skeptics Society, and founding publisher of Skeptic magazine. Dr. Gary Schwartz, in the same book, characterized Dr. Shermer as a “Type II skeptic.” He writes, “Sadly, there are individuals who claim to be ‘skeptics’ who are not open minded. They do not engage in careful questioning. They are not discerning in their evaluation of evidence. Though they may claim – often insistently – that they are undecided and seek the truth, in practice they are disbelievers or ‘unbelievers.’ They hold strong beliefs about what must be impossible. Furthermore, they often engage in irresponsible and unjustified evaluation of theories, methods, findings, and conclusions which challenge their convictions about what is possible in nature and the cosmos. This is pseudo-skepticism. I call this ‘Type II Skepticism.'” During his interview with Paul Davids, Dr. Michael Shermer certainly came off as a “Type II Skeptic.” However, later in the book, and just before it was published, Dr. Shermer ended up having his own very “mysterious” experience that he confessed “shook his skepticism.” He was getting married and his bride had an old transistor radio that belonged to her deceased grandfather that hadn’t worked in decades. New batteries didn’t help – the radio was dead. On their wedding day, his bride said she wanted to say something to him alone, so they went to the back of the house where they heard music playing in the bedroom. They opened a drawer and found her grandfather’s radio playing a romantic love song. Other family members reported the music started playing just as the wedding was to begin. The next day, the radio went silent and never worked again. Dr. Shermer’s bride was reportedly a skeptic as well, so how could this happen within the rules of engagement, especially since we know the divine realm will go to great lengths to protect the beliefs of skeptics? So much so that just the presence of James Randi, for example, could literally temporarily disable the intuitive abilities of those around him? What can Creator tell us about this radio at the wedding event and how it all fits within the rules of engagement? Was the bride’s grandfather still in limbo?ClosedNicola asked 4 weeks ago • Divine Realm66 views0 answers0 votesDr. Gary Schwarz reported in the book, An Atheist in Heaven, that even after decades of research and seven books he wrote on the topic, he still struggled believing it all! He wrote, “In my case, being a well-trained skeptical thinker and well-educated disbeliever in the possibility of an afterlife, I had this strong, uncontrollable emotional reactive habit of automatically assuming that anyone who believed in life after death was naive, ignorant, stupid, brainwashed, prejudiced, delusional and/or crazy. This emotional reaction was clearly inconsistent with the emerging theory … and research. I experienced increasing conflict between what the emerging theory and research were teaching me versus my growing fear that if I accepted the theory and research, that maybe I was becoming ‘brainwashed’ by the theory and evidence, and I was even ‘losing my mind.’ I came to realize that I was like one of Pavlov’s classically conditioned dogs who automatically salivated to the sound of a bell. Dogs do not automatically salivate when they hear a bell ringing, and neither do we.” This confession by Dr. Schwartz is both revealing and disturbing. How could it possibly be that decades of research and validation could not successfully alter his emotions? How could he still harbor fear? Is all Type II Skepticism ultimately a FEAR reaction? Was the origin of Dr. Schwartz’s inexplicable emotions, even after decades, wholly originating with his deep subconscious? If so, it certainly reinforces Creator’s assertions that there is little short of divine intervention, via the Lightworker Healing Protocol and Deep Subconscious Mind Reset, that we can do to alter beliefs in the deep subconscious. What can Creator tell us about Dr. Schwartz’s struggle, and what lessons can we draw from it?ClosedNicola asked 4 weeks ago • Divine Realm28 views0 answers0 votesDr. Gary Schwartz provided another deeply mysterious observation about himself in the book. He wrote, “It is now Alice in Wonderland time. For many people, it is having … direct personal experiences which leads us to change our minds. However, if a phenomenon is novel, challenging, and especially if it is ‘seemingly unbelievable,’ then having a direct personal experience with the phenomenon is often essential. And for certain phenomena, there is no substitute for experiencing it ourselves. … What I have discovered is that the more unbelievable events are replicated, the greater the level of disbelief one may experience. Often the so-called boggle factor does not decrease with replication, it actually increases. This increased disbelief is not rational; it is emotional. Replication and validation are cornerstones of the scientific method. On the one hand, with each replication we are more convinced that the phenomenon is real, and yet simultaneously the phenomenon feels more unbelievable and seemingly impossible. If any single ‘formally physical person’ illustrates this emotional boggle factor, it is Forry. As the empirical evidence accumulated, the case for Forry being alive and well became stronger and stronger, and yet simultaneously the evidence became more and more difficult to believe.” What is Creator’s perspective on this dilemma and conundrum?ClosedNicola asked 4 weeks ago • Divine Realm57 views0 answers0 votesThe rules of engagement are certainly there for a reason. But also, arguably, they can be one of the biggest obstacles there is for creating critically needed change in this world. As Creator has said repeatedly, saving humanity is a “Divine Level Problem.” Can Creator tell us how Empowered Prayer, the Lightworker Healing Protocol, Deep Subconscious Mind Reset, and Divine Life Support are the tools we need to both work within the rules of engagement but also overcome the obstacles they represent at the same time?ClosedNicola asked 4 weeks ago • Divine Realm60 views0 answers0 votesA viewer asks: “I had a few recent dreams of experiencing a power outage and watching on TV a young man smiling and then seeing the pupils of his eyes turn from round into vertical like a reptile. There was no subtlety about it. This coincided with my daughter on a camping trip with her boyfriend encountering a garter snake while trying to sleep. It disturbed her greatly as you can imagine. What was the significance of these events? Was this to help prepare me for the coming events somehow?”ClosedNicola asked 4 weeks ago • Non-Local Consciousness161 views0 answers0 votesWas this reporting in Scientific American accurate in its speculations: “Bird flu showed up on dairy farms and surprised everyone. How did bird flu jump to cows?” What can Creator tell us?ClosedNicola asked 4 weeks ago • Extraterrestrial Interlopers42 views0 answers0 votesA viewer asks: “Can we augment sleep so that we can get more rest with less sleep? Especially useful with recent amplified targeting against sleep and rest to fatigue people out.” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 4 weeks ago • Non-Local Consciousness164 views0 answers0 votesWas the channeling I did accurate, that Flexafen actually provides a superior benefit compared to taking Advanced Collagen Plus, from Advanced Bionutritionals, for helping arthritic joint symptoms and healing?ClosedNicola asked 4 weeks ago • Healing Modalities45 views0 answers0 votesA practitioner asks: “I had been without arthritis symptoms in my hands and acne on my face for several months. All of a sudden, both are back. Is this due to karma, due to a new medication I started taking in June or the fact that I am taking a different form of the chaga mushroom than what was vetted through you? If none of these are the cause of the flare up of inflammation in my body, what is?”ClosedNicola asked 4 weeks ago • Karma140 views0 answers0 votesA study was just reported that ivermectin, in a nanoparticle formulation for helping to cross the blood-brain barrier, was highly effective in shrinking brain tumors in rats by 70% after giving a tiny daily dose for 10 days. Because of poor drug delivery to the brain without a special formulation, does this mean that ivermectin will not be effective in treating dementia, despite its antiviral activity?ClosedNicola asked 4 weeks ago • Healing Modalities35 views0 answers0 votesPhysicians usually mandate stopping all other drug use when administering chemotherapy. Can that directive be safely ignored in the case of ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine?ClosedNicola asked 1 month ago • Healing Modalities76 views0 answers0 votesAssuming that chemotherapy will suppress the immune system, will that lower the benefit from the ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine? Is it best for this or safety reasons to have a drug-free period in between?ClosedNicola asked 1 month ago • Healing Modalities145 views0 answers0 votesWhen using ivermectin plus hydroxychloroquine for cancer, is it advisable to do a second round of administration for extra thoroughness? If so, after what interval?ClosedNicola asked 1 month ago • Healing Modalities65 views0 answers0 votesFor administering ivermectin and hydroxychloroquine, we have seen a recommendation to give the ivermectin on an empty stomach 1 hour prior to a meal, but to give hydroxychloroquine along with a meal. Ivermectin with a fatty meal can reportedly reach higher blood levels and might be less well tolerated in terms of GI complaints, but that might be advantageous and worth trying if tolerated. What is the best dosing regimen when using these together as joint antiviral and anticancer agents?ClosedNicola asked 1 month ago • Healing Modalities63 views0 answers0 votes