DWQA Questions › Tag: human corruptionFilter:AllOpenResolvedClosedUnansweredSort byViewsAnswersVotesThere is a martial artist who has six black belts in six different disciplines. Once when asked “why,” he replied, “others golf, this is what I do.” But another time he was overheard complaining after practicing with weapons (wooden swords and knives) that he simply couldn’t stand “being vulnerable” as he put it. This from a man with six black belts. Can Creator share what trauma has clearly fueled this man’s lifelong obsession with self-defense?ClosedNicola asked 5 years ago • Karma593 views0 answers0 votesSaving money is wise, more often than not. But when it becomes an obsession, it can result in a number of issues. Hoarding is one of them. Some people will buy an endless string of used goods if they are cheap, but whether the item purchased is even needed or useful, is a secondary concern. To the extent that such a person is convinced that saving money is good, arguments advocating moderation seem to fall on deaf ears. Can Creator comment?ClosedNicola asked 5 years ago • Karma641 views0 answers0 votesSpouses throughout the ages have noted that they are rarely listened to. A spouse might observe that a window where a spouse is trying to grow some starter plants lacks sufficient sunlight, but is utterly and even violently ignored. But when a neighbor who is anything but a botanist points out the same thing, the plants get moved right away. Even though people have more mobility today, we seem to be isolated more than ever. People have fewer and fewer non-family guests than ever before. Common sense appears to need common inputs from multiple people. Does excessive privacy and isolation impair common sense?ClosedNicola asked 5 years ago • Karma629 views0 answers0 votesWe know that the deep subconscious communicates through emotion and that it falls to the conscious mind to decide what it means and act accordingly. In lucid moments, people enslaved to irrational behaviors will even admit that they themselves see the irrationality, but “cannot help themselves.” Clearly, there is a healing need here in terms of removing underlying past and parallel life trauma that is fueling the emotion leading to the irrational behavior, but beliefs are also in play. In addition to healing the trauma, do the beliefs have to be dealt with as well?ClosedNicola asked 5 years ago • Karma540 views0 answers0 votesThe problem with everyday irrational behavior, especially when there are agendas working at cross purposes, is that it can lead to even bigger problems if left unchecked—perhaps even resulting in trauma worse than the original insult creating the behavior to begin with. As an example, perhaps the spouse wakes up one day, decides they have had enough, and ends the marriage. How can people realize they have to push back against their own irrationality (and not wait for others to do it)?ClosedNicola asked 5 years ago • Karma584 views0 answers0 votesPushing back against one’s own emotions and habits is usually countered by the deep subconscious with even more intense emotion and anxiety. Marshalling inner strength seems an almost inexplicable outcome of excessive irrational behavior. At what point does the deep subconscious finally relent and ease off in response to a newly determined self, no longer willing to accept such emotions uncritically? Is it simply a bigger trauma overwhelming a smaller one, or is it the long-in-coming birth of wisdom?ClosedNicola asked 5 years ago • Karma707 views0 answers0 votesHitting rock bottom is the hard way to overcome everyday irrationality. Can Creator share how prayer work and the Lightworker Healing Protocol provide an easier way to resolve our not so benign idiosyncrasies?ClosedNicola asked 5 years ago • Karma605 views0 answers0 votesA client asks: “I’ve been told by a shaman in Peru that my whole family was ritually sacrificed at Atlantis (but not my current partner), and that I’ve been under very oppressive black magic since that point. I’ve had recent experiences of dark rituals they’re performing on me which are energetically disgusting and feel grosser than gross can be. What I kind of saw as the Sword of Damocles, but many, many little knives coming down … Oh, which I mention because I remember this energy and feeling from childhood too.” Were these accurate psychic perceptions?ClosedNicola asked 5 years ago • Karma598 views0 answers0 votesShe also asks: “I’m also a bit curious about my genetics. I sometimes fear my mother is Anunnaki, but I know I am far more human/Pleiadian because my mother’s side 8 generations back the women are incapable of empathy and extremely toxic and abusive to the girls (Although I was told they are sea witches, whatever that means, and that under this density resorted to stealing divine womb chakra energy from their daughters … My grandma just passed at 101). This is giving me trouble with the mother gazing divine womb chakra activity. My father’s side are salt of the earth beautiful loving people, which I myself am FAR more like genetically and personally.” What can we tell her?ClosedNicola asked 5 years ago • Karma595 views0 answers0 votesThere have been prominent announcements from the FDA about the inadvisability and dangers of people using ivermectin to treat COVID-19. Caution about taking pill formulations intended for large animals by humans is understandable, but this seems to have the same feel as the trashing of hydroxychloroquine early and often by the medical establishment exaggeration of possible side effects and even alteration of the data in clinical trials to make it falsely look both ineffective and highly toxic. Is that planned or underway to deliberately undercut further studies of ivermectin?ClosedNicola asked 5 years ago • Coronavirus COVID-19669 views0 answers0 votesWill further clinical studies of fluvoxamine in patients with COVID-19 be suppressed by the US medical establishment as they have done for hydroxychloroquine?ClosedNicola asked 5 years ago • Coronavirus COVID-19494 views0 answers0 votesIn a preliminary study of adult outpatients with symptomatic COVID-19, patients treated with fluvoxamine, compared with placebo, had a lower likelihood of clinical deterioration. There was clinical deterioration in 0 of 80 patients in the fluvoxamine group and in 6 of 72 patients in the placebo group (absolute difference, 8.7% [95% CI, 1.8%-16.4%] from survival analysis; log-rank P = .009). The fluvoxamine group had 1 serious adverse event and 11 other adverse events, whereas the placebo group had 6 serious adverse events and 12 other adverse events. Is this a worthwhile agent for COVID-19 management? How would it compare with hydroxychloroquine or ivermectin?ClosedNicola asked 5 years ago • Coronavirus COVID-19614 views0 answers0 votesAn osteopathic physician and frequent spokesperson on the Internet says there are at least 10 ways that the SARS-CoV-2 mRNA vaccines can cause serious side effects in human recipients. Is this the case, or an exaggeration? Why is she beating this drum?ClosedNicola asked 5 years ago • Coronavirus COVID-19849 views0 answers0 votesA viewer asks: “Are self-driving vehicles, which include planes, trains, and automobiles, part of the evil plans of the dark forces? It would seem they could be interfered with technologically to cause mayhem.”ClosedNicola asked 5 years ago • Extraterrestrial Agenda757 views0 answers0 votesHe continues: “What can technology employees working on projects producing self-driving vehicles do to help alleviate any and all potential future problems these systems could cause? Or is it better simply not to serve on such projects?”ClosedNicola asked 5 years ago • Extraterrestrial Agenda644 views0 answers0 votes