DWQA QuestionsTag: isolation
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A practitioner asks: “I’m finding that with the clarity that comes from the healing through the protocols, there are also a lot of feelings of shame, guilt and embarrassment about the past as well as a lot of “could haves,” “should haves,” and “would haves.” At the moment, I feel like I’m just reliving everything in my head and I’m finding it difficult to focus on the present moment and enjoying the healing changes that the protocols have brought about. Being mindful and communing with Creator helps but it’s difficult to do this at all times, especially when at work or busy. There’s constant fear and worry and fear of judgement from others about past mistakes even though, in the grand scheme of things, the mistakes I’ve made haven’t been that bad. I understand that I’m coming from a different starting point that makes me feel different from others and why I’ve often been isolated and alone, so I’m guessing that I’m lacking in the general life experience that others have to move on from past mistakes. I’d like to be as fighting fit as possible for what is to come in the days ahead without fear that my mind will be full of worry about things that don’t really matter. Can Creator offer advice on what to focus on as a healing need in the protocols to help with this, to strengthen soul attributes and change beliefs and programming to be able to deal with the past and move on from the leftover guilt and shame?”
ClosedNicola asked 2 days ago • 
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The recently deceased Stanford Emeritus Professor Dr. Philip Zimbardo wrote the book, The Lucifer Effect: Understanding How Good People Turn Evil. Dr. Zimbardo is famous for his 1971 “Stanford Prison Experiment” that he was compelled to abruptly terminate as it quickly got out of hand and turned into a dangerously oppressive and health-threatening situation for the experiments’ participants after only a week. In the experiment, the prison guards became overwhelmingly sadistically abusive and cruel, and the prisoners became shockingly powerless and submissive to the point of losing their objectivity and grip on reality and actually believing they were real prisoners and not just participants in an “experiment.” The findings of this experiment were deeply disturbing and shocking on many levels. Zimbardo wrote, “One of the dominant conclusions of the Stanford Prison Experiment is that the pervasive yet subtle power of a host of situational variables can dominate an individual’s will to resist.” He continued, “We see how a range of research participants … have come to conform, comply, obey, and be readily seduced into doing things they could not imagine doing when outside those situational force fields.” Can Creator tell us how this MOCK prison with randomly chosen guards and prisoners almost immediately took on the atmosphere and oppressiveness of some of the world’s worst prisons and concentration camps? Zimbardo wrote, “We were surprised that situational pressures could overcome most of these healthy young men so quickly and so extremely.” Is this widespread and disturbing proclivity, to quickly slip into either extreme perpetrator or extreme victim roles, an inherent flaw in the human makeup? What can Creator tell us?
ClosedNicola asked 11 months ago • 
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