DWQA QuestionsCategory: Non-Local ConsciousnessWe know that planetary consciousness such as Gaia can experience trauma and that the age of the dinosaurs on Earth was necessary to reduce the trauma created by the Anunnaki. Does planetary consciousness experience fear as well? How does a planet “cope” with fear, since “fight or flight” doesn’t appear to be an option?
Nicola Staff asked 3 years ago
This is a quite interesting question, something almost no one has ever considered. The concept of Gaia, to define the Earth as "A kind of global organism with many subparts and components that act with an interdependence," and thus the Earth can be seen as a gigantic organism with an ebb and flow of energy and consequences much as happens in the human body with its subparts from organs to tissues to individual cells. We can tell you that Gaia has consciousness and has a soul as well; therefore, it has a soul purpose and it has soul yearnings it wishes to express, and it has ways of reacting to perceptions of significant disturbance and threats to its existence, and certainly to overall balance on a local as well as global scale. So you can imagine with the presence of a large body of human beings and other influencers affecting the environment, disrupting the planet itself through mining operations, drilling for oil, creating many wells to extract water, and various more environmental unfriendly actions like strip mining, deep-sea oil drilling that can cause ecological devastation with a large leak into the water, and so on, Gaia has many concerns, many hurts and woundings, and as such, engages actively with attempts for healing. It can react energetically to adversity in ways humans can perceive. This is the cause of some so-called natural disasters when there is simply the presence of an imbalance and a large energetic shift might happen all at once to cause a large disturbance in weather or a stratigraphic perturbation resulting in an earthquake. Planets as such do not incarnate; they are created to be in their environment; they can be repurposed and recycled, just as with a human body as your bodies come and go, because they are simply containers. In the same way, all of Gaia, humans included, are physical extensions of Creator’s energy taking various forms and with certain roles to play and these, in the case of the planet and its constituents, reflect the soul of Gaia, but what is present in the land and seas and air and all of the life forms in the biosphere are an aggregate of consciousness that is interwoven with the soul destiny and purpose of Gaia itself but not essential to its long-term existence. Just as with human, when the body dies the spirit moves on and the soul is ever-present within the higher astral plane and is immortal. This is true of all souls, those of planets included, so in a sense the birth and death of a planet has no greater significance than the birth and death of a human body that plays host for a human soul extension for a time. This is not to say the existence of planets is ephemeral and therefore trivial and not deserving of respect and consideration to treat the Earth as deserving of love, to be cherished and appreciated as a loving nest for humans and not squandered, polluted, and besmirched with human negativity. All such degradations on the part of human culture represent a departure from divine alignment and are not compatible with the true art of living, which is to honor the environment as an integral part of experiencing existence—to dishonor the environment is to dishonor the self and your soul’s purpose.