From Siphoning to Assimilation

by Bronte Baxter

June 04, 2008

from BronteBaxter Website

Extracted from Blowing the Whistle on Enlightenment

The world’s religions have changed from their ancient demands for blood sacrifice to their modern insistence on a more personal commitment to the divine.

Blood provided life-force renewal to the interdimensional predators who call themselves the gods. But blood-on-demand is nothing in “loosh quality” compared to willing, devoted worship.

Robert Monroe was told as much in his encounter with the light being (see my two last articles: Loosh 101 and Loosh 102).

Yet there is another, more insidious reason why the ancient religions, which taught fear of God, have morphed into modern religions and spiritual practices that teach surrender or love of God.

The reason concerns free will.

If that deeply human element can be won over, if the heart and ability to choose can be wholly offered to “the divine,” those on the receiving end no longer have to siphon humans for their energy, they can simply assimilate us.

We become one with their system, with their collective consciousness. Our personal energy signature – the soul or ego, individual self, that which makes us creative, original, reasoned, deliberate beings of action – that is taken from us.

Or more precisely, we give it away…

We give ourselves to “the divine,” and in so doing, align our personal frequency with those who have fed on humans since the dawn of history. We become entrained with them, like a tuning fork that hums the pitch of the humming forks around it or a soldier that marches in step with his army.

As in the military, the surrender of personal choice results in a strengthening of the collective.

Soldiers fall out of step when they cross a bridge, because the power of marching in unison is great enough that it could break the structure.

Assimilation strengthens the collective that is the gods

If the “Star Trek” image of The Borg comes to mind, the parallel is not inappropriate.

The Borg in the sci-fi TV series were a civilization of beings half biological and half cyber.

Like a hive, they were ruled by a central queen, whose will ran the collective.

They thrived by discovering new planets and assimilating their inhabitants.

Assimilation was accomplished by mind-controlling a person and then inserting, in place of the individual’s mind, the mind of The Borg.

The victim’s will became the will of The Borg, his actions entrained, like an ant’s, to work for the collective’s purpose.

Cosmic consciousness is not what we are told:

a state where the individual mind merges with its own interior pure consciousness.

Cosmic consciousness (“enlightenment” or “Brahman”) is a fusing of one’s personal self with the force that has hijacked the universe.

We can reason that the Infinite Source of all the egos in the universe must be an unlimited consciousness of love, life, joy, creativity and immortality.

It knows no destruction or death, either for Itself or its children.

Why would a self-fulfilled, joyous being want to make individuals that don’t share in and express Its own qualities?

Brahman is quite different than this original entity.

Brahman is the consciousness that enfolds the physical universe, spitting out supernovas and destroying them with all their attendant life forms.

We are told Brahman is the creator, the maintainer, and the destroyer.

Brahman is that consciousness that feeds and depends on physical matter, creating and devouring it at will, as humans breed then slaughter animals on a farm for food.

When meditators have cosmic visions of themselves as all the universe, this is the consciousness they identify with.

By uniting with and surrendering to it as their Higher Self, they become possessed by the entities who have taken charge of (and perhaps created) the physical universe.

I remember a chilling moment in a videotape of the popular spiritual teacher, Eckhart Tolle, where he describes the movement of the “Presence” in the world.

He reaches out a long arm and makes a swooshing sound with his mouth, drawing the arm back in.

Then he makes a swipe in the air with his other arm, then the first one again. That’s Consciousness, he tells us, creating then sucking back in life form after life form.

That is what Tolle has aligned himself with,

the Presence that creates and destroys individual life…

A loving and unlimited creator of individual awareness would not create life forms only to destroy them.

That is the act of a farmer, not of an artist or innovator…!

Creative people don’t make things in order to feed off their creations.

They make things to express what’s inside them:

the joy or beauty or humor or wisdom.

We know this from our own life experience.

Happy people create good things around them, and cherish and take care of those things. They don’t decide to blow them up or devour them.

If we as humans naturally behave like that,

How could the Infinite Being from whose cloth we were cut think and behave like a savage?

How could It be unfeeling or uncaring, when we by nature are feeling and caring?

How could the children be greater in character than their own Creator?

It’s not a very reasonable premise.

It cannot be God, in the sense of a supreme consciousness, that requires sacrifice, worship, surrender of ego and ultimate physical death.

That can only be the agenda of limited spiritual beings, who see the manifest universe as their playground.

They are the playground bullies.

They’ve convinced everyone that they by rights run the show and that they even created it.

I remember Tolle’s story of his “awakening.”

After suffering for years from severe depression, he decided he would commit suicide, at which point he felt an energy vortex sucking him in and heard the words “Resist nothing.”

He blacked out and when he awoke, the world was fresh and new.

He was a man without depression, without desires, without thoughts.

He was a clean machine, devoid of his former sense of personal self.

From that day on, he has moved through physical reality without an ego.

“Life” moves through him, he says, and he identities that “wholeness” as his Self.

But Tolle’s wholeness is a small particle in the vastness of the Infinite.

It is not the Infinite, however much he believes it must be. Brahman is not Infinite, it is the collective consciousness of the material universe, which embraces good and evil, birth and death, as equal in value.

The consciousness of the Infinite surely never intended suffering or death for its children.

Tolle, like the enlightened guru-followers, has accepted all that happens in this world, horrendousness included, as the wonderful will of the divine. He regards what happened to him the night of his transformation as an awakening to the highest truth.

I suggest what he awoke to was assimilation of his will, his personhood, all that made him uniquely human.

He became a vessel for the voice that told him, “Resist nothing” – words that eerily echo the voice of The Borg, telling its victims the moment before assimilation:

“Resistance is futile”…

Brahman, what Tolle calls “Presence,” does bring euphoric peace to the experiencer.

The grave is peaceful, too, but I wouldn’t want to spend time in one.

There is peace when an individual surrenders their personal self.

Gone is the responsibility of making choices, of finding motivation, of coming up with creative solutions.

Gone is the need to think and the sting of emotional repercussions from former bad decisions.

The enlightened need to do nothing, say nothing, become nothing… but to achieve that iced-over state of detachment, that cosmic disassociation, they must sacrifice the most precious thing they have ever been given:

their personal divine spark.

The enlightened willfully self-implode.

And God’s very purpose for making them, as a unique, personal expression of Itself, gets subverted.

Surely we were meant to be more than automatons, possessed zombies, walking around the earth while something else moves through us.

Surely God’s plan was not for Its creatures to become mindless robots, with glassy grins and empty hearts, who regard suffering and happiness, death and life, as all the same in value.

Surely there is something beyond what the gurus’ teach as the ultimate, Something that celebrates, supports and cherishes each being It ever created, that desires them to live forever and in harmony and joy, as Itself.

The gods have not stopped living off human sacrifice

The rules of the game have only changed a little.

Blood-on-demand is not as delicious as the willing offering of a human soul.

Siphoning is evolving into assimilation…

This is the tyranny of One, the reason the New Age teaches that awakened consciousness means seeing “small self” as illusion and “Cosmic Self” or “the One,” as the true reality.

The intent is to fuse all egos into the will of the One, the will of the Overmind.

The gods are masquerading as Cosmic Self

We either open our minds and recognize our programming, and reason our way out of this snare, or we grin like foolish children and follow the Pied Piper right into the maw of the mountain.

Will we choose to amalgamate or to shoulder the burden and joy of becoming conscious, empowered individuals?

The fate of the universe rests on our decision…

by Bronte Baxter

June 04, 2008

from BronteBaxter Website

Extracted from Blowing the Whistle on Enlightenment

Spanish version

Part 1 – Tracking the Crack in the Universe

from Blowing the Whistle, Chpt. 5

Did you ever wonder why a goodGod would build a world where the only way to survive is by taking life?

How long would you stay alive if you refused to eat?

You may love animals and grow plants inside your home and flowers in your garden, but every time you eat, you destroy the life of something.

A something with a consciousness, that feels and desires to live, as we do.

The other day I grabbed an onion from a basket to chop up, and I saw it had sprouted a beautiful, tender, light-green shoot. It had a life inside it, a consciousness that wanted to take root, breathe air and thrive.

Any tears in chopping that onion did not come from the fumes.

I’m not a sentimentalist. I’m a person questioning, increasingly aware of an insidious thread woven through biological life.

We are born, we feed, and we die.

Life is a process of consuming other living things in order to stay alive as long as possible until death in turn consumes us.

We tell ourselves life is a whole lot more, but it’s reduced to that as long as we must feed to survive.

If we can’t stay alive more than a few months without food,

how can eating not be fundamental to how we define our existence?

Eating is a requirement for biological life as we know it.

It’s the thread that holds together material existence. More than a thread, it’s a chain, binding us to the law that we must consume each other. Rebelling is punishable by death.

What kind of God or gods would create a world predicated on killing?

We don’t like to ask that, and we find every excuse to avoid looking at this question.

But every time a dear one dies, or you find a nibbled bird in the yard destroyed by an idle cat, or you read about an animal that has suffered mercilessly, or another molested child, or a nation ravaged by a quake that’s buried thousands of living people, your mind goes back to that nagging question…

Who would make a world like this?

Was it truly a God of love?

According to much evidence, it wasn’t.

The world was created by something else. Or if it was created by the loving God our hearts insist exists, then creation has been tampered with by someone else so merciless that it barely resembles the original divine vision.

The biological universe is controlled by the law that to live we must take life or die.

That is sinister…

Something there is that makes us have to eat, that makes us age and disintegrate. This is the “something wrong with the world,” the crack in the universe.

Knowledge of it works,

“like a splinter in the mind, driving you mad,” quoting “

The Matrix.”

Yet awakening to the truth of our predicament is the first step toward radical change. Only radical change can possibly right the fundamental flaw woven into physical creation.

And how well-woven it is. Not only does violence wind through the lives of all Earth life like the fibers of a time-bomb attached to a victim. It reaches out into space, where supernovas implode, collapsing millions of stars along with all living beings on all their attendant planets.

Death and devouring are so pervasive most people can’t conceive of a world without them, or if they can conceive it, they label the concept preposterous.

Yet quantum physics shows that matter is nothing but atoms:

emptiness vibrating…

Emptiness does not die and neither does the energy it oscillates.

So why must bodies die that are made of up of these things?

Robert Monroe, in his book “Far Journeys,” writes of contact he had with a light being in an ‘out-of-body experience‘.

(Monroe is arguably the world’s foremost researcher on OBEs; he started an institute with trainee/researchers to scientifically investigate the phenomenon.)

Reportedly the light being told Monroe that,

when humans die, their energy is released and harvested by trans-dimensional beings, who use it to extend their own life spans…

The claim is that,

the universe is a garden created by these beings as their food source.

According to Monroe’s story, animals are intentionally positioned on this planet to feed on plants and on each other, thereby releasing the life force of their victims so it can be harvested.

In a predator-prey struggle, exceptional energy is produced in the combatants. The spilling of blood in a fight-to-the-death conflict releases this intense energy, which the light beings call “loosh.”

Loosh is also harvested from the loneliness of animals and humans, as well as from the emotions engendered when a parent is forced to defend the life of its young.

Another source of loosh is humans’ worship…!

According to Monroe’s informant, our creators, the cosmic “energy farmers,” intentionally equipped animals with devices like fangs, claws and super-speed in order to prolong predator-prey combat and thereby produce more loosh.

In other words,

the greater the suffering, the more life force is spewed from our bodies, and the tastier the energy meal for our creators.

This story told to Monroe (which threw him into a two-week depression) corresponds to reports in some of the world’s oldest scriptures:

the Vedas, Upanishads, and Puranas of India…

There we read that,

  • “the universe is upheld by sacrifice” (Atharva Veda)
  • “all who are living (in this world) are the sacrificers. There is none living who does not perform yagya (sacrifice). This body is (created) for sacrifice, and arises out of sacrifice and changes according to sacrifice.” (Garbha Upanishad)

Again:

“(Death as the Creator) resolved to devour all that he had created; for he eats all… He is the eater of the whole universe; this whole universe is his food.”

Mahabharata

In the writings of Carlos Castañeda, who chronicles the life and teachings of a Yaquii sorcerer called Don Juan, we find another story of the Divine devouring humans, in this case human consciousness.

Reports Castañeda:

“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.

The Eagle disentangles these tiny flames, lays them flat, as a tanner stretches out a hide, and then consumes them; for awareness is the Eagle’s food.

The Eagle, that power that governs the destinies of all living things, reflects equally and at once all those living things.”

The Eagle’s Gift,” by Carlos Castañeda

The idea that man must sacrifice (must kill something or be killed in order to appease the gods) is apparently intrinsic to all the world’s root religions.

We find blood ritual, including human sacrifice, in the Druidic tradition, Tibetan Buddhism, among the Indians of the Americas, in Greece and Rome, Africa, China, Arabia, Germany, Phoenicia and Egypt.

Even the Old Testament (Judges 11:31-40) has a little-advertised story of human sacrifice, with the Israelite judge Jephthah ritually slaughtering his own daughter to fulfill a vow he made to Jehovah.

While we may not think of Judaism as typically promoting human sacrifice, it more than promoted it if we count the genocide Jehovah demanded of the Hebrews (¿Today’s Gaza…?).

In one day alone, they murdered 12,000 Canaanites,

“and utterly destroyed everything in the city, both man and woman, young and old, and ox and sheep and donkey with the edge of the sword.”

(Joshua: 6:21)

In Islam, the situation is similar.

Allah, while paying lip service to the immorality of human sacrifice, orders his servants in the Koran to practice jihad against all unbelievers.

“When the forbidden months are past, then fight and slay the Pagans wherever ye find them, and seize them, beleaguer them, and lie in wait for them in every stratagem of war.”

(Koran: 9:5)

Peace-loving Moslems interpret such passages as “symbolic” in their desire to justify their faith, much as Christians try to justify Jehovah’s sociopathic behavior with excuses.

In many ways, the god of Islam reasons and rants like the god of the Israelites.

Could it be the same entity…?

It isn’t contradictory that he would support two separate peoples, then lead them to fight each other.

Not if his agenda is to stimulate and

harvest plenty of loosh

Christianity, the religion of ‘brotherly love’, is implicated in blood sacrifice by being rooted in the Jewish tradition.

The Bible declares Jesus is the son of God (Jehovah), and Jehovah announces at Jesus’ baptism,

“This is My beloved Son in whom I am well-pleased.”

(Matthew: 17:5)

Where was Jesus when his father was slaughtering the Canaanites?

Jesus himself becomes a blood sacrifice, a fact that Catholics reenact in the mass and that Protestants bathe themselves in to be “saved.”

Christians are no strangers to sacrifice…!

If suffering and death were part of creation that no one, including the gods, could help, there’d be some reason to be more forgiving. I might even buy the story that they need us to support them with our homage and we need them to keep the universe running.

But when you add blood sacrifice into the equation, I abandon ship…

It’s one thing if the gods can’t prevent earthly suffering and death – quite another if they seek it out and thrive from it – or worse yet, created it. And that’s what blood sacrifice, and the scriptures around it, indicate.

When the oldest scriptures of the world tell us we were created as food for the gods, I have to ask myself if I want to live in a universe where that might be true.

The fact is, I don’t…

I can no longer give my approval to that kind of reality.

So if I won’t live with it, I have to come up with something better.

I have to find something more fundamental than the physical universe to locate my identity in, and my power in.

I sense, as many do these days, that there’s something beyond the universe as it has been presented to us, something outside this box, outside this system.

That’s what I seek to know, connect with, and draw from.

Robert Morning Sky, a truth seeker of the Hopi and Apache traditions, tells a story he learned from his people about,

a race of beings who knew no limitations, who existed far outside this physical universe.

One day one of them declared his intention to visit Earth and take on a body just for the adventure of it, for the experience.

His friends cautioned him, as this universe had a reputation as amnesia-producing, a place of no return.

But the entity laughed that off and promised to come back after one lifetime.

Centuries passed, and the entity never came home.

One of his comrades decided to enter the physical world to go look for his friend. He promised not to get lost in matter and to return with the other individual.

More centuries passed, and neither being returned.

So another immortal entered physical mass, and he also never came back.

In time many members of these unlimited beings incarnated in human form, and the story goes, none of them yet has gone home…

Maybe we are those people, starting to remember who we are.

Maybe it’s time to break out of the hypnosis we’ve lived under for eons, the unquestioned assumptions that we must kill and eat, suffer and die, live in lack and sadness, and undergo all the human drama as it has been defined for us.

Is it insane to think that humans can beat the system?

That we could make a choice to stop the activities that supply our up-line with fuel?

That we could minimize – even stop – our own refueling from the life force of creatures lower than us on the food chain?

Is it madness to think that our bodies, made of undying energy, could themselves not have to die, that we might learn to live on the power of infinite consciousness, which we can access within ourselves, being part of it?

While some may call that madness, I prefer it to the world I see around me. I certainly prefer it to death. I prefer it to loss of my dear ones, and to sickness and poverty.

The greatest experiment mankind can engage in is mastery of the principles of freedom, creation, abundance, and immortality.

We’re wearing body suits that in 70-some years of use are programmed to self-destruct.

What could be more important than changing that programming?

In the Bhagavad Gita, Lord Krishna warns:

“He who does not follow the wheel thus set revolving lives in vain.”

The wheel is the cycle of birth and death, karma and retribution, human sacrifice and divine blessing.

To rebel against this system is to fail in our life purpose as defined by those who say they are our creators and gods. But surely life was meant to be more than dinner for the next rung up on the food chain.

If “living in vain” means breaking out of that, I’m all for that kind of failure…!




Part 2 – The Forgotten Key to Freedom

from Blowing the Whistle, Chpt. 6


Let’s talk more about loosh.

If you haven’t read the above “Loosh – Tracking the Crack in the Universe,” that’s the foundation for what we’ll talk about here, so check that out before you continue. This is “Part 2.”

The concept of loosh, in my opinion, holds a major clue to human freedom.

What is loosh, as it was described to Robert Monroe?

It is a kind of energy that animals and humans generate in situations that involve two things:

an intense desire plus a negative emotion.

In the last article I equated loosh with “life force,” but when loosh arises in the harvestable form, it is laced with some form of negativity:

  • fear (in the example of a mother defending her young)
  • sadness or hopelessness (in the example of a lonely person)
  • fear again (in the example of prey/predator combat)

So how do we explain this?

Life energy isn’t negative, so what really is loosh?

It seems to me loosh is a strong inrush of vital energy caused by a strong desire in the individual experiencing it. It’s that adrenaline surge you feel in a fight-or-flight situation.

But it’s more than a chemical, because we are told loosh is also generated in a situation like a lonely person pining, where no adrenaline is involved.

In both cases, there is a common element:

a strong emotional desire…

Negativity seems to be what makes the harvesting possible, but it is not the loosh.

It’s something that sometimes laces loosh, and its presence is necessary for access to the substance by interdimensional energy-eaters.

Negativity is not the essential emotion but an overlay emotion, and when it is present, it creates a drain on the inrush of vital energy.

Let me explain more concretely.

Whenever we have a strong desire without tangential feelings of fear, sadness, remorse, etc., what do we experience?

A surge of life, a re-charge. We say “I’m pumped” or “I’m psyched.” We feel power.

But when we have a strong desire accompanied by the negative emotions, that’s another story.

Then our strong desire seems to churn inside us, causing anguish.

In the first case, our life energy is infused into us from somewhere.

In the second case, it’s being infused and at the same time being drained away.

Hence no re-charge.

Negative emotions come from an attitude, a decision that has been struck by a very deep part of us, the subconscious mind.

The subconscious decision behind a negative emotion like fear or sadness is something like “This won’t work,” “I can never have it,” “I’m sure to fail.”

Self-messages from the deep influence what happens to us in outer, material reality.

If we’re engaged in combat, a self-defeating attitude determines that we lose.

If we’re trying to create something nice, this attitude jinxes us.

If we have a fabulous dream, a negative subconscious decision ordains that the dream remains a wish and never becomes reality.

Negative self-talk, which results from self-doubt on the subconscious level, also opens the door to being harvested.

When the subconscious has decided that we can’t get what we want, that we will fail, that fundamental ruling relinquishes the reins that control our destiny, in spite of the positive thoughts we may be consciously thinking.

Self-doubt puts the outcome of any endeavor on the cosmic “freebie shelf,” where anyone who wants can come and take it over.

That’s the reason behind the expression,

“Victory belongs to the most committed.”

The individual with the least negative self-talk about a competitive outcome wins, because that is the person with the fewest internal obstructions to manifesting their desire.

Negative self-talk makes it possible to be defeated by an opponent with a more user-friendly subconscious.

It also opens the door for trawling psychic entities, like “the gods” or Monroe’s “light being,” to lap up the influx of energy that our strong desire has instigated.

No such in-road exists when a strong desire is accompanied by a determined intention. The energy drain only happens when negative self-talk contaminates the process of strongly desiring something.

Then the tears come, or the sadness, or the fear or the outrage, and that self-undermining mindset that shouts “I can’t do this!” shoots a hole in our manifestation, letting the wonderful energy drain away to benefit those who know how to cart it away and make use of it.

Did they steal it, these loosh harvesters…?

Actually, they didn’t.

We gave them permission subconsciously.

We said “I can’t handle this,” so somebody else decided.

That’s what happens when you put your life or desires on the freebie shelf of the universe.

To put this in a nutshell:

  • Strong desire + authoritative intent = influx of life energy stored (spiritual empowerment)
     
  • Strong desire + self-defeating attitude = influx of life energy siphoned (spiritual harvesting)

What’s emerging from this picture is that intent is everything.

Intent is the reverse side of permission.

Holding a determined intention is the key to both success in a given situation and to personal empowerment from that situation, while having a weak intent (a desire polluted by self-doubt) is tantamount to permission for someone else to step in.

This spills the life energy and places the key to a situation’s outcome into the hands of something outside ourselves.

Let’s look at this from another angle.

What is that inrush of energy you feel when you have a powerful desire, the kind that’s uncorrupted with negative mind chatter?

When you get that flush of inspiration, that idea of something wonderful you could be or do or create or experience, how do you feel?

You are flooded with energy and joy. If it happens in the middle of the night, you are up for hours. There’s power in a dream, in a desire.

Because dreaming and desiring are – what? – they’re attached to something. They’re like a pipeline, bringing in an unbounded rush of energy.

Where does that come from?

What is it that such great thoughts tap into?

Whatever it is, it seems to be the font of the life force itself.

The energy that rushes in from that place is strong enough to empower people to lift cars that have fallen on the body of a loved one. It’s strong enough to give the victory in battle to the physically weaker party.

Quantum physics has revealed that matter is not solid.

It’s made up of atoms, which are not particles and waves as we once believed, but waves only.

Matter is nothing but vibration:

waves in some unseen medium.

We could call that unseen “nothingness,” or we could call it “consciousness,” or “energy.”

I suggest that consciousness and energy are better names for the material emptiness at the core of physical life, because,

how can “nothing” manifest as matter and all the varied activity of this world?

Surely it’s more reasonable to assume that the energy we see around us comes from a source of energy, rather than from zip.

Our experience suggests that we ourselves are linked to a source that is a font of energy, something outside physical matter, something on which matter is predicated.

When we desire something, or dream of something that instills a desire, that need reaches into the deepest part of ourselves, a realm that is a powerhouse of energy and consciousness.

Unless we obstruct the natural process by throwing up self-doubt, the Infinite, this powerhouse, responds to our desire like a reservoir responds to an opening pipeline:

it rushes in to fill it.

That’s why energy suffuses us in our inspired moments and in our crisis moments.

We are becoming more powerful, more filled with life, at those times. We are garnering spiritual power.

In those moments we are fulfilling the intention of the life force to create and to manifest, and to become a unique embodiment of itself: an empowered creator, making manifest more creation, more expressions of life.

Powerful, authoritative desire is the key to personal empowerment, spiritual empowerment. That’s why those who feed off human life created religious teachings that tell us desire is bad.

If we believe it’s bad to want things, our desires will never be powerful, never full of confident intent.

They will be wimpy and ridden with self-doubt:

just the thing the psychic trawlers like, because then our pipeline to the Infinite has holes in it, making any incoming energy harvestable.

So passion, or what I’ve been calling “authoritative intent,” brings in spiritual power.

Self-doubt brings in the harvesters.

Loosh is the power of the Source, the power of life.

When we access it through desire, it infuses us, unless we let it be drained off by doubting ourselves, by shooting holes in our pipeline.

Intent and permission are reverse sides of will, and will is one of the faculties of personhood.

We can give it away through permission, letting our energy be siphoned and our souls assimilated into oneness with the harvesters.

Or we can build our will and grow in personal empowerment.

We are told that being spiritual means surrendering our ego (our desires and our self-hood). But true spiritual empowerment will never be achieved by bending before the gods in self-abnegation...

Spiritual empowerment means living the power of the Infinite as unique expressions of the Infinite, which is what our spirits were long before the gods got hold of us, long before the creation of this physical universe took place.

Freedom means taking back control of ourselves through will, taking back control of our spirits. It means exercising will to think the thoughts we desire, not the thoughts the trawlers want us to think.

And freedom means much more.

It means, through intent, hooking up our bodies to run on the intelligence, love and energy of the Infinite, rather than on the limited grid of DNA.

DNA was created by (or at least is currently controlled by) the gods, our harvesters

It is programmed with our decay and death.

We can overcome the program by establishing ourselves in our nature as one with our spiritual Source.

When we ordain, from our authority as sons and daughters of the Infinite, then the power behind our wishes brings them to fruit, whatever our declaration might be.

We can ordain a parking place, or we can ordain a healing, or immortality.

We can ordain personal freedom from harassment by purveyors of the global agenda.

We can also work together with other awakening creators, and ordain freedom for mankind.

Working on behalf of all material creation, we can ordain freedom and happiness for all beings in the physical universe.

We can establish material life on a new level, where death, lack and suffering are never part of the picture again.

We can claim our own divinity, and oust the regime that controls this dimension.

And if we choose to ordain that, we must do it in love and compassion for the trawlers, not in revenge and hate, because a made-new world is no place for negative things.

The harvesters are hungry, like everybody else.

The gods are no worse than we are when we eat chicken or beef, or when we set up pens on a farm.

They eat our energy because they know no other way to live.

Our life force sustains them, while they make us their minions…

But just as we don’t need meat to live, just as we can rewire ourselves to live off the power of the Infinite within us, so, too, can these gods.

What better way to help them learn to tap their internal spiritual resources than by removing their external food source, rendering ourselves unavailable?

When humankind takes back its power and its home in the universe, the psychic vampires will have empty nets from their trawling and will have to look to the same Source we’re being forced to look to for ongoing life.

This learning process, for both mankind and gods, won’t be easy and may not always be pretty.

But it’s the door to everyone’s freedom, the door to a new life.

We can no longer afford to let paradise remain a metaphysical concept.

We have to make it reality.

Because it’s the only alternative, at this time in history, to assimilation.

Our enemies wish not only to harvest our energy but to assimilate our consciousness, our individual souls.

That is their plan with their

New World Order, where all will be

microchipped servantsof global government.

That is their plan with a universal religion, where all will surrender their egos and amalgamate into Oneness consciousness:

the impersonal consciousness of “enlightenment” – stripped of desires, originality, joy, passion, and the power to choose.

We either let them accomplish this by doing nothing, or we take action now.

We pick up the forgotten key to freedom, call it whatever you will:

choice, personal will, authoritative intent, impassioned and confident desire…

We elect to become the children of the Infinite that we forgot how to be.

We take back our birthright as sons and daughters of the original, loving, joyous divine intention.

How will that happen?

The Infinite will show the way.

Once we hook up our pipeline of desire and shore up the holes of self-doubt – in other words, once we take back our power – Original Consciousness can pump its life into our flagging bodies and spirits once more.

With that will come inspiration and ideas. Connections will get made.

When that starts happening to enough of us, how can the New World Order do anything but fail…?

 

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