
Tag: consciousness
Reality

Free Will

Masters & Flying Monkeys – Craig Childress PsyD
Hello, you must be Dante. I’ll be your tour guide.
I’ll be taking you around to see the various ‘homes of the stars’ on our descent into Hell. Feel free to take pictures, our residents don’t mind tourists, but please keep your hands and arms inside your personal vehicle at all times.
You’ll notice off to the right as we enter the first gateway, our wonderful collection of flying monkeys. The First Level of Hell is known for having the highest quality of flying monkeys in all the demonic regions.
Flying monkeys are quite well-disciplined and they are extremely effective in swarms, but they are equally able to work independently as tormentors if needed – and they’re quite savage.
You may believe you know of flying monkeys from your former life in the family courts, but you haven’t actually met actual flying monkeys. You weren’t the target of the monkeys – just of the demons.
The flying monkeys are well-disciplined, they only attack the targets that the Master directs them to attack, and you’re not a target of their Master’s.
Hell has had its higher-order demons assigned to you – the flying monkeys are for those who try to help you, who try to stop the demons from doing their demonic stuff to you.
Everyone becomes afraid to help you because they don’t want to trigger the flying monkeys to attack. The role of the flying monkeys is to isolate you from rescue.
All the prosecutors and judges – and their families – became targets for the vile, degrading, and disturbing threats of the Maga-monkeys… that you don’t see.
You only see it if you’re the target.
When the Master signaled his faithful monkeys to attack the Haitian immigrants in Ohio, the Maga-monkeys directed their savage attacks on them. It’s targeted.
By Historical parallel process, the prototype flying monkeys were the Brownshirt SA of Ernst Röhm – the Storm Troopers. In the current iteration, it’s the Proud Boys who serve as the core of the threat, but monkeys don’t need much organization, they easily function independently and in small groups.
The nice thing about the flying monkey minions of Hell is that they’re both disciplined and undisciplined – they’ll wait for indications from their Master – and – once indications are received they work on their own and know what to do.
They’ll even coordinate with other flying monkey-troops if given the opportunity, and our flying monkeys from Hell are some of the most savage you’ll find anywhere.
Any questions before we move on? As you can see, they’re quite excited. They truly do love their works of cruelty, and they can’t wait to get going now that the gates have been opened.
The Master likes revenge. The Master likes his monkeys. Fly, my pretties… fly…
Well, come along, there’s more to see.
Craig Childress, Psy.D.
Clinical Psychologist,
WA 61538481 – CA 18857

The Return of the Great Cosmic Mother
My tile refers to the aces sign of the Goddess , the 1st “ God “ children know, trust and love . Her power has been restored, and it’s epic , and points to peace and harmony on earth.
If it upsets you , that women are being cleansed and beginning anew and that resurgence of power, is a very good for the men she stands beside , and their children .
Lessons learned , Thank You 🙏🏼, but we walk beside you , not behind you and not in front of you..
Ending this war , this separation, the imbalance of masculine and feminine, and the trauma we have experienced and again abused medically , legally and spiritually.
This for me was conformation, that indeed all wrongs are righted , and I must release any one who does not have an awareness, and shares my desire to live a simply abundant and peace filled life , where I know enough . A hand on my back, no swords , who knows the truth and the light. Seeing me as I am, and not fearing the plan of Divinity that brought us to this place of rewards for escaping Ground Hog Day .
Just as the Great Mother is Cosmic , so is love ❤️
Own the joy of having leaped , and we are powerful 🏆👁️🎁✌️🙏🏼
Confirmation of my sensory perception, feels Super. 100% trust
in Divine , all there is , and will ever be , Love & Light
Dona Luna
Down to you – Joni Mitchell
In an interview Joni Mitchel , who just celebrated her birthday and received awards , stated that after age 60 , we all become psychologically aware ..
The awareness of my self , and my surroundings have been akwaened
Writer on Estrangement/ Parental Alienation/ Child Psychological Abuse
Yesterday, I posted a long essay here about the experience of parental estrangement. I am sad to say, it’s an experience I know personally. Over a thousand readers responded, many to say that they share this experience, and it is as brutal as any they have known. A kind of death.
This morning’s New York Times ran a long story by a Times reporter, Ellen Barry, about parental estrangement. Over the past many months, I had spoken to Ellen Barry a number of times about parental estrangement, directing her to a number of deeply thoughtful and self-examined parents I know well, who struggle with the devastating experience of having been cut off from an adult child and grandchildren.
None of the kinds of stories of the estranged parents I’ve come to know well (and I know dozens now) were covered in Barry’s article in today’s Times. Barry focused largely on a social worker (and Tik Tok star) named Patrick Teahan, who leads a vast and growing community of young adult and millennials, unhappy (deeply so, no doubt) in their relationships with their parents. His advice: Take his online quiiz to determine how toxic your parents were in your childhood. Then send them a note, no more than a paragraph long if possible, informing them that you are “going no-contact”. Forever.
Not surprisingly, I have a great deal to say about this social worker, and about the article in today’s Times, which I believe may do untold damage to families –not only in our own lifetimes, but beyond.
When I write about parental estrangement, I never fail to acknowledge the experiences of adults who justifiably distance themselves or cut off all contact with a parent who has abused them irredeemably. Those situations exist. I know some of these too.
But there are so many other stories–and they are heartbreaking– of well-intentioned, deeply loving, self-examined parents ready to admit to their failures and to the ways their children may have been hurt by them, whose relationships have been felled by the same brutal ax of the radical (and growing) no-contact community.
I am posting a link to Ellen Barry’s article below–free without paywall, along with my response to it.
i know well how hard it is for estranged parents to speak publicly of their experience. Speaking only for myself, I can no longer remain silent.
A terrible tragedy is unfolding in families across America.
There are circumstances in which all an adult child can do to save herself is to sever contact from dangerous parents. Abusive parents. Parents who truly abandoned their responsibilities and brought harm to their children.
Then there are the others, who made mistakes, but never out of a deficiency of love or care. Now comes a world of therapy ready to endorse the idea that the only answer to pain or sorrow or discomfort in a relationship is to sever contact–employing the predictable vocabulary of “toxic narcissist”, “need for boundaries” “trauma” –a word whose definition has become looser and looser with every passing year.
The no-contact therapist quoted in Ellen Barry’s piece recommends that estranging adult children construct a mock funeral for their parent–with “an unsparing ‘goodbye letter attached to the parent’s photo, propped on an empty chair.”If more is needed to liberate one’s self from the clutches of parents, he “recommends using a foam baseball bat to hit or smash things, like eggs or plates.”
As for the estranged parents. They are unlikely to take out their baseball bats. We who have lost a child to estrangement will mourn that relationship forever. Often in silence.
You can read the Times story in its entirety in a link, below.
https://www.nytimes.com/…/therapy-family-estrangement…
Estrangement is not simply a tragedy for the parents who suffer the loss of a beloved child, and the inability to know or be known by their grandchildren. It is a tragedy that will reverberate through the generations.

Despair – David Whyte
takes us in when we have nowhere else to go; when we feel the heart cannot break anymore, when our world or our loved ones disappear, when we feel we cannot be loved or do not deserve to be loved, when our God disappoints, when our world disappoints, or when our body is carrying profound pain in a way that does not seem to go away.
Despair is a haven with its own temporary form of beauty and of self -compassion, it is the invitation we accept when we want to remove ourselves from hurt. Despair, is a last protection. To disappear through despair, is to seek a temporary but necessary illusion, a place where we hope nothing can ever find us in the same way again.
Despair is a necessary and seasonal state of repair, a temporary healing absence, an internal physiological and psychological winter when our previous forms of participation in the world take a rest; it is a loss of horizon, it is the place we go when we do not want to be found in the same way anymore. We give up hope when certain particular wishes are no longer able to come true and despair is the time in which we both endure and heal, even when we have not yet found the new form of hope.
Despair is strangely, the last bastion of hope; the wish being, that if we cannot be found in the old way we cannot ever be touched or hurt in that way again.
Despair is the sweet but illusory abstraction of leaving the body while still inhabiting it, so we can stop the body from feeling anymore. Despair is the place we go when we no longer want to make a home in the world and where we feel, with a beautifully cruel form of satisfaction, that we may never have deserved that home in the first place. Despair, strangely, has its own sense of achievement, and despair, even more strangely, needs despair to keep it alive.
Despair turns to depression and abstraction when we try to make it stay beyond its appointed season and start to shape our identity around its frozen disappointments. But despair can only stay beyond its appointed time through the forced artificiality of created distance, by abstracting ourselves from bodily feeling, by trapping ourselves in the disappointed mind, by convincing ourselves that the seasons have stopped and can never turn again, and perhaps, most simply and importantly, by refusing to let the body breathe by its self, fully and deeply. Despair is kept alive by freezing our sense of time and the rhythms of time; when we no longer feel imprisoned by time, and when the season is allowed to turn, despair cannot survive.
To keep despair alive we have to abstract and immobilize our bodies, our faculties of hearing, touch and smell, and keep the surrounding springtime of the world at a distance. Despair needs a certain tending, a reinforcing, and isolation, but the body left to itself will breathe, the ears will hear the first birdsong of morning or catch the leaves being touched by the wind in the trees, and the wind will blow away even the grayest cloud; will move even the most immovable season; the heart will continue to beat and the world, we realize, will never stop or go away.
The antidote to despair is not to be found in the brave attempt to cheer ourselves up with happy abstracts, but in paying a profound and courageous attention to the body and the breath, independent of our imprisoning thoughts and stories, even, in paying attention to despair itself, and the way we hold it, and which we realize, was never ours to own and to hold in the first place. To see and experience despair fully in our body is to begin to see it as a necessary, seasonal visitation, and the first step in letting it have its own life, neither holding it nor moving it on before its time.
We take the first steps out of despair by taking on its full weight and coming fully to ground in our wish not to be here. We let our bodies and we let our world breathe again. In that place, strangely, despair cannot do anything but change into something else, into some other season, as it was meant to do, from the beginning.
Despair is a difficult, beautiful necessary; a binding understanding between human beings caught in a fierce and difficult world where half of our experience is mediated by loss, but it is a season, a wave form passing through the body, not a prison surrounding us. A season left to itself will always move, however slowly, under its own patience, power and volition.
Refusing to despair about despair itself, we can let despair have its own natural life and take a first step onto the foundational ground of human compassion, the ability to see and understand and touch and even speak, the heartfelt grief of another.
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‘DESPAIR’ From
CONSOLATIONS: The Solace, Nourishment and Underlying Meaning of Everyday Words. © David Whyte:
REVISED EDITION Many Rivers Press 2020
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Beckoning Path
Photo © David Whyte
Garden of The Vineyard
Cape Town South Africa
June 23rd 2024

State of the earth – Kyron
Astrology of the US Election
That dull thud , when the collective hit the wall as it were .
Well , this clears things up , or at least it did for me , and that’s where I’ve tried to hold space !
Keep the faith , especially you ladies who felt so close to being heard , knowing we matter …
We DO
