Particle Event – Skywatch

Photos from Pete Ramón — ‘new particle event’ — this is why the sky might look clear – these tiny wisps and strange small gathering of blobs, then the streamers and the HAZE — these are vicious — using them over us since yesterday afternoon. Severe headache, hard to breathe (costochondritis), pee and pee, back pain and tooth pain and on and on — comes with a powerful frequency that goes on in 3 hr increments — Thursday it lasted 9 hrs EXACTLY.

Spraying Changes – Skywatch/Russ Tanner 6/29

June 29 – The Daily Spraying Log

thedailysprayinglog – #chemtrailsitswhatyoubreathe

11:41 am

A strong night of spraying. Intensity was between 8.5 and 8.75+ throughout the night. The sky is overcast so they can spray the strong plume that product persistent trails to maintain a higher intensity. This is the pattern I have seen.

Think about it. Here, we typically have had overcast days 6 of 7 days, and this has continued for years… yes, years. But now, this has all changed. We have had many more clear days lately, and this has happened just as they have completely rolled out the new no-trail spraying. When the sky is overcast, they can spraying as heavily as they want above the clouds without the public seeing it. When the sky is clear, they are switching to using jets that product no persistent plumes. So, when they want to spray hard, they first create an overcast condition, then they spray hard above the clouds so you can’t see them. Now that they have more fully implemented no-trail (or very short-trail plumes), they can provide more clear day yet still keep intensity high, and this is exactly what I have witnessed.

So, how do I “see” the hard spraying on overcast days? Two ways.

First, when gaps between clouds appear, you can see the hard, persistent spraying happening above the clouds layer.

Second, I smell and taste the fallout, so I know they are spraying.

In fact, check this pattern out.

We have had a string of clear days, and guess what, This coincides with having little or no Chalky-Bitter-Pharma in the air. This type likely produces a long or persistent trail. Check the log and you will see this pattern. In fact, you will see the past few days we have had a brand new phenomenon in which plumes contained only 2 components: Inflammatory and Mercury. This is unheard of historically. They usually contain 1 component (the Burnt Electronics type), or 4 components: Model Cement, Chalky-Bitter-Pharma, Inflammatory, and Mercury. Again, the spray patterns and the weather changes coincide.

Today, it’s fully overcast and the dangerous Chalky-Bitter-Pharma type is back. I have now noticed this pattern enough times to mention it here. It actually is a pattern that has been recurring. So, the Chalky-Bitter-Pharma type creates longer, more-persistent trails (not necessarily 100% persistent), and this type also produces “the haze” that covers the sky and also can be seen when viewing vistas of about 1/2 mile or more.

So, the string of beautiful clear days with no haze also had no Chalky-Bitter-Pharma (and no Model Cement), which is rare because this dangerous type has become one of the most frequently-sprayed types. It’s “dangerous” because it rapidly depletes magnesium which can cause mild health issues or severe cardiac issues.

As I type this, intensity is 9.5- and includes the Chalky-Bitter-Pharma type, and also the Model Cement type.

This will all come out one day, but for now, those who care and hear it here first and hopefully use this information for good.

The long-term attack continues.

The False Self From Childhood- Eric Jones

The False Self From Childhood

–Eric JonesListen to AudioTranslationsRSVP for Awakin Circle

I ran across a developmental psychology theory not long ago that I’ve had bouncing around in the back of my head ever since. It comes from the pediatrician and psychoanalyst Donald Winnicott, who coined the term “good-enough mother” to describe the everyday kind of parent who does their best to meet their child’s needs and only fails at doing so in ordinary and understandable, even inevitable ways. His theory is about the origins and development of two distinct selves in each of us, a “true self” and a “false self.”

As babies and very young children, Winnicott says, each of us instinctively expresses our true selves: we cry when we’re hungry or tired or in distress; as toddlers, we act with creativity and spontaneity without much (if any) thought about what’s correct or proper, and we can have the most dramatic emotional outbursts when we don’t get what we want. We can’t help but express our true selves when we’re very young, because we can’t do otherwise; we need what we need and we want what we want, and we do our best to get it.

And here’s the crux of the whole thing: If our caregivers are attuned and capable, if they’re able to read our true expressions of need and want and (mostly) gratify them most of the time, it strengthens a belief in us that our most honest needs are okay, and that we ourselves are relatable and worthy. If we receive this “true self” recognition and reassurance as children, then we’re much more likely to move into adulthood connected to our true self, willing to live openly, alive and present to our most deeply felt longings.

But some of us don’t get that much-needed reassurance. As very young children we express our truest needs and our caregivers can’t respond adequately or consistently, due to things like depression or addiction, and we come to learn that our most basic needs aren’t acceptable or relatable. Winnicott says that in cases like this a child becomes “compliant,” meaning they don’t just stop expressing their truest needs to caregivers unable or unwilling to meet them, they lose touch with those deepest needs by convincing themselves they weren’t the very things they needed in the first place. This adaptive story is, according to Winnicott, the birth of the “false self,” which is also the compliant self.

More simply put, I think the theory is that when we’re very young, we need to have adults around us who are strong enough and capable enough and loving enough that we can express our wants and desires with as much anti-social self-centeredness as humanly possible, and they will consistently love us unconditionally, accept us, and give us what we need most of the time. By doing so, they teach us that we can truly be our most authentic selves and the world will still hold us, accept us, even love us. And when we don’t get that, we learn the opposite: that the world might not accept us and almost certainly won’t love us if we express our true needs or callings. And even more, we’ll do such a good job convincing ourselves we don’t want what we in fact need, that we’ll live lives divorced from our creativity and passions because we can’t find our way back to them after those first and formative lies. We’ll be lost in our false selves, accommodating others, not trusting the world to be strong or capable enough to hold us dearly.