Margi update; Everything happens FOR you, not TO you

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Outrageously, the Hope Lodge (for cancer patents, where we stayed for a month last year for free), has closed due to the Cohenavirus hoax! So we are paying $40 a day for an AirBnB….. where I am now staying alone, Margi being over in the hospital.

Many patients here believe that  Covid mania, the masks, and everything is a lie and a hoax. You can see it in their eyes, the anger. And a lot of Minnesotans are not liberal, not at all!
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…..Comrade asks what happened to the monster Stalin when he died

I told him that the Michael Winkler book “Die spirituelle Welt” (“The Spiritual World”), which I and my team have translated, is accurate.

After processing at death, we see a life-review video, and then we are sent to a world that corresponds to our nature in order to learn more.
Fairly good people go temporarily to a world with other fairly good people; super-advanced souls to to a very nice place (BEFORE THEY RETURN TO EARTH, REINCARNATING AGAIN).
And utter monsters like Stalin or Churchill go to worlds peopled exclusively by other predators, psychopaths and human devils.
There, EVERYONE is just like them: a torturer, rapist and murderer. You have to watch your back every second. There are no gullible prey-people there, just other cutthroats.

It is a hell of your own making. Your own heart sentences you there.

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You are allowed to leave it — when your soul is sick and tired of its monstrous atmosphere and goings-on, and you have truly learned your lesson. Everything is telepathic there; you cannot lie or fake anything. Fake remorse is laughable to the angels in charge of your case — all former humans themselves.
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It is a hell that was tailored by you to your own learning needs.
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Rapists need to be raped, torturers need to be tortured, and murderers need to be murdered. This is the only way they learn. It is called tough love.
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The wicked may stubbornly spend centuries in there. Wanting to get out is not enough. You have to deeply regret how you lived and hurt others.
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God is not one to be mocked; whatever a man sows, that shall he reap.

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The comrade replied: What about all the innocent little kids who got molested by these satanic jews?
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My answer:  In a higher sense, here is a hard truth: there really are no victims.
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People commit so many sins of omission as well as commission. It is as serious to fail to act when it is the time to fight and help as it is to actually do evil things yourself.
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The masses ignore all the good souls who ask them to join in the struggle.
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For millennia, great men have warned about the jews, and the masses did nothing.  Now the frightful end phase is here.
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Most people suffering today under jewry stubbornly did nothing in many previous lives as this problem festered and got worse.
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In a higher sense, there are indeed no victims.
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Others of us incarnated here nobly, while knowing full well how the majority is, and what a horror show this earth can be.
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So we too, the noble ones, are not victims either.

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We are here to do our duty. And annihilate the wicked.
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All this suffering just spurns us on.
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So, as they say in Pittsburgh,  where my dad was from (1and we lived there for six years as well), “kwitcher whinin’ ! ” 🙂
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I have no doubt Margi was a Reich German and national socialist in her last life.
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She never whines.
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I think she was even an East Prussian — after a strange vision I had of her.
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We can overcome any horror, we can learn from it, and become stronger! We came here knowingly to this challenging planet on a mission to live, love, learn and win, even if it takes 25 generations of epic struggle!
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…”for richer, for poorer; in sickness and in health; TO LOVE AND TO CHERISH UNTIL DEATH DO US PART.” Our honor, in hardship and pain, is to be LOYAL!

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…….Everything happens FOR you, not TO you

Mind Cafe

3 Science-Based Ways to Become Psychologically Bulletproof

“What others think of you is none of your business. If you start to make that business your business, you will be offended for the rest of your life.” — Deepak Chopra

Benjamin Hardy, PhD

Jun 30 · 9 min read
[JdN: This Hardy fellow is amazing.]

Becoming psychologically bulletproof means you have nothing to hide. It means you have no ghosts in your closet. It means your past is nothing to be ashamed of, and your future is nothing to be embarrassed about. What it really means, is that you’re progressively living your life by choice, not out of fear.

Now you may think you’re making your own decisions, but I can promise you that you’re not. At least not 100%. Because if you were absolutely living your life 100% by choice, my guess is, you’d have something even slightly different from what you have.

There are layers and degrees when it comes to having the confidence to full-out make the decisions you want to make. Most people have likely settled on less than 50% of what they really want. If you’re doing REALLY good, you may have settled on like 70–80% of what you really want.

Interestingly, it’s easy to convince yourself that you’re FULLY making a choice until someone really challenges it. Then you’re forced to really ask: Is this TRULY what I want, or is this a slightly different but “close enough” version?

Becoming psychologically bulletproof means that, less and less, you take “close enough” versions of what you want.

But getting to that level of honesty and confidence is not easy. And you definitely cannot do it by yourself. So in this article, I’m going to break down 3 science-based strategies for getting closer and closer to that level of confidence — wherein you truly do make decisions based on what you truly want, knowing you can have it. Rather than settling for less.

Robert Brault’s bone-chilling words will set the tone: “We are kept from our goal not by obstacles, but by a clear path to a lesser goal.”

This applies to all of us. We have all settled for some form of “lesser goal” for ourselves in various aspects of our lives. The question is: Are we willing to raise our standard of honesty, both with ourselves and other people? Are we willing to face obstacles — which by the way are mostly emotional — in order to create the life we really want? Or are we going to forego the emotional tension and instead, settle for a lesser path, which is less emotionally taxing.

Being fully honest, and being willing to admit when you’ve settled takes guts. It takes courage.

And in order for you to be courageous, you’ll need encouragement from amazing people. So that’s where we will start:

1. Have Amazing People Around You, Whom You Trust, Who Help You Claim The “Permission” You Need

“Trauma is not what happens to us, but what we hold inside in the absence of an empathetic witness.” — Peter Levine

One of the top keys to being successful and even living a long-life is healthy social support. Almost nothing else has been found to be a better predictor in all of the psychological literature.

But “social support” isn’t enough. You need the right type of social support. You need smart people you look up to, who can help you claim your confidence.

I’m lucky enough to have such people in my life. One of them is Tucker Max, who is one of the smartest people in the world when it comes to writing, positioning, and packaging books.

Tucker has edited two of my books now and has helped me in many other ways. While writing a book I’m co-authoring with Strategic Coach founder, Dan Sullivan, I got all caught-up in my head. I started worrying about all the wrong things and couldn’t get myself to write.

Tucker got on the phone with me and immediately was able to cut to the heart of the issue. I was too worried about writing the book I thought Dan wanted me to write, rather than writing the book I genuinely wanted to write.

I just didn’t have the confidence to do what I really wanted in that situation. When you’re pursuing big goals, your confidence often isn’t to the level of the situation. This is why you need people who can see the situation for what it is — without fog and confusion.

Tucker gave me permission to write the book I genuinely wanted to write, helping me realize that would be the absolute best thing I could possibly do.

More recently, I’m working on a book proposal for what could be a controversial book. I thought I was proposing the book I really wanted to write. But when Tucker read my proposal, he immediately saw that I saw beating around the bush.

“Why don’t you just go all-in on this idea?” he suggested, pointing to a concept I was building as a second or third level concept in the book.

And of course, what he was saying was 100% on the money. If I had the guts to do it, that’s the book I would totally write. Instead, I was squeezing the idea in as an afterthought, because I was too afraid to fully own in.

Tucker gave me permission, yet again, to do what I truly wanted to do, without need for apology.

We all need people like this, not just for our careers, but for ALL aspects of our lives. It’s humbling to have experiences like this where you realize you were settling for less even when you thought you weren’t!

In my case, I genuinely thought I was writing the book I wanted to write. But then, with a single comment from a trusted friend and some introspection, I was able to see that I was hiding. I was playing safe. I was settling for a “lesser version” — maybe a 60–75% version — of what I really wanted.

Would it be more risky to go 100% for what I truly wanted? Of course.

But there’s no other way to go when you’re living your life by choice rather than default. And you need encouragement from smart people you respect who are willing to tell you straight up when you’re settling for less.

2. View Everything In Your Past and Present As: “This Happened FOR ME” (not TO ME)

“Life is simple. Everything happens for you, not to you. Everything happens at exactly the right moment, neither too soon nor too late. You don’t have to like it… it’s just easier if you do.” — Byron Katie

When you dig a little deeper into this concept, it is a game-changer. But initially, it doesn’t make much since.

Let me give an example: My father-in-law raises bees. He has several hives. And each hive has a queen. A few days ago, he was marking one of the queens, and when he put it back into the hive, all the bees killed the queen. He had put her in too soon and the smell of the paint hadn’t dried. So the bees didn’t recognize their queen.

This was pretty frustrating for my father-in-law. For that particular hive, it will cost him at least a month of production, which is likely several dozen pounds of honey.

He asked me: “How can I view this as happening FOR ME? There are no benefits to this situation. It just plain sucks.”

We got talking about the long-term situation. If he’s only committed in the short-term to raising bees, then yes, this situation can be chalked-up as a “loss.” But if he’s committed to the long-game, then this is EXACTLY what he needed.

Why? Because clearly he just made a mistake. He did something that killed the queen and slowed the progress of one of his hives. That’s HIS fault, due to his ignorance.

This situation, although frustrating in the moment can be an incredible LEARNING experience, thus allowing him to hopefully not repeat the mistake he just made. Therefore, this event happened FOR the long-term success of his bees, if he learns from it.

It all depends on how you look at it.

  • Are you going to be defined by what just happened? (i.e., “This happened TO ME”)
  • Or, are you going to USE what just happened to make your future different and better? (i.e., “This happened FOR ME”)

You can apply this same principle to ANYTHING that has either happened to you or is currently happening to you.

Life isn’t about what happens to you, but rather, the meaning you give to what happens to you (which, although it doesn’t feel like it, is actually a choice). The more emotionally evolved you become as a person, the more effective you are at giving useful meanings.

Rather than reactively creating meanings in the moment, you “emotionally regulate.” You take a second and get clear on what’s going on, and ultimately, you frame the experience to your long-term benefit, rather than to your long-term detriment.

Challenge for you, the reader: Look at any event from your life, which you believe has negatively impacted you. Now ask yourself, was this ABSOLUTELY a negative experience, or am I simply ascribing a negative meaning to it? What would happen if I chose to see it from a different angle? What would happen if you chose a different meaning for the event — such that it can be viewed in a positive light? How would seeing this event different change how you see yourself and the world?

When negative situations pop-up, which they will, do yourself a favor. Don’t get all caught-up. Take a few breaths and entertain the idea that this is EXACTLY what you need.

What you resist persists.

Whatever is happening, as frustrating or annoying or disappointing, as it may seem, is HAPPENING FOR YOU. The sooner you can create that meaning and own it, the faster you’ll move forward as a person.

This isn’t easy. Again, it’s emotionally taxing, but it’s also how you become emotionally intelligent and emotionally flexible — wherein you become the person who ultimately owns your emotions rather than having your emotions own you.

3. Tell People What You Truly Want For Yourself

“All progress starts by telling the truth.” — Dan Sullivan

There are a lot of people who believe you should keep your goals and ambitions private. And in some cases, that may be the right strategic thing to do.

But the reason for keeping your true goals private should be strategic, not due to fear of judgment or fear of getting negative feedback.

But here’s a question for you: If whatever you truly want is going to eventually come to pass, then won’t people know about it at some point or another?

If you’re TRULY going to achieve or become whatever it is you want, then eventually people are going to know about it.

One of the top regrets people have on the deathbeds is that they didn’t have the courage to do what they truly wanted. Instead, they lived up to the expectations other people had for them.

Your identity — which is one the most powerful predictors of how you behave — is the story you tell about yourself. Most people are not intentional about their identity.

What would happen if you oriented your identity toward your goals, rather than telling the story about who you are or worse, who you were?

What would happen if you became radically honest about the person you wanted to be, and the situation you wanted to have?

How would that change your relationships?

Want to become psychologically bulletproof? Define what you truly want and start OWNING it. Stop hiding. Stop worrying about the judgment of other people. Instead, get encouragement and support from the right people to have the courage to move your life forward.

Bust past emotional obstacles and become the person you genuinely want to be. Stop playing small. Stop settling for a 40, 50, or 60% version of the life you truly want.

You’ve got this.

You’re awesome.

Become psychologically bulletproof. Live your life where you’ve got nothing to hide. Live your life so that you’re not longer constrained by fear.

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4 Comments

  1. “Il trauma non è ciò che ci accade, ma ciò che teniamo dentro in assenza di un testimone empatico”. – Peter Levine
    Ecco…questa cosa mi è sempre mancata,un testimone empatico!
    Sentirsi diversi e allo stesso tempo sbagliati,o peggio sentirsi in colpa!
    Ogni pensiero diventa un macigno…anno dopo anno perché lo tieni nascosto,non è il luogo a darti problemi ma quello che crea la Mente collettiva!Un paese può essere bellissimo dal punto di vista paesaggistico…ma diventa invivibile per la “mentalità” delle persone.
    Oggi mi concentro su quello che sento,attraverso i suoni,sulla mia solitudine che non è così male come pensavo!Ti puoi fermare a respirare..
    Le persone non sono in grado di stare sole…hanno paura!Eppure puoi respirare tutto della Natura,anche i suoni..
    Margi vive dei suoi colori,secondo me vive bene attraverso i tuoi colori,il tuo modo di pensare e il tuo modo di vivere.La sua forza e ispirazione sei tu!

    • Transl:

      “Trauma is not what happens to us, but what we keep inside in the absence of an empathetic witness”. – Peter Levine

      Here … I have always missed this thing, an empathetic witness!

      Feeling different and at the same time wrong, or worse feeling guilty!

      Every thought becomes a boulder … year after year because you keep it hidden. It is not the place that gives you problems, but this thing which creates the Collective [slave] Mind! A country can be beautiful from a landscape point of view … but it becomes unlivable due to the “mentality” of the people.

      Today I focus on what I feel, through the sounds, on my loneliness which is not as bad as I thought! You can stop and breathe ..

      People are not able to be alone … They are so afraid! And yet you can breathe all of Nature, and take in the sounds ..

      Margi lives off her colors, and in my opinion she lives well also through your colors, your way of thinking and your way of life. Her strength and inspiration are you!

      [end]

      So many of us live a lonely life, and thus the unquenchable desire burns in us for the folk community, to be again one big, caring family, and live in beauty and love. 🙂

  2. https://photos.app.goo.gl/7Gp7mscv6zdANQqS7
    (Children)Ero davvero indecisa per un piccolo errore 🙂 e per la vergogna che mi assale!a parte questo,la modifico in continuazione..
    A me non piace ripetere qualcosa due volte;io non so come fanno quando i musicisti devono registrare qualcosa!
    “La ripetizione è qualcosa che odio nel profondo”[..]come l’OLOTRUFFA!
    Mi piace l’effetto specchio,le mani su in alto si vedono poco,purtroppo!
    È qualcosa che fa parte del nostro Essere,Corpo Anima e Spirito(diciamolo)..
    Spero si veda…

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