Fear is a feeling, not an idea
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Fear is a feeling, not an idea |
Fear is a feeling, not an idea
Fear is one of the many emotions that we feel and express as human beings in response to certain events or experiences.
Feelings are neither good nor bad, they are part of what makes us human. When we are in danger, fear plays a role in our survival and no human is immune to this feeling.
Feeling is not an idea, so fear is not something we think about, it is felt. A thought can evoke fear, but a thought is not fear.
When we are in danger, the feeling of fear motivates us to work in order to survive the threat. The feeling is automatic and stems from the subconscious mind where all our programming is stored. One such program is the one that makes our hearts beat. We don't need to constantly check if our heart is beating because we have a subconscious program that does.
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Fear is a feeling, not an idea |
subconscious programs
We are also born with the ability to add programs to our subconscious. This ability can be used to our advantage or at our expense.
When we learn something new, such as driving a car, we follow procedures by consciously thinking about each step. Only after many repetitions is the action stored in the subconscious and we perform the steps without having to think about it anymore.
Programs can also be added to the subconscious when a person experiences intense emotion in response to an entirely new and threatening experience. The person under attack experiences such intense emotions and may be traumatized by the experience unless they have been previously trained to deal with such an event.
When a person experiences such an event, everything that happens is automatically recorded and saved in the subconscious. This information is recorded from the five senses in the same way a person might record a series of files on a desktop that at first glance seem unrelated, but actually stems from the same experience. Examples include sounds near the attack, such as the rustle of leaves, heavy breathing, or even the sound of an airplane overhead. Odors are recorded as the smell of fresh grass where the attack occurred, the smell of aftershave or deodorant, or perspiration. Then there are also records of what was seen, felt, and tasted. All these files remain active on the subconscious's desktop until they are properly processed and categorized.
The type of unconscious person does not go into shock and can affect the person for the rest of their life, affecting the chain of decisions and it is still impossible to live in the present to the point that they are stuck in this experience that happens every time. They hear, see, smell, taste, or touch anything that reminds them of what happened.
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Fear is a feeling, not an idea |
The imagined threat is not real
The fear we experience, stemming from trauma stored in the subconscious, does not stem from any real threat in the present. This unconscious compulsion to survive an impending threat is not real, but rather a reason from the past sitting at the desk of the subconscious.
Examples include:
- A schoolboy emits a teacher after reminding him of the abuse at the hands of the man who used the same.
- A woman who was raped in a field of fresh grass has an asthma attack as she walks through her garden.
A person reacts angrily to the sudden sound of breaking glass hearing the sound at the time of the initial shock.
Collective fear and responsibility.
We are also affected by our collective memory of the trauma. The Jewish people can be moved to this day by the authoritarian rhetoric of a politician.
People who are repeatedly told about threats to their existence and to the planet itself are prepared to act as if those threats are real and to act accordingly.
How many of you remember President George W. Bush telling you about the weapons of mass destruction that Saddam Hussein was stockpiling in Iraq and that was the excuse he used to go to war in Iraq?
How many of you remember being told about the threat of communism and its use as a pretext for the United States to enter the Vietnam War?
To engage residents, officials understand that fear is the first step. Time and time again we see how any government can pursue its own agenda by first instilling enough fear in the population. A sufficiently fearful population then abandons its power to its government and submits to all its dictates, however contradictory they may be.
This is exactly what is happening in the world today and it is not happening in one country but all over the world and they are getting away with it again.
After convincing the nation of its urgency to go to war and after all the bloodshed in Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan, to name a few, the United States withdraws and nothing is said.
This time all of humanity will pay the price and it's not like people haven't seen the methods used in the past.
What will people say when their children and grandchildren ask them, "Why didn't you protect us?"
Anamorphic illusion
When Germans after World War II were asked why they went with Hitler, most said they did what everyone else was doing and were afraid to rock ship. When asked if they knew about the atrocities, most said they were completely unaware of them.
Fear and ignorance are the excuses that are always given after the truth, so before it's too late why can't people just shift their stance an inch and see the distortion of the truth commit in today's world?
The measures taken by those in power to put the world into this trance are the same measures that have been used by all governments and tyrants throughout history.
Most people have seen sidewalk graphics that give the illusion of something real when viewed from one vantage point, but from another vantage point the illusion is revealed.
To wake up and take responsibility, all a person has to do is change their perspective slightly and expose the lie.
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