Whey Protein, Solfeggio, Asking Someone Out, Reptilian Dream, and Kabbalah Progress
My 'cancer feeling' in my stomach has been off-the-charts lately. This happened after trying whey isolate instead of concentrate. (Whey is actually low in tyrosine compared with other dairy. I don't really care about tyrosine anymore though. They even sell N-Acetyl-L-tyrosine as a supplement to enhance focus.) It's unknown why isolate would do this. There are no negative reviews on it. I guess this will have to be another 'unsolved mystery.'
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Why not change it up with healing frequencies?
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I decided to ask someone out at a health food store I occasionally shop at. She said I'm a nice guy but "No." I'm just glad I asked her out. I haven't asked anyone out in a very long time. It's invigorating to do something like this.
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Early this morning I dreamed about fighting a reptilian. This reptilian was different than any I've ever encountered. I was trying to stab his neck, but he was trying to help me. I looked into his eyes and saw that he didn't want to be what he was and wanted to die. I found myself feeling sympathy for him. Then I woke up. I don't know his current status.
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The Kabbalah research is going well. I could make a mega-post about what I'm learning. I may or may not in the future. This information is taking me to a level I've never reached before. Here's an interesting story quoted from "Kabbalah for Dummies":
"One day, Rabbi Eliezer prayed to the Almighty for a vision of Elijah. Elijah the Prophet appeared before Rabbi Eliezer and said to him, “What can I do for you?” Rabbi Eliezer said, “I’d like to follow you around. I’d like to watch you do your work, your work for the Holy One, Blessed be He, in the world. I just want to follow you around and watch you do your work.”
Elijah the Prophet said to Rabbi Eliezer, “Sorry, you can’t follow me around. You’ll have too many questions, and I don’t have time for your questions.” Rabbi Eliezer responded, “I promise I won’t ask any questions. Will you allow me the honor of watching you do your work?” Elijah the Prophet agreed to that condition, and off they went.
That night, the two were looking for lodging and saw a dilapidated shack. They approached the shack and discovered a young, poor couple, impoverished and owning little else besides one cow, living there. Elijah the Prophet and Rabbi Eliezer approached the couple and asked them for lodging, and the young couple greeted them warmly, welcomed them in, and gathered some straw to make the two strangers as comfortable as possible. They offered their guests whatever they had, and Rabbi Eliezer and Elijah the Prophet spent the night.
When he awoke the next morning, Rabbi Eliezer overheard Elijah the Prophet praying to the Almighty, asking that the Almighty kill the cow. No sooner had Elijah the Prophet expressed this prayer than the cow suddenly died.
Rabbi Eliezer was outraged and said to Elijah, “What did you do? Why did you ask the Almighty to take the life of the cow? They were such lovely people. They have next to nothing. Why did you take their cow?” Elijah the Prophet looked at Rabbi Eliezer and said, “See, you have so many questions. I don’t have time for your questions.” Rabbi Eliezer, though confused, quickly responded, “Please forgive me. I want to follow you. I won’t ask you any more questions.” Elijah gave him another chance, and off they went.
The next evening they were looking for lodging and arrived at a big mansion. They knocked on the door, and the owner of the mansion came out, greeted them coldly, and agreed that they could stay down in his cellar. He offered them no human warmth, no physical warmth, and no food, and down to the cellar they went. During the night, Rabbi Eliezer awoke upon hearing a commotion. He watched as Elijah the Prophet patched up an area of the cellar wall that was unfinished and crumbling.
The next day, they continued traveling and arrived at a synagogue of wealthy congregants. The pews were made of gold and silver, and the people in the synagogue were cold and unfriendly. When Elijah the Prophet and Rabbi Eliezer entered the synagogue, nobody greeted them, and nobody performed the mitzvah of welcoming guests. In fact, they noticed people whispering about them behind their backs. Before they left the synagogue, Elijah the Prophet looked at the congregation and said, “I pray that you should all become leaders.”
They entered a neighborhood that was impoverished. The people were living in squalor, but they were very lovely, sweet, warm, gentle people. Elijah the Prophet looked at this neighborhood, looked at these people, and said, “I want to bless you that one of you should be a leader.”
It was at this point that Rabbi Eliezer couldn’t hold his questions in any longer. He said to Elijah the Prophet, “I know that you’re going to send me away. I know that you required me not to ask questions, but I beg you, please, can you give me some understanding of what you’ve been doing? I don’t understand anything that you’re doing. I beg you. Can you offer me some kind of explanation?”
Elijah the Prophet looked at Rabbi Eliezer and said, “I’ll offer you some explanation, but then you’ll have to leave. Remember the first night when we encountered that lovely yet poor couple living in their shack with their cow? And remember how outraged you were the next morning when you heard me praying to the Holy One, Blessed is He, that he should kill the cow? What you didn’t know was that it was time for the wife to die. But I pleaded with Hashem, "Don’t take the wife. Take the cow.”
Elijah said, “You recall the next night when we were put in that rich man’s cold cellar? And you woke up puzzled when you saw that I was repairing his walls and fixing them up beautifully? I wasn’t doing that. I knew that there was a treasure buried within the walls. The man who owned that mansion didn’t deserve the mansion, let alone the treasure buried in the walls, so I patched and finished up the walls nicely so that no one would ever discover that treasure.”
Elijah the Prophet went on. “Remember the next day, when we went to that synagogue that was so wealthy, with gold and silver pews, but all the people were so unfriendly? I noticed how confused you were when you thought that I’d offered them some big blessing by saying that they all should become great leaders. That wasn’t a blessing; it was a curse. Anyone who has ever been in an organization knows the chaos that results from everyone thinking that he or she is a leader. I prayed that they all should become leaders.
And then we went to that poor neighborhood, and the people were so sweet and so lovely, and you wondered, in comparison to the earlier so-called ‘blessing,’ why I would just say, "I bless you that one of you should be a leader." You see, that indeed was a blessing. All that neighborhood really needed was one good, strong leader who could take the people out of the poverty and squalor that they lived in.”
Elijah the Prophet then said to Rabbi Eliezer, “Yes, you have to leave now, but please don’t forget that what you see in the world is not the whole picture. It’s only part of the grand picture in the mind of the Almighty.”
(End quote)
I'm finding more wisdom from Judaic sources than I ever thought possible. Yes, there are genocidal Zionists. Every culture has bad apples. Muslims have genocidal extremists but this doesn't represent Arabs, just as Zionists don't represent Jews. Why not take the best and leave out the rest?
Anyway, it was the Jews who originally developed the Kabbalah that is used by newagers, spiritualists, and occultists. And unlike modern versions, the Judaic Kabbalah actually makes sense.
Oops, this turned out to be a mega-post.
"When the Kabbalist eats bread, he’s/she's acknowledging the ability of human beings to combine the elements of the world and to create something new. Kabbalists consider this ability to create to be a divine spark within humans. Bread is the finest example within the human diet of that expression of creativity, and therefore the blessing said before eating bread is sufficient for the entire meal regardless of how many other kinds of foods are consumed.
ReplyDeleteThis example also points to the Kabbalistic notion of repairing the world. Kabbalists gather the gifts that God has given and try to combine them in a way that will improve the world. By gathering the ingredients to make bread, people exercise their ability to create the tools necessary to improve, build, and raise the level of the world. Each day, Kabbalists need to be aware that the world requires rectifying and things need to be put into their proper places. Kabbalists assume that the world is mixed up; all too often, things that are small are considered big, things that are big are considered small, things that are important are considered unimportant, and things that are unimportant are considered important. The Kabbalist’s job is to put everything into its proper proportion for the sake of the health of the world."
Source: "Kabbalah for Dummies" by Arthur Kurzweil
I knew there was something very special about making and eating bread! I always felt it was a form of alchemy.
‘No Idea What It Is’
ReplyDeleteI'm finding that many new age beliefs originate from esoteric Judaism. For example, the Judaic text on the five levels of the soul which was made 2,000 years ago may be the origin of the spiritual belief in the stages of initiation Cobra mentioned recently from a posted link. Although esoteric Judaism isn't the origin of all modern spiritual beliefs, many Judaic texts are where much of the occult get their information from as well, such as the Kabbalah.
DeleteMore and more I'm asking the question, where do all these modern spiritual beliefs people have come from? I'm amazed to find that one of the sources is definitely Judaism. I always thought Judaism was just another religion too until I started researching it. There are the Emerald Tablets of Thoth, which far predate very old Judaic texts - it's not an end-all. And I'm not religious myself either. But spiritual people may be very surprised to learn where their perspectives originate from.
Judaism even states that we live in an eternal present - that creation is not a linear progression, with creation being constantly created anew.
Cool link! Musk is a grey hat, but who knows. I don't like to get caught up in dates though. All we can do is take it a day at a time - that sort of thing. But it's interesting that he's talking about this.
Thanks for the visit! I didn't mean to make this reply so long, sorry. I'm glad to explore the religious vs. nonreligious aspects of my current line of research though. There are modern Jews who are more strict who reject the Kabbalah and so forth. It was just a matter of digging deeper to find the esoteric aspects. There's also esoteric Christianity, which leads to Gnosticism. It's a very massive arena with so many directions!
Finding the origins of modern-day movements can be very empowering. For example, "As above, so below" is often said, but its origins are from Hermeticism. Going to the origin, one would be surprised to find that "As above, so below" is only one of the seven hermetic principles. 🙏💖