posted on Aug, 4 2008 @ 11:24 AM
Personal Decisions
We have predicted that mankind in the main will go into the pole shift unaware. Most of the world has no access to the media, or the Internet, and
relies on the senses of seers within their culture or their own intuition. As prophets have emerged over the years, warning of the coming earth
changes, other cultures such as Africa have also been rich in their own folklore, though the West has been unaware of this. The indians of South
American, the tribes of Borneo, the Australian Aborigines, all have their seers and prophets of old. You are aware of the Hopi warnings, the Red Sky
story, but this is just a small part of the underground lore among the American Indian. Most hearing at this time, or even in the recent past, about
the coming changes are not planning any action at all. As astonishing as this may seem, this is because of a predictable set of steps the thinking
process goes through.
The first thought is that action should be taken. This requires health, resources, and teammates. Should the individuals have this, in youth, energy,
the ability to travel, and others of like mind, they make plans. Should the individual not have this, in that they are in poor health, old and tired,
or blocked from travel due to finances or responsibilities, they move to the next step.
The next thought is what to do in the event the warnings are true. For those trapped, by either inability to move or finances, the conclusion is
either death or slow debility. Should the individual be strong enough to consider the warnings affecting their immediate locale, and concluding that
life would be horrendous afterwards, they subconsciously decide to allow death to overtake them and their loved ones. This is no different than the
decision that those beset with cancer or the final stages of a debilitating disease make - they go with the flow. Should the individual be weak,
frightened at the thought, they move to the next step.
The next step is denial, and this takes many forms. Denial is usually loudly shouting down the offending message, or ignoring it. In any case, it is
put aside. Once put aside, the individual moves to the next step.
Distraction is the final and lingering step that those in denial take. Work, play, overeating, overexercising, or getting drunk or dopey. Taking up
religions, deciding that saving the local song-birds is the most important thing that one could be involved in, whatever can consume the
consciousness.
If a quiet resignation to death is not taken, will a frantic running about after false promises occur? This is unlikely to happen, in spite of the
plans of the Hazelwood crowd who hoped to reap millions if not billions from the public due to their panic. Those in step 1 who have funds will make
their own plans, and if they have no funds, will be of no interest to the ilk of Hazelwood. Those in step 2, who have decided that nothing much can be
done and they must resign themselves to the inevitable, will not send Hazelwood funds. Nor will they run into the arms of strangers. They will, if
they have religion or poetry in their lives, rely on this heavily. Music and poetry may have a renaissance, an upsurge, as adoption of orphans and the
underprivileged. Love may have a blooming going into the shift, as it ought, those with great love in their hearts responding to the realization that
little else matters.