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Jun 2·edited Jun 2Liked by J.S. Kasimir

Mental health has been a source of interest to our owner/occupiers (priest class) for over a hundred years now.

https://ariaveritas.substack.com/p/waiter-theres-a-persecution-psychosis

9/11 was a similarly a premeditated global shock, like an alarm (clock or fire alarm) going off. Shocks are how we undergo change - for better or worse.

https://ariaveritas.substack.com/p/executing-good-judgement

Both tie in to the so-called 2030 Agenda which is very real but not as the conspiracy theorists suppose (though crossover is possible).

https://ariaveritas.substack.com/p/famous-uranus-cosmic-avenger

If there's only time to read one, the first and last are less technical than the second.

Edit: I don't like people who go round promoting their own stuff on other peoples comment system... I am aware of that at least, so please forgive me. There is cringe in based and based in cringe etc. but the point is deep dives and that's my speciality.

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How does this theory comport with human history, though? Humanity is resilient, and has endured far more horrific tragedies than 9/11. If unborn children are as susceptible to stress as this article suggests, that paints humanity as the opposite of resilient, and we would have gone extinct eons ago.

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author

Amazing question.

As we're raised, our environment and culture shape our temperaments into more concrete personalities. That being said, if we're raised in a culture promoting resilience, or at discourages weakness, doubt, and anxiety, we will be able to suppress and effectively ignore our natural neuroticism in favor of more culturally favored traits. For example, if a child does get anxious when meeting new people, he will learn to still interact with others *in spite* of his anxiety, because it's what his culture encourages or even demands.

However, in our modern society--especially in highly Westernized countries--we do not promote the resilience so common throughout history, and instead promote the neuroticism. So we will not encourage the child to continue operating in spite of his anxiety, but will rather promote it, slap a diagnosis on it, and continue to accommodate the child, rather than promoting his growth.

So while depressed, neurotic, and unstable people have always existed, those who were/are encouraged to operate in spite of it were/are able to succeed.

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Jun 2Liked by J.S. Kasimir

Imho that's a very accurate take. Things only become a problem when unforeseen shocks come along to trigger a 'constellation' or what R.G. Hamer called the original neuroses which is a combination of previous shocks on both/either sides of the brain, which must be dealt with, ie. controlled, eliminated or suppressed. Further shocks can lead to a psychotic split, as seen in Max Azzarello the other month.

Children are shocked routinely from infancy in the west via hospital/doctor intervention, vax, circumcision, separation from the mother either in a different room overnight or carted off to daycare immediately (or in fact any time in their first three or four years). The whole thing is a dumpster fire and premeditated to be so. A 'final act' on the last night of the show.

From the learning gnm website: MATURITY STOP “I'm afraid if I ever grow up, I won't be able to make a living" (Robin Williams)

"When a person is still in the developmental age and experiences a conflict that creates a constellation, the maturation stops at the time when the *second* conflict takes place. The maturity stop, however, is only put on hold. With a conflict resolution after the age of 23, the manic depression ceases; the maturity stop, however, stays and becomes part of the adult’s personality."

Dr. Hamer: “The phenomenon of the maturity stop has existed all along. However, in our days, not least because of early sexualization, the frequency of constellations among teenagers between the age of 11 and 14 has increased significantly. Most conflicts occur during that period.”

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author

This is very interesting!

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That tracks, thanks for sharing. In other words, your hypothesis is that 9/11 was the lightning strike that kindled the cultural debris. Is that accurate?

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author

Yeah. More likely, though, it was one of many leading factors in the whole mental health crisis of today.

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