Thursday, June 27, 2019

Over 60 Common Traits of a Psychic - Could you be Psychic?





The Commonalities

Over the years I have discussed this issue of the commonalities between Clairvoyants and this is what seems to come up more often than not, we tend to be:




- Can't sleep with closet doors open. You have to shut them habitually or won't able to sleep.
- Outgoing- People person with a great love for humanity.
- Easy to talk too – people you don't even know will tell you there life stories and seek you out for advice.
- Storytellers, Poets, Writers, Performers, Artists etc.
- Extremely honest and trustworthy- In a society that some might say to a fault.
- Big Heartd with a large capacity to love.
- Communicators with all living things, especially the animal kingdom.
- Unique in your ability to communicate with aboriginal elderly, children (of all cultures) special needs people, especially deep connections with Autistic Children and Adults.
- Children know you as a friend and will call you that upon meeting you for the first time.
- We call wild animals, birds, mammals etc. to you and they tend to follow you around. Especially crows.
- A Leader and Chief even though you fear leading.
- Calm when everyone else is freaking out, especially in times of life threatening or traumatic situations.
- Wise beyond your years.
- Highly intelligent, ingenious at figuring out difficult situations and then fix them.
- Dyslexic or have severe learning disabilities.
- Able to leave our bodies (astral travel) in .5 seconds.
- Levitation has occur as a child or preteen ie. Floating off the bed or floating in the air while running.
- Hypersensitive to taste, touch, smell and sound.
- Borderline diabetics, having sugar intolerances and allergies to sugar.
- Butter addicts.
- Intolerant to caffeine.
- Have opposite effects with pharmaceuticals prescriptions. Hyper = Drowsy and Drowsy = Hyper
- Lip-read and also have unique abilities to read peoples idiosyncrasies.
- Think that they are crazy, unstable, and unfit because they hear voices in our heads.
- Hear voices (individuals even, sometimes with accents) in our heads that gives you information about; problems we are experiencing, people with health difficulties, innate info about world the order, the universe at large and how to navigate it and where you were from (what exact star) family, friends and loved ones, disasters etc.
- Worried about having Multiple Personalities
- Insomniacs.-because there bodies are whirling beyond light speed. Waking a 3 in the morning with a rapid heart beat that is pounding out of the chest. To the point to making them think that they might be having a heart attack.
- Extremely hypersensitive 10 to 13 days of each month from the 20 to the 3rd of each month depending on the moon. And four times a year i.e. solstice, equinox etc. tend to be Extreme extremely hypersensitive almost with the ability to feel the earths pulse.
- Lacking in any ambition or ego that resemble anything in the 21st century modern society’s minds.
- Aware that they are being hunted and think that they are paranoid schizophrenics.
- Deficient of vitamins C and lack calcium, magnesium and basic other minerals.
- Relationship junkies and sometimes sex junkies.
- Scared to be alone and afraid to go to sleep.
- Frightened to dream for fear of information or being hunted or shot.
- Hesitant in seeking power or becoming who we believe we are for the fear of being killed.
- Frightened to know more about who they are bit it for fear of responsibility, or not fitting in, or being different, or being ostracized by the general public, or being seen as weird and therefore sooner or later being sent to an insane asylum.
- Highly imaginative and the general public tends to remind them all the time.
- Aware that people are frightened of them because they think they can read there minds even though they don’t believe in that stuff.
- Happier in the forest but lonely for people after a time.
- Lonely, and sad and feel separate from the world.
- Frightened of the dark.
- Afraid of being alone in the forest during the day and especially at night.
- Afraid of spiders or snakes and owls.
- Bonded with Cats of all kinds.
- A little over weight or a little to thin.
- Able to speak in tongues.
- Have severe allergies.
- Hear voices outside our heads with no one around.
- Able to predict wonderful things.
- Incredible hunters of things, animals, and of people.
- Read incessantly beyond all normal bounds devouring books in the hunt for information they know but don’t quite know what they are looking for.
- Heal people in numbers of ways through, tarot, channeling, healing touch, reiki, medical intuition etc and not know quite how we did it.
- Unable to keep watches on wrists and have electronical equipment around shut down or totally stop working i.e. TVs., car radio’s, cars electronic systems etc.
- Have dreams of dancing in a spirit form.
- Have a fascination with long bows, hunting bows that go beyond archery and hunting.
- The Earth is not my home…Does this sound like something you've said & rarely share?
- Have had Alien contactee experiences.
- Able to see little people, fairy folk or talk to them.
- See hooded cloaked people at the end of streets but when they get there it was a tree instead.
- Have had loss of time experiences from 1 to 6 hrs.
- Aware and have seen people pretending to people who are not what they appear.
- Feel an intense calling to First Nations peoples. That goes beyond reason.
- Hyper aware that they are being watched.
- Seeing white orbs, 6ins in diameter – 3s, 6s, 9s etc.
- Have no desire for power. Find it distasteful.
- You have woken up (as an adult) so terrified, you've refused to sleep alone.(c)


Thursday, June 20, 2019

Color Coded Reverse Racism in Aboriginal Medicine?



Saved by
Susan Malueg


Just read a post were only Red people can be called "Shaman". And Yellow people are called "Sages" and Black people are "Shamans" too. And Brown people are "Guru's" but if you're White then you can't be called any of these. Especially if you live in North America. Then you can be a pastor or  a reverend or a priest but not a Shaman, but maybe a "Guru" but then most people think your some flake hippie from an ashram. 

Now Siberian Medicine People are called "Shamans" but aren't they white-ish. So is that okay? I guess cause there culture hasn't been completely wiped out by the church but if  you are "Whitey" and your aboriginal culture has been genocide totally with little or known ancestral information left then, then what?

So what if you have a gift, what if you talk to spirits, what if you where born in the wrong time in the wrong land and you happen to be "White?" What then?

Do you take on "Druidism" or "Wicca"? What if that doesn't resonant with you? What then? What if you become an accidental "Shaman." What then?

Aren't all peoples of the World indigenous, I KNOW I KNOW, you can't say this Duende, its blasphemy.

So we call all "Whitey's" with magic/medicine "Mage's"? Can we do that? Just take a name? Of course but where does it originate from? Greek and the Old French ancestral medicine when I look it up.

What do you call yourself, if you don't quite fit? Do you have to call yourself anything? Well you don't really but other people on this planet seem to need too? Does it even matter if what we call ourselves? Probably not. After all it is about your relationship with Creator and the Creator knows with out judgement, but there is alot of people out there, in our world in pain: Trauma in there early childhood and trauma closes the eyes and the heart from all cultures with all peoples. I don't blame anyone for Color Coded Racist Identification but to stop people becoming who they are through bullying?

Everyone appears to be specializing, and qualifying themselves into groups of subgroups creating exclusiveness and cleekisms making it quite impossible for anyone to learn anything on there own, because more times than not, you're not the right color, not in the right culture, not in the right club, you're to young and not ancient enough (cause we all know that wisdom is only found in the elderly...not). Does this all just becomes the land of the in titled? Which is insecurity caused by childhood trauma?

By now you probably horrified that I should be so Politically Incorrect in mentioning these issues, but when is any form of Racism okay, even Reverse Racism?

Let me tell you a story that best explains what i'm talking about:

I met a man, much older than myself and he said, "I'm looking for a Shaman?"

"Oh," I said, "What do they look like?"

"I don't know?"

"Can I help you with that?"

"Yes Please!!" He was very excited.

"Do they have feathers in there hair or there hats?"

"Yes."

"Do they wear sandals?"

"Yes."

"Do they have long grey hair?"

"Yes, yes they do."

He was getting very excited. "Do they carry a long stick or a staff?"

"Oh Yes."

"Are they very old, and hunched over?"

"Of course,yes."

"Do they wear weathered robes with a hoods?"

"Yes, yes yes!"

"Are they RED?"

"YES!" He was ecstatic at this point.

"Careful."

"Why?"

"You might just miss him," or "Her"



Being Shaman filled, has nothing to do with age, color, gender or culture, it just is inside of you. If you are looking for a Shaman don't be blinded by your brain, listen with your heart and then see with your eyes. And if you are a Shaman, not to worry you can be any color of the rainbow, male or female or neither or either or both.

What's the Universal Rule?  They're are NO Rules.

Separation is a disease caused by Trauma. Heal it and you'll heal the world.









Tuesday, June 18, 2019

The Jinn - Arabic Supernatural Spirits



By reading and examining other cultures, myths and supernatural phenomena I believe we can understand the other worlds and learn more of the other worlds. Supernatural phenomena happens all around the world, no one culture has all the answers and sometimes they might have more. Just because you're born in lets say North American does not mean to say that all your dream time/visions are from that land. We are creatures/spirits/children of the world or of the Universe. 

Duende (c)  2019


Please find below information from the internet.


Arab poet Kuthayyir ‘Azzah of the Umayyad period (661–750)—known for depicting his romantic obsession with a married woman—once described how he became a poet:
One day [...] a man on horseback came toward me until he was next to me. I looked at him. He was bizarre, a man made out of brass […]. He said to me, “Recite some poetry!” Then he recited poetry to me. I said: “Who are you?” He said, “I am your double from the jinn!”
That is how I started reciting poetry.
Jinn (often al-jinn or djinn) are shape-shifting spirits made of fire and air with origins in pre-Islamic Arabia. They are the inspiration for Aladdin’s genie, and have held space in Arab culture for almost as long as Arab culture itself. And yet, having transcended both religion and the physical world, so little is understood about the spirits. “People in the West currently are more interested to learn about jihad, the veil, the status of women in Islam, and the various fundamentalist movements,” writes Amira El-Zein in her book Islam, Arabs, and the Intelligent World of the Jinn. “They assume the jinn is a topic better left to Disney and popular culture, or at best to anthropologists.” But jinn, who are part of Islam but not worshipped in it, with their free will and obscurity, have too much to teach us about a culture, a people, and their multiple religions to be forgotten.
Neither inherently good nor bad, Jinn are amorphous entities, able to take the shape of humans and animals alike. Their role in society, too, has been malleable: Jinn have served as a source of inspiration for both the most esteemed classical Arab poets in the first millenium and Disney in 1992 (jinni—aka genie—is the singular of jinn). Both before and after Islam’s introduction—which included mentions of jinn in the Qur’an—jinn have remained an inexplicable entity. “The orthodox scholars say you can’t understand jinn,” Arabic literature researcher Suneela Mubayi tells Broadly. Still, despite their mysterious nature, there are some things historians, Islamic scholars, and believers of jinn have come to discern about the spirits.


According to El-Zein, pagan Arabs (big believers in the occult) worshipped jinn long before Islam was introduced in the seventh century, believing that the spirits were masters of certain crafts and elements of nature who had the power to turn plots of land fertile. Jinn are believed to both interact with humans in our reality and lead their own lives in a separate realm. “As spiritual entities, the jinn are considered dual dimensional, with the ability to live and operate in both manifest and invisible domains,” El-Zein writes.
"The jinn are considered dual dimensional, with the ability to live and operate in both manifest and invisible domains."
Jinn’s influence has been widespread both religiously and culturally in pre- and post-Islamic Arabia. They can talk or otherwise communicate with people, though some, like poets, are more likely than others to be hit up by a jinni. Ancient Arabs, known for their affinity for poetry, even coined the term sha’ir, meaning an Arabic literature poet who was “supernaturally inspired” by jinn, to designate poets like Kuthayyir ‘Azzah. “Poets in pre-Islamic Arabia often said they had a special jinni that was their companion,” says Mubayi. “Sometimes they would attribute their verses to the jinn."
In the early seventh century, when the Islamic Prophet Muhammed (SAWS) began spreading the word of the Qur’an, he shared multiple surahs, or verses, that mentioned jinn, including one named entirely after the spirits. Belief in jinn has been a part of the world’s second largest religion ever since. El-Zein argues that “one can’t be Muslim if he/she doesn’t have faith in [jinn’s] existence because they are mentioned in the Qur’an and the prophetic tradition.” And while, of course, not all who identify as Muslim subscribe to every word of the Qur’an literally, if El-Zein is right, it means that around 1.6 billion people in the world believe in jinn.
Jinn are considered part of al-ghaib, or the unseen. As invisible entities with abstract definitions, belief in them manifests differently between communities and individuals. For instance, while some Islamic scholars agree that jinn are capable of possession, others do not. Still, in both the past and present, stories of those possessed by jinn are not hard to find. Exorcisms, which can involve reciting the Qur’an over a person or, more rarely, physically beating the jinn out of them, are performed in some circles on those thought to be possessed by jinn (despite being condemned by mainstream Muslims). People who partake in the latter believe that the pain is not felt by the person who the jinni occupies, but the jinni themself. And while reading the Qur’an is a popular exorcism method, Jinn’s links to possession predate Islam. “The Arabs of pre-Islam invented a whole set of exorcism procedures to protect themselves from the evil actions of the jinn on their bodies and minds, such as the use of beads, incense, bones, salt, and charms written in Arabic, Hebrew, and Syriac, or the hanging around their necks of a dead animal’s teeth such as a fox or a cat to frighten the jinn, and keep them away,” writes El-Zein. In Arabic, the word majnun—meaning possessed, mad, or insane—literally means “to be possessed by a jinni.”
Despite stories of possession, Jinn are remarkable in their propensity towards neither good or evil. In Christianity, demons and evil spirits appear as entities carrying out Satan’s maleficent wishes, but neutral spirits like the jinn have no place. El-Zain believes that jinn have been robbed of the scholarly devotion they deserve, in part because they complicate the narrative of monotheism, what it means to believe in “the existence of intelligent spiritual entities without necessarily demonizing them.” Jinn—different than both angels and the devil—oscillate between good and evil, making them all the more relatable. They can fuck up, they can be pious, they can help us, or they can hurt us, as shown in folktales from One Thousand and One Nights (commonly known in English asArabian Nights). In one of these tales, “The Fisherman and the Jinni”—the inspiration for Disney’s Aladdin—a fisherman pulls a bottle out of the sea. When he opens it, a jinni appears. Angry to have been trapped in the bottle for centuries, the jinni tells the fisherman their plan to kill him. But after the two exchange stories, the jinni changes their mind, instead bestowing the fisherman with a life of good fortune.
Fluid in form and interpretation, jinn not only possess and converse with us, but they can also fall in love (or in bed) with humans. Pre-Islamic poet Ta’abbata Sharran once wrote about sleeping with a jinniyah (feminine form of jinn) in a poem called “How I Met the Ghul”:
I lay upon her through the night

that in the morning I might see what had come to me

Behold! Two eyes in a hideous head

like the head of a cat, split-tongued

Legs like a deformed fetus, the back of a dog,

clothes of haircloth or worn-out skins!

According to El-Zein, the ability or desire to have sex isn’t all jinn have in common with humans. Like us, “jinn eat, drink, sleep, procreate and die,” she says, though their mortal lives can extend for thousands of years. And yet, while we can relate to the spirits on many levels, the consensus remains that we cannot fully comprehend jinn—though we can try.

Thursday, June 13, 2019

Post Traumatic Stress Disorder - For the Pyschics/Intutives/Empaths/Clairvoyants


It starts from childhood and then compounds as you get older, with more and more traumatic experiences and then effects you through out your adult life.


Post Traumatic Stress Disorder

This is what occurs with many many Pyschics/Intutives/Empaths/Clairvoyants but most people don't think that PTSD's play a role in there neurosis because there experience has occurred in a dream or in a vision. So it wasn't real so there fore it shouldn't effect them or me in this case. 

It took me 40 years to realize that PTSD's where having a profound effect on me in this reality. I am a kind caring human being who believes in non-violence (I'm always trying to find a better way) but in the dream time....Holy Shit I am like this Ranger from the Lord of the Rings. I have weapons and I hunt people, spirits, nasty business and other world creatures. Sometimes it felt like I was right out of Stephen Kings Dark Tower Trilogy, it was mind blowing what goes on. 

I was hunted and shot at and killed many times in the dream, and it was so realistic, so clear that it would take me months even years to re cope from. I was terrified to go to sleep at night for fear that I would be hunted down and killed or I would hurt something so bad in the dream I would wake up and feel so awful that this world me had a hard hard time dealing with what had happened. Then I discover better way to deal with the nasty bits of business, which where hooded assassins, nasty aliens, hounds of Baskerville to name a few. I started an approach of non violence, which means that I would heal anyone or any thing who crossed my boundaries and this worked extremely well and stopped being terrified to sleep at night. 

It was only the nasty stuff that gave me PTSD's it was also the extreme other world phenomena that would leave me twitching and tongue tied for months. For example I once saw an angel at the foot of my bed, she was as solid as you and I and I was wide awake (not dreaming in my sleep) and she floated around my bed. I wasn't terrified but my whole paradigm (as I knew it) had been blown outta the water. I mean who can I talk to about this encounter? If I tell my friends at the time they'd think me crazy or out of my mind. Even though it was a positive event It shifted me so much in the ordinary world that I could barely cope with coping with a reality so radically different that my priors if not the whole word.

I started shifting my perspective, called myself a Dream Walker, a Spirit Walker, a Mage, a Shaman, an Mystic, a Pyschic, a Clairvoyant, an Empathic, an Intutive which created a space where I could have a point of reference to deal with this other world Phenomenons. The other thing it gave me was a place to start to look for anyone living who could help me with what was going on, unfortunately the more I looked the less I found. They're very few people in this world who are actually experiencing authentic phenomenon and know anything about what was happening in the other worlds, in fact it must be (from my experience) 1.5 % of the population of the world, maybe even less. I know you where hoping that Native Americans (North and South) know whats happening, but unfortunately I'm sadden to say that this is not true. Real Seers are from any walk of life, any age, and any color, you can't just say that you'll find it with a guru from India because the guru can be wise but not see into the other worlds. Its so rare to find a person who really really know whats going on in all the other realms and realities that co-exist together.

I'm dealing with PSTD's much better these days but still struggle when out of body visions occur and what of the past ones? They just don't go away, they are always there and are so easily triggered which leaves you devastated, confused, in tears and feeling entirely separate from the world of normal as you know it.

I'm writing this to help you where I had no help and it is my hope that bringing awareness to PTSD will help you and your well being. 

Below is the Definition of PTSD for this world but realize they will effect you from the dream because the trauma still occurs even if its supposed to be unreal, but we know that it is real at least to us (No matter how hard we try to deny It).  Duende (c) 2019




Post Traumatic Stress Disorder/Definition

A young woman gets mugged and hit over the head with a pipe. Years later, she is still afraid to go out at night by herself. She has trouble making friends and she is slow to trust people. She has gotten several warnings at work for missing days; sometimes she just can’t seem to get out of bed. A former soldier, when he finally sleeps, finds himself back on the dusty roads of Afghanistan. He awakes in a panic and struggles futilely to return to sleep. Days are hardly better. The rumble of garbage trucks shatters his nerves. Flashbacks come unexpectedly, at the whiff of certain cleaning chemicals. He is imprisoned in his own mind.
Like these two people, more than 5 million people in the United States alone suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder, or PTSD.
And like these two people, PTSD can often go hand-in-hand with traumatic brain injury, the symptoms overlapping into indistinct colors.

What exactly is post-traumatic stress disorder?

Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is an anxiety disorder that can occur after a person has been through a traumatic event. These events can include:
  • Natural disasters
  • Car crashes
  • Sexual or physical assaults
  • Terrorist attacks
  • Combat during wartime
During a traumatic event, people think that their life or the lives of others are in danger. They may feel afraid or feel that they have no control over what is happening. And if the person has a TBI, too, these feelings of lack of control and fear can balloon into confusion, challenges with memory, or intense emotion.
Combat-related PTSD has existed as long as war itself. The condition was called “soldier’s heart” in the Civil War, “shell shock” in World War I, and “Combat fatigue” in World War II. Despite the fact that the condition has been around for thousands of years, it is sometimes still difficult, or controversial, to diagnose.

Signs and symptoms

Generally, symptoms of PTSD can occur when a person re-experiences the traumatic event, tries to avoid thinking about the event, or is experiencing high levels of anxiety related to the event. Some of the most common symptoms include:
  • Having recurrent nightmares
  • Acting or feeling as though the traumatic event were happening again, sometimes called a “flashback”
  • Being physically responsive, such as experiencing a surge in your heart rate or sweating, to reminders of the traumatic event
  • Having a difficult time falling or staying asleep
  • Feeling more irritable or having outbursts of anger
  • Feeling constantly “on guard” or like danger is lurking around every corner
  • Making an effort to avoid thoughts, feelings, or conversations about the traumatic event
  • A loss of interest in important, once positive, activities
  • Experiencing difficulties having positive feelings, such as happiness or love
Not all people who are traumatized develop PTSD; but for those who do, treatment brings hope.

Getting treatment

As with depression or anxiety, getting the right treatment for PTSD depends a great deal on the individual. Sometimes counseling called cognitive-behavioral therapy is effective; medicines known as SSRIs can help, too, like Zoloft or Paxil. Sometimes a combination of both therapies proves successful. Treatment can help people with PTSD feel more in control of their emotions and result in fewer symptoms, but some symptoms like bad memories or super-sensitivity to sounds and lights may linger.
Here are some strategies to help with PTSD:
  • Find a therapist.
  • Join a support group or other support services.
  • Find a peer mentor.
  • Meditate.
Sometimes PTSD, especially in conjunction with TBI, can lead to unhealthy behavior like substance abuse or taking unnecessary risks. Sharing your experiences, feelings, and fears with others, whether with friends, family, or a professional, can lessen the burden.
Source: Brainline.org

More Resources

MoodJuice Post Traumatic Stress Disorder Self Help Guide
Learn more about Post Traumatic Stress and skills to cope with it.
PTSD Association of Canada
A non-profit organization dedicated to those who suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) those at risk for PTSD, and those who care for traumatized individuals, as well as bringing together society at large to form an ocean of compassion, awareness, knowledge and tools necessary for recovery.
National Centre for PTSD (U.S.)The National Center for PTSD is dedicated to research and education on trauma and PTSD. We work to assure that the latest research findings help those exposed to trauma.
About.com – PTSD and SuicideRead this guide which states, “connections between the experience of a traumatic event, PTSD and suicide risk have been found.” See: There is Hope: Seeking Help.
Can I go back there? Understanding post-traumatic stress disorderView this 2012 lecture by Camillo Zacchia published by the Douglas Mental Health University Institute.
Post-traumatic Stress Disorder and the Mental Health of Military Personnel and VeteransDiscover this Canadian government Parliamentary Information and Research Service paper that notes each year, over 20% of all veterans can be expected to suffer from the symptoms of operational stress injury, which will take the form of severe PTSD for half of them.
PTSD ResolutionUK outreach programme helps veterans and TA struggling to reintegrate into a normal work & family life because of military post traumatic stress suffered as a result of service in the armed forces.
Stars and Stripes: Military study shows increase in suicide attempts, PTSD symptomsArticle reveals, “a wide-ranging DoD survey revealed the rate of servicemembers attempting suicide has doubled in recent years, coinciding with an increase in those reporting symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder and those abusing prescription drugs.”

Additional Resources and Guides







Combat PTSD Blogs

Another solution to helping with PTSD is: 

Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing (EMDR) is a psychotherapy treatment that was originally designed to alleviate the distress associated with traumatic memories

What is EMDR and how does it work?
Eye movement desensitization and reprocessing (EMDR) is a fairly new, nontraditional type of psychotherapy. ... It does not rely on talk therapy or medications. Instead, EMDR uses a patient's own rapid, rhythmic eye movements. These eye movements dampen the power of emotionally charged memories of past traumatic events.