DWQA QuestionsCategory: Karma“I was young and a bit foolish, and enamored of a ‘famous hockey player’ (even though I really knew nothing about him or hockey). I did get much more interested and even watched him and his team play against the Blackhawks in Chicago a couple times. To make a long story short, he scored 50 goals, 3 years in a row (and although he had been a decent player, this brought him to ‘superstar’ status). After those 3 years, I got kind of fed up at not being ‘acknowledged’ and did a “take it back” ritual: he not only got injured, his team went on the longest losing streak in the team’s history. This is also in line with the channeling. I’m now kind of “retired” from Wicca, and remember this tale of the hockey players so your show was quite interesting. I am much wiser now, and more in Divine Alignment, and so appreciative of what you (and the whole team) are doing in bringing your message and the Lightworker Healing Protocol to a wide audience. As it’s said in Wicca … Merry Meet and Merry Part, and Merry Meet Again.” Will her “take back” ceremony have karmic consequences?
Nicola Staff asked 4 years ago
Those following Wicca will be exposed to dark practices as well. This is easy to assess because anything done to cause harm, to lower one person compared to another, is nondivine and will not be supported by the divine, but that is not to say the practitioner will be ineffectual in causing harm. Human consciousness has power and it can be wielded to produce a negative outcome. Moreover, the sending of negative intentions will be seen by spirit meddlers and can be used as a conveyance, as a carrier wave to penetrate the target recipient and cause an end result of spirit possession with a concomitant worsening of things for that target individual. In this way, the Wiccan strategy and goal of causing mischief can easily happen, but this is a human choice and a human consequence, and always is met with a karmic backlash because it is causing an imbalance to happen.