DWQA Questions › Tag: divine loveFilter:AllOpenResolvedClosedUnansweredSort byViewsAnswersVotesMost of the questions for today’s show are derived from the book, The Psychopath Code: Cracking the Predators that Stalk Us, by a late open-source software creator, Pieter Hintjens. Hintjens created hundreds of volunteer project teams, and found almost all of them to be magnets for “bad actors.” This proved to be such a problem that he devoted most of his final years to analyzing and ultimately, writing about it. Hintjens writes: “There are some scary people around. People who take what they want, using their charm and wits. Con artists. Professional liars. They take from friends, colleagues, family, and strangers alike. They never apologize or feel remorse towards the people they hurt. They often have criminal careers. We call them by many names. Narcissist. Anti-social. Sociopath. CEO. And more and more, we call them Psychopath.” Can Creator share with us the divine perspective of these scary people around us?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs248 views0 answers0 votesHintjens posits the idea that society has developed ‘psychopath detectors.’ One of the principal ones is humor. Hintjens writes that we instinctually trust people who make us laugh. “It’s not enough to just laugh, either. Both parties must laugh at the right moment, not too soon, not too late. The laugh must last long enough. It must not be too loud, nor too soft. A good joke makes both the teller and the listener happy. A failed joke disturbs and irritates us.” He further writes, “What we have evolved with humor is an empathy detector. If the listener has no empathy, they are baffled. A psychopath cannot laugh ‘right.’ He does not laugh, or he laughs too much, or too long. We are more wary of people who laugh too much, than of those who don’t laugh at all. What is he hiding, we wonder?” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs227 views0 answers0 votesHintjens writes about art: “Art serves no functional purpose except to stir emotions in the viewer.” He further writes, “Psychopaths have many curious traits. One is their lack of interest in creative acts. They do not draw, paint, sculpt, or carve. They do not take photographs, except of themselves and their possessions. They do not cook for pleasure, invent recipes, nor make their own bread as a hobby. They do not create music, though they can be excellent performers of others’ work. This lack of creative drive is a curious thing when you first see it. It matches their generally empty sense of humor. Their hobbies are travel, shopping, eating out, meeting new people. This is consumption, not creation.” Hintjens says, “I’m certain creativity is another secret language of empathy.” And as such, another effective psychopath detector. What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs230 views0 answers0 votesHintjens suggests that we have an incomplete view of the psychopath. The general assumption is that they are broken people, but he suggests that they are in fact human predators. “Psychopaths hunt other humans. They attack and capture them. They feed on their time, resources, power, and energy. They dispose of the remains. And they move on. Every relationship between a social human and a psychopath follows the same pattern. There seem to be no exceptions, no nice psychopaths. To be a psychopath is to be a predator.” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs207 views0 answers0 votesHintjens wrote that arranged marriages evolved from the need to safeguard against predators entering the family. He writes, “The rate of arranged marriages will correlate with social status of the pair. The higher their status, the less free choice in marriage. This seems true in all societies. Between societies, the weaker the state, the higher will be the rate of arranged marriages. This is because weak states cannot protect a family’s wealth from predators.” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs219 views0 answers0 votesHintjens speculates that psychopaths have only one true fear, and that is of being unmasked and exposed. He suggests this is why they can never accept responsibility. “If a psychopath gets caught, he always denies the facts, and blames someone else. It may be the victim. It may be other bystanders. He denies responsibility even when confronted with material evidence. There will be no remorse, no attempts to make it right, no apologies.” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs223 views0 answers0 votesHintjens suggests that “The psychopath lies to confuse, manipulate, and hide. She does not seek truth, only control. Her mind constructs magical theories in a heartbeat. She describes them with complete sincerity.” What is Creator’s perspective on the psychopath’s liberal use of lies?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs226 views0 answers0 votesHintjens speculates that psychopathy is not a disorder, but a maladaptation. No one becomes a psychopath just through trauma, which is the idea the psychopath is simply a broken person. Rather, it is always about survival. Hintjens doesn’t think you can be a little bit psychopathic. Whether you play the social game, or the cheater game, you must play to win. The psychopath is competing with other psychopaths, and with their victims. Is psychopathy a predatory skill set? And does this explain why psychopaths have no genuinely close and intimate social and personal relationships? What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs221 views0 answers0 votesIs the core belief of the psychopath that they are on their own, and that everyone is either predator or prey, and it’s safer or better to be a predator? We know that beliefs are considered a free will choice. How can prayer work and the Lightworker Healing Protocol, along with Deep Subconscious Channeling and Holographic Memory Resolution be used as tools to help free the psychopath from their maladaptive multi-incarnation history and outlook, and provide them with a true path back to divine alignment?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Limiting Beliefs238 views0 answers0 votesWill the following introduction to using the Creator’s Recommended Prayers be acceptable and effective: “Source Creator, apply the following prayers each and every day, to myself, my loved ones, and every being everywhere, in all time domains, in increments proportional to my spiritual reach, so no one is underserved and all are covered, eventually. Pool the intentions of all who use these prayers and apply them to augment the power of each incremental prayer launched by each individual?”ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Prayer294 views0 answers0 votesI was outside on my patio, working on an upcoming radio show about the anatomy of prayer, and feeling quite annoyed at a neighbor playing pop music with a shrieking, repetitive vocal, as has happened before. They never play anything I like. After a brief silence, I heard Carole King’s recording of “You’ve Got a Friend” which was made almost 50 years ago. While I loved that recording at the time, it seemed like a quite improbable promise—having a friend who might be far away, but who would drop everything and come to your side whenever you called their name, “winter, spring, summer or fall, all you’ve gotta do is call, and I’ll be there, yes I will, you’ve got a friend.” I was now deeply moved as it made me think about Creator loving and cherishing all of us, and always being available. Was this circumstance a message from you?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Divinely Inspired Messengers271 views0 answers0 votesThe song by Carole King, titled “You’ve Got a Friend,” seems almost like a hymn promising divine caring and assistance. Was she inspired by you to write it?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Divinely Inspired Messengers254 views0 answers0 votesA viewer asks: “I’ve had quite a few Deep Subconscious Channeling-Trauma Resolution sessions and after re-listening to the audio, a question for Creator popped into my mind. This isn’t a question I need, or necessarily want, to be answered but I thought it might help others understand how healing works. Here’s the backstory: When I was younger, I’d imagine around 4 or 5 years old, I was diagnosed with an illness called Perthes disease, which basically meant my right hip joint formed badly (according to the Internet, it dies, gets absorbed into the bloodstream and then regrows, but I don’t know). I was supposed to be operated on and I even went under anesthetic, but when I woke up, (wanting to see the cool scar as a 5 or 6-year-old), I was told I didn’t need an operation and they just gave me an injection. Since then, everything has been fine. In the first DSC/HMR session I had, it was about the same age and same area of the body. The same area of the body came up later on, in a different session, too. I’d like to ask Creator: ‘Did the DSC/HMR work done recently, in 2021, help to heal an issue that I had in the early 1990s? If so, could Creator elaborate how it was a certainty that I would engage in DSC/HMR to heal this?'”ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Subconscious Channeling307 views0 answers0 votesA viewer asks: “Can Creator comment on the difference between formalized prayer requests and the focused and specific stream of questions, thoughts, requests, and prayers sent to Creator as our Partner, being an extension of Creator, throughout the day, as part of our ongoing internal dialogue with Creator? Other than a quiet focus and specificity, if we are aware of our connection to Creator as an integral and inalienable part of our experience here on Earth, why is one considered better or stronger than the other? I’m guessing Focus and Specificity are the point here. Is that correct?”ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Prayer266 views0 answers0 votesShe continues: “Isn’t focused and aware inner dialogue with Creator considered a form of prayer? If not, why not?”ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Prayer277 views0 answers0 votes