DWQA Questions › Tag: love relationshipsFilter:AllOpenResolvedClosedUnansweredSort byViewsAnswersVotesShe asks: “When I was very little, I used to think how great it would be if I had, I don’t know, intuitive knowings, see things others can’t, know things others don’t, understand the nature of this world in a way that most don’t take the time to think about. I thought those things would be cool. Turns out they’re not. Turns out they’re horrible. Turns out it makes for a terrible time trying to blend in with those around me. I don’t mean to sound conceited. I’m not saying I’m all that, I’m not, but I’m not the same either. I’m different, and I hate that because It’s getting harder and harder to fake it and pretend I don’t notice what I noticed, and pretend that I’m not who I am, if that even makes sense. I don’t even know how to “turn it off.” I am feeling like such a weirdo. Will I ever fit in anywhere? I have the best intentions. I don’t have hidden agendas. I really want everybody to make it and I’m genuinely happy when good things happen to other people. Why does it have to be so hard?” What can we tell her?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Extraterrestrial Mind Control304 views0 answers0 votesDr. Viktor Frankl wrote that in his opinion, it was possible to “lie with the truth.” He cited as an example a man who came to him plagued with guilt about an illicit affair he had some 20 years earlier. His wife never learned of it and was still ignorant of it when he sought Frankl’s advice. Dr. Frankl implored him NOT to tell her. His reason for doing so was because he believed that the man truly loved his wife and had no desire to traumatize her. Based on what he knew of the man’s wife, he was convinced that there was little to no chance of the wife receiving the news without drawing the false conclusion that he did not love her, and consequently would not be able to forgive him. So he attempted to coach the man, that telling her the truth, would be akin to lying, for it would encourage her to believe a lie—that her husband did not ever love her. The man ignored Frankl’s advice, and the result was an ugly divorce with both parties deeply emotionally traumatized. Was Frankl right? What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Divine Guidance292 views0 answers0 votesIs my client’s sister now safely in the light after my doing a Spirit Rescue with the Lightworker Healing Protocol? Does she have any message for her brother?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Transition (Crossing Over)268 views0 answers0 votesWhat is the difference between twin souls and twin flames?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Divine Guidance301 views0 answers0 votesDr. Milton Erickson had a patient who became inexplicably hostile toward her best friend and sought his assistance in trying to discover why. During the combined psychoanalytic and hypnotic investigation, she also revealed hostility toward her father. It turned out that her father and best friend were having an affair, and were both shocked that their efforts at keeping it secret met such profound failure. Did this patient either witness something directly that she repressed away from her conscious awareness, or was she in fact unconsciously, intuitively, aware of both her best friend’s and father’s betrayal of her mother, and her anger and hostility were manifestations of that subconscious intuitive awareness? What does this tell us about trying to get away with something as hurtful as adultery, or any clandestine potentially hurtful behavior?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Non-Local Consciousness221 views0 answers0 votesCan Creator share with us how Empowered Prayer and the Lightworker Healing Protocol are the best means for responding to negative feelings and forebodings?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Non-Local Consciousness333 views0 answers0 votesWhat is the reason my new client is having trouble with her love life, with many short-term partners who move on, and come back expressing interest only after they have already committed to someone else, and she is alone and childless at 48 years of age?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Karma215 views0 answers0 votesArthur Guirdham was an English physician and psychiatrist who researched and wrote about past life memories and reincarnation. In the course of his investigations, he became acquainted with a “Mrs. Smith” who, as a twelve-year-old girl, had written down copious memories of a past life as a young Cathar girl who had fallen in love and left home with a much older Cathar cleric named “Roger.” Mrs. Smith identified the author, Arthur Guirdham, as Roger, her lover and mentor, from that past life she remembered so well. Was there a divine mission involved for both of them in collaborating to bring this compelling and extremely detailed medieval story of love and tragedy, as well as the reality of reincarnation, to modern humanity’s attention?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Reincarnation249 views0 answers0 votesUnlike other cases of childhood reincarnation memories, Mrs. Smith was twelve and thirteen when she received an intensive uprush of memories via dreams and visions that was extraordinary in its vividness and detail. So much so in fact, that often her notes were written in Medieval French in the distinct dialect of the southern region of France at the time of the Crusades. This was the period when Pope Innocent III called for the conversion or destruction of the Cathar heretics whose stronghold was Southern France. Can Creator share with us what precipitated this “uprush of memory” when Mrs. Smith was a young teenager?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Reincarnation260 views0 answers0 votesMrs. Smith revealed that the cause of her death in that life was “immolation,” or death by burning. She was burned at the stake along with many others at the time for the crime of heresy against the Catholic Church. She described the pain as “maddening” but lasting only a few minutes. To her surprise at the time, and to most people almost certainly, she described becoming cold and likened her demise to freezing to death. Death by fire is widely regarded as one of the worst deaths one could ever experience. What is Creator’s perspective, and how much of a problem does a past life death by fire present for one in a later incarnation?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Reincarnation276 views0 answers0 votesMrs. Smith in a letter to the author wrote, “Sometimes you make me very cross. Is it really so difficult for you to understand me? I have been trying to cope with this business for twenty years. I have never been able to get rid of it and you’d be surprised at the measures I’ve taken … I have never tried to force recollections … On the contrary, if ever I have forced myself to do anything it has been to try to forget, and the forcing did no good because I couldn’t forget.” Did the means of her death contribute to her helplessness in suppressing these memories? What was the number one reason that she was forced to live through this life—twice? Was this a form of helpless Post Traumatic Stress Disorder stemming directly from that time period?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Reincarnation246 views0 answers0 votesMrs. Smith wrote, “…It is a great pity that the great and organized religious bodies fail to recognize the simplicity of Christ. His true philosophy of life has been lost to them and how can it be otherwise when he has been imprisoned in the church? I am not trying to belittle the good of the church, which is a necessary place of comfort for some, but an enlightened preacher once wrote that ‘the great use of the church is to enable people to do without it.'” What is Creator’s perspective?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Reincarnation258 views0 answers0 votesArthur Guirdham wrote, “She (Mrs. Smith) said, that if she started remembering too much she ran a high temperature and developed a severe headache. I do not know about the high temperature but the headache is interesting and perfectly in order. A proportion of cases of migraine are attributable to psychic factors.” What can Creator tell us about this?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Reincarnation232 views0 answers0 votesArthur Guirdham wrote, “Certainly Catharism must have largely spread by example and emanation, but this is not really the whole story. How did it come that a creed that which seems, to many modern students, to have been austere and pessimistic spread with such rapidity? … One factor is, I think, consistently overlooked. In the Middle Ages, people were dominated by the fear of Hell. Catharism to some extent dissipated this fear … If this world is the worst Hell one has to put up with, it must have been, even at its lowest, vastly preferable to perpetual damnation of the Orthodox Christians of the epoch.” What can Creator tell us about the rapid spread and popularity of Catharism?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Reincarnation233 views0 answers0 votesArthur Guirdham wrote, “The inquisitors regarded the purity of the Parfaits (Cathar priests) as something to be used against them, believing that, because it was associated with heresy, it must necessarily be classified with hypocrisy. Evidence for the corruption of the Roman Church at the time is adequately provided by Pope Innocent III, who instigated the Great Crusade against the Albigensians but had no illusions about the failure of his own priests.” Then there is the irony of a pope with the name “Innocent” single-handedly being directly responsible for more overt and severe human suffering than arguably any other pope in the history of the Catholic Church—as evidenced by the unhealed trauma of Mrs. Smith eight centuries later. What can Creator tell us about the irony of his chosen name and the sincerity of his belief that God was truly on his side in announcing his horrific edict?ClosedNicola asked 3 years ago • Reincarnation232 views0 answers0 votes