The two situations are not the same. When one is in a waking state, the conscious mind is dominant. The subconscious is subdominant and following the needs and desires of the conscious will, from moment to moment. While it does many things behind the scenes, its primary duty is to be available at all times to follow the marching orders of conscious choice. It does bring up many reminders, and will initiate many activities by sending up memories of things that were planned, for example, to help the person get back on track and meet obligations and so forth, but these are passive prompts and not actual controlling of things. They must be recognized and then acted on through choice by the person. Most times, there is a smooth harmony where the subconscious creates much of the agenda, and it is then seen, recognized for what it represents, and then embraced because it is appropriate in the moment and accepted as a good idea, and then the decision made to act on it and things go from there. But whenever the conscious mind wants to change focus, it will do so and the subconscious must follow. This is where a division of attention creates a problem, because the switching of gears causes a pause in what is going on in the moment, and then must stand aside until the new demand is met.
Those disruptions are what impair the quality of a Protocol session in progress. If the practitioner, because they are sitting with eyes closed, focusing on cultivating an alpha/theta brainwave state for maximum intuitive sensing, becomes too relaxed and falls asleep, what is happening is the conscious mind will shut down, but the subconscious can still keep going. So in that sense, the situation is not impaired with respect to accomplishing an effective Protocol session, as the subconscious will follow the prompts because it was instructed and the process initiated by the conscious mind. And the subconscious will follow the planning dutifully, and listen to the prompts and implement them, with respect to maintaining an intention for them to take place, and do the witnessing and thereby maintain the healing circuit in each step, to ensure there is time for it to be acted on.
This is not to say the ideal would be to do these sessions in one’s sleep by eliminating the conscious mind as a point of focus and potentially a distraction if it becomes impatient and has a wandering thought, which many experience at times. It is still better to do the Protocol work as intended as a meditative exercise. What we are saying is the goal should always be to remain awake, but calm and relaxed, as that is the ideal circumstance to carry out the work with greatest efficiency and effectiveness. But if the practitioner falls asleep at some point, the subconscious can carry on the session and the results will be effective because, after all, it is the divine realm implementing the Protocol requests. So as long as the subconscious is maintaining the circuit of connection between Creator and the client, the work can go forward and will not be interrupted as one might assume. It is not the ideal situation. There are some people for whom falling asleep sets free their subconscious in a way to fall prey to inner issues with lack of boundaries, and so on, when there can be an interference from outside incursions, and the agenda of the subconscious itself.
If there is a part of the mind that is in conflict with the rest of the consciousness, and there is no one setting the agenda and keeping the attention focused on the matter at hand, an individual with large inner conflict might become distracted by their own inner turmoil and then begin to have other experiences, for example, the launching of a dream state, and begin to ignore the Protocol prompts. In most cases, the session will still be finished adequately. But if the intention is completely disconnected by a wandering subconscious, then there would be a degradation of effectiveness. One can always fall back on the opportunity to have the work repeated at the next opportunity, by including that client alongside the new business at hand, as a backstop. So they will have the benefit of having an active ongoing focus for each step of the Protocol once again, including any that might have fallen short when there was a misdirection of the mind through falling asleep in the prior session working on that individual.
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