Session 28 June 2025

What was so great about the 50s? Post-War consumer Boom ? TVs? Washing machines? Cold war? 🤷 Your youth 🫨

I think in Europe the post-war consumer boom only started in the mid sixties. The loathed cold war made for stable conditions not least economically. You just had to be settled on the right side of the Iron Curtain.

The feminist agenda was slowly creeping in during the seventies. As a youth I once bought a progressively named 'unisex' shirt which turned out to sit very tightly on my shoulders while it had a strange wide cut around the belly.

It took me some time to find out that it was actually a girl's shirt.
 
We are STS. We are Lucifer, the Fallen Race. As Cassies said, we have the potential for STO.

It’s been mentioned a few times in this thread that we are STS. But there seems to be some grey area on this subject.

There is an understanding we’ve gotten from the C’s transmissions that there was in the past a push to make people more evil and selfish so that it would create human bodies or vehicles that 4D STS entities could then enter into. The fact that 4D STS had to do that shows us that the average human is not sufficiently polarised towards STS for a being who is for all intents and purposes fully polarised towards STS to inhabit them.

This shows us that it’s not black and white, and we shouldn’t think of humans as being simply STS. What we should be factoring in is the idea of FRV, and that our dial from STS to STO can be - and is - altered and adjusted through decision making.

I think the fact that this concept - written about extensively by Laura in The Wave - is so easily forgotten is because the idea that we are just STS can be conveniently used as a crutch and as an excuse for not making enough of an effort to fulfil our STO potentials.
 
What was so great about the 50s? Post-War consumer Boom ? TVs? Washing machines? Cold war? 🤷 Your youth 🫨
The general ethos, the beauty, grace and elegance of how people dressed, the cars they drove etc (beautiful dresses & gloves, suits and hats, no fish lips, cosmetic surgery, tattoos etc). Family & community (less divorce). The video to the 50s edit of this song by luc recently captures this 50s vibe:

And this:

Consumerism was starting, sure, but the products appear to have durability (see this fridge still running today from 1951 and this one from a bit later) - built-in obsolescence had not crept in yet. And the cars were gorgeous too.

Then the counterculture revolution (inspired in part by the CIA) started in the 60s and here we are. I’m not saying all things were perfect in the 50s, but it seems to me that everything devolved in terms of beauty, architecture, education and culture from the 60s onwards.

Edit: I should add that I wasn’t around then, it comes from watching old movies, listening to my parents talking about those times, their photos from back then & their social norms (they weren’t allowed to be alone & had to have a chaperone).
 
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What was so great about the 50s? Post-War consumer Boom ? TVs? Washing machines? Cold war? 🤷 Your youth 🫨

It was post WWII. My parents trusted that the government was working for the people. Everybody in the farming community worked hard, helped kids in different school and church organizations. We weren't well off farming, but we had the last good unchemicalized foods in North America. Returning to our farm by the mid 60's as a teenager, after we'd moved away, I have a stark mental snapshot of seeing for the first time neighbours out on the tractors in the fields in hazmat suits. The usual beautiful August smell in the air was gone, it was the smell of the stinking chemicals. Cleaner agriculture made it a great time as did the faith in civilization moving in a good direction. And optimism after the end of the Second World War.

Imagine what it would be like if Russia/Ukraine war ended, and Israel/Palestine war ended. We'd feel a lot better, not quite like in the 1950's, there's a whole lot of problems, and we don't have faith in government, but the end of big wars is a good time. Accomplishing peace and accord, what a dream! Even if only temporarily.
 
It was post WWII. My parents trusted that the government was working for the people. Everybody in the farming community worked hard, helped kids in different school and church organizations. We weren't well off farming, but we had the last good unchemicalized foods in North America. Returning to our farm by the mid 60's as a teenager, after we'd moved away, I have a stark mental snapshot of seeing for the first time neighbours out on the tractors in the fields in hazmat suits. The usual beautiful August smell in the air was gone, it was the smell of the stinking chemicals. Cleaner agriculture made it a great time as did the faith in civilization moving in a good direction. And optimism after the end of the Second World War.

Imagine what it would be like if Russia/Ukraine war ended, and Israel/Palestine war ended. We'd feel a lot better, not quite like in the 1950's, there's a whole lot of problems, and we don't have faith in government, but the end of big wars is a good time. Accomplishing peace and accord, what a dream! Even if only temporarily.
Must add, mom had both a B.A. and was an R.N. and at times was the family breadwinner. I grew up not aiming to get married but to train in a profession I was drawn to. So the war had opened up job oportunities while men were away, but also opened up women's minds to pursue subjects they were really interested in. I was named after an M.D. and a Geologist mom admired.
 

The problem between the sexes is a topic I’ve been kicking around and chewing on quite a bit recently. I’m intrigued that it came up in this session, though I know it has come up before.

I have a few observations to offer concerning @Serendipity ’s posts and the many replies.

It occurs to me that the sacred cows run deep throughout: the patriarchal defense, the feminist threads, the polite society angles. Let’s have a look at the extremes that humans swing between. And let’s think about, however you like, personal responsibility, accountability, and karmic cycles.

it seems that at a point in time, women may have systematically killed the majority of men within their civilization. And we are considering that maybe this is why psychopathic men want women in burkas now.

I kid. But so, we have clearly not mastered the balance on a grand scale.

I would like to sincerely lay out some of my personal realizations that have only come about because I am a woman who trusted the process of hearing out an angry man (who I love and respect and who is not a psychopath), even when he made loud scary noises and said mean things to me. This was not a quick or easy venture for me.

My husband and I went through some rough years. It is a very common experience for women with very young children to feel overwhelmed and alone and to begin to lash out a bit more.
I had of course felt that emotional space many times before I had our daughter, but the mother experience really layers it on thick at times.

I would usually pick these fights by becoming instantly indignant whenever my husband said something that sounded insensitive or dismissive. Some examples might be
“what’s the big deal f I put a dirty dish in the sink? It takes 5 seconds to move it to the dishwasher.”
Or
“I was at work all day. I need some down time before I play with the kiddo.”
Or
“Why are you talking about your male coworker so much?”
Or
“Trans women shouldn’t use women’s restrooms because that could be dangerous.”
(I know. That’s a weird thing, but it sticks out as evoking the same rage crying as the others.)

Let me be clear, both of us had ugly things to say to each other. He got very loud a number of times (in truth so did I, but I felt like HE was inappropriately loud sometimes.)

One time he opened the door of our moving car and just walked into a random neighborhood during one of these arguments. I couldn’t understand later when he told me he did it to get away from me.

In retrospect, that should have been a red flag to me in a different way than it was. I was quick to drop this in the bucket of “his unstable behavior” and get more indignant and wary about having further discussion on the matter. I didn’t give a thought to what it might say about my own at the time.

So, while I was busy internalizing the oppression of housework and diaper changes and breast feeding, I was growing more dismissive of his perspective on any aspect of our shared life, because I believed we didn’t share much of it anymore. And since the arguments were not going away, I began avoiding confrontation or conversation all the more.

Keep in mind, I knew I loved him. And I knew he loved me. That made it all the more troublesome. Because how could we be so good together and still not work?

On down the road, we had a pretty blowout argument - at this point about some topic that just rubbed my basic feminist tendencies a very wrong way, and I still remember the look on his face during the escalation.
I was insisting for the umpteenth time that I didn’t want to fight, but that I just couldn’t make sense of his perspective (probably yelling and waving my arms the whole time.)
His face was embodied desperation: wide eyed, loud voice, but helpless. Non-threatening. Saying the same words as me but somehow on the wrong side still. Begging me to not get into this again.

Here I am curious - men of the forum, have you ever found yourself in a state like that while arguing with a woman you care about? Unheard, desperate to find common ground, unable to find firm footing anywhere in the conversation?

At that moment I abandoned his company. I grabbed a notebook and a pen and I wrote the words that came out of his mouth that set me off. And I tried to figure out how these words had so much sway over me. I know I can express myself better in writing than I can when in a heated conversation, so it began as a documentation of my relationship with offensive remarks as a woman, and I went all the way back to toddlerhood.
I intended for him to read it and to finally see from my perspective. Of course, once I was done writing it, I realized what my issue was and that it actually had very little to do with him.

That is where the healing began. But the best part came after some weeks, once I had really had time to contemplate the far-reaching consequences of my response to triggers like this, and why those triggers existed. I laid out to my husband what I had learned about myself and my behavior, and I told him I was so sorry that I tried for so long to lay the blame on him. That I had absolutely stopped listening to him a long time ago, and that I had stunted my own progress, because I felt a certain way that I couldn’t explain when he talked or moved a certain way.

If it sounds like nonsense, that’s because it was!

I can expand on what obstacles I perceived and what he did, and I can extrapolate my story onto most (if not all) of my female friends and family, all of whom I love and respect. I have a list of anecdotes and a text exchange that took place while I read this thread, if anyone needs further example of the everyday horrors.

In an effort to hold interest, I will try to keep this brief.

What I have learned about myself, and therefore possibly women at large is the following:

We are more open to our subconscious when perceiving reality. This is why we are creative, why we thrive with symbolism, why we have been witches and magic and psychic throughout time. It is why we “feel” more. It is why we remember more about people. It is why we are good with children and elderly and people who are hurting.

It could also be that this more open subconscious allows women to learn to behave in ways that are socially acceptable while bypassing important lessons in personal development. This is just an idea I had - I could be off base. But I know that a big part of my experience as a western liberal independent and capable woman (well, girl at the time) was disassociating during conflict because I had a rich inner world to travel through, full of memories and media and all the rest telling me that I was actually awesome and the world couldn’t change who I was.
At any point in time, I could find sympathy from other women in my life - fellow students, friends, my mother, my boss, the clerk at the store- who would assure me that I could do better than whatever jerk I was dating at the time who made me feel such a way. I never had to own up to a damned thing. I still don’t, as far as they are concerned.

Women of the forum coming from a fairly stable childhood - is this something you have experienced? Or was I just especially coddled?

So, to conclude this invitation to deeper exploration of the problem with men and women, especially now, I would like to offer my suspicions that perhaps women don’t realize how much time we spend in feelings and memories and fears and hopes instead of looking at reality, especially who we are and what we do in it.

My three point plan for beginning the work:

1. Make a conscious effort to understand the plight of men, historically and currently, in the same way we do every other sun-sect of humanity. Do it without blaming the dude immediately. This is important because it is not the default right now. We have to try a new approach, and we have to do it without assuming it leads to burkas right away.

2. As women, we need to do brutal self analysis on our actions and words in the world. Set aside women’s history for a moment. Only consider your own. If you have regular contact with modern normie culture, observe other women’s actions and attitudes regarding the men in their life. No judgement, no feelings, no flying off into times when you felt the same. Just observe and listen. See how often you can find a familiar pattern. Consider how often these patterns may worsen the problem:
-avoidant behavior
-make nice and or “kill with kindness”
-victim mentality/crying instead of talking
-Disney princess program (rebel against the king/father/tradition and be the hero)
-woman warrior mentality (if I feel like he thinks I’m weak then I will have to fight)
- if I feel like it’s happening, then it’s reality
-all men are the same (or any variation thereof)

3. Take ownership for all of those patterns that you have identified and apologize to those you’ve wronged. No half-apologies, where you are sorry you made someone feel bad. Apologize for lying, for shutting down, for dismissing, for cold shoulder treatment.
Apologize for any time you treated a man like he was “just like the rest of them,” or in any way inferior for not understanding you in the moment, because you may not have been explaining yourself very well.

Obviously none of this is really gender-specific. This is pretty basic work. But do it through the lens that doesn’t welcome it. Make the devil meditate.

I don’t even want to share all of this that I have written. I don’t expect a warm welcome. When I talk about this stuff with the women in my life who ask for advice, I usually get the silent treatment for awhile, followed by a quick change of subject.

But there it is, from one chick to anyone who will make it this far.
 
I can expand on what obstacles I perceived and what he did, and I can extrapolate my story onto most (if not all) of my female friends and family, all of whom I love and respect. I have a list of anecdotes and a text exchange that took place while I read this thread, if anyone needs further example of the everyday horrors.

I feel curiosity. Would you be willing to share and tell us more?

Requesting that, I'm aware of how vulnerable it may seem to do so.

I like your 3-step-plan. It shows accountability and seems like a good way to repair.

And I so recognise the animosity you receive from the women in your life asking for advice. I'm so sorry to hear that.
 
I feel curiosity. Would you be willing to share and tell us more?

Requesting that, I'm aware of how vulnerable it may seem to do so.

I like your 3-step-plan. It shows accountability and seems like a good way to repair.

And I so recognise the animosity you receive from the women in your life asking for advice. I'm so sorry to hear that.


I will explain the very timely texts from one of my good friends. She is a single mom, twice divorced. Her most recent ex husband is a long time friend of ours who treated her well, and they are still on very good terms. She only recently got her own bank account - they had still been sharing one despite the divorce and separate living situations.

Their marriage ended after their monogamy turned into an open relationship. I won’t ask the guy about this stuff because it doesn’t seem like my place. But I have asked her several times who initiated the open relationship and she didn’t ever open up to me about it. I only heard about her extra relationships for a time before they separated fully.

She is a very social person with (in my opinion) an unhealthy fixation with “connection.” She chases it like a drug while not fully grasping what it might entail. But she is beautiful, and she is generous with her time and care and affection to everyone she befriends.

As you may infer, she has had a good number of relationships since her last divorce. I don’t even try to keep track of all of the names. And each time, she tells me the same speech about how “this guy is different, just so interesting and relaxing to be around, and has a very unique set of interests and a unique sense of humor.”
The dudes are usually into the same set of interests. She goes for the outdoorsy types. Also, most of these relationships arose from her using bumble or Facebook dating apps.

So, this evening she texted me that she got a text from a more recent ex. She dated him two or three times, she felt he was getting too invested too quickly, and she broke it off. Later she did a background check and found the guy had a personal protection order filed against him by a woman in his past (this is a common theme as well.)

So, she tells me that this guy has contacted her. Then she tells me that her new guy is at her house right now, and she’s going to inform him of scary ex stalking her.

Her new guy is traditional, just breaking away from the church he grew up in, and is divorced. His wife cheated on him for seven years, but he only suspected it for the last 3.

My friend thought that was a red flag, because if his ex was cheating on him for that long he must have done something wrong. (!!!)

I said she should consider carefully. Maybe she just wants to feel more secure, knowing that someone else is aware that there might be danger. Then again, maybe she is throwing her veil into the ring of fire and asking this new guy to take action. I don’t know what her angle is and I don’t know how new guy might respond.

She tells me he took it well and thanked her for telling him, and also that he is now doing all of her yard work that she’s been neglecting. But she’s found herself annoyed with new guy twice already tonight.

Then she tells me that he’s out getting takeout for their dinner, so she has time to list the annoyances. For one, he’s too chipper and she feels that even his jokes are a little forced. Also, when he was doing the yard work, she said she was going to open a gate. He asked if the gate was locked. She responded yes, that’s why I’m opening it. And she is irritated that she had to explain that to him.

So in one evening she has basically taken a guy she’s been seeing for a couple of weeks, asked him to be her body guard, let him do work outside on her property without helping him, and sent him off to get their food so she could complain about being forced to communicate.

I told her she had the option to pull her own weeds, if it’s so exhausting to deal with him.

And he does all of that with no promise of anything, unaware that in her head, he is guilty for his broken marriage because he made his wife cheat.

And again I stress, my friend is not an overtly malicious person. It’s so hard to hold all of that together.

The important point I feel I need to make about my own relationship story - what shocked me about my husbands reaction to my apology was, he said “no one ever apologizes. That was so cool of you.”
And immediately he began apologizing for every ugly thing he had said to me. It was like my offering made all the world good and wonderful again. We have had absolutely no issues since, and we have the most honest communication I have ever experienced with each other.

And as many times as I have tried, my friend just doesn’t understand what that level of connection requires.

I could go on, and maybe I will again tomorrow. It is late, so I’ve got to go to sleep.

Thank you so much for your curiosity, Noctu. And don’t worry about me - I have made my peace with the animosity. I just wish it didn’t have to be this way for so many people.
 
She is a very social person with (in my opinion) an unhealthy fixation with “connection.” She chases it like a drug while not fully grasping what it might entail. But she is beautiful, and she is generous with her time and care and affection to everyone she befriends.
Could your friend "fall" into the category of narcissistic personality disorder?
Just something to consider. It's not a diagnosis.
 
Here I am curious - men of the forum, have you ever found yourself in a state like that while arguing with a woman you care about? Unheard, desperate to find common ground, unable to find firm footing anywhere in the conversation?
From my own experience, I do argue periodically with my partner where it is hard / impossible to not come across as the problem. The "arguments" I'd consider to be normal, and so I rarely blow them out of proportion. I take a different route though, in that I rarely shout but instead just embrace silence.

In one shape or another, the arguments usually revolve around perceived oppression and the suffering she experiences from this - again, this is normal. Usually life, work, me or whatever has done something that is oppressive - I have not done the dishes for example, or work is stressful, or the weather is always grey etc. All normal stuff - there is the eternal fight to be free from oppression, an aspiration if you will.

The one fundamental difference I have with my partner with respect to how we see the world is that I believe we must suffer, there is no escape. If the world out there isn't making you suffer in some way, your own mind will make you suffer. I believe that the key power we have as individuals is the ability to influence our suffering, to choose what we suffer rather than to escape suffering all together.

So my partner suffers because she can't escape suffering, but she see's an image in front of her regarding how she can escape, and the trick is to do certain things to make that image a reality, whilst from my point of view, I'm actually okay because I am at the stage where I have worked to experience the suffering that works for me. Of course there are always things that come unexpectedly to make you suffer, but in the main, I'm content with my lot of suffering. In fact, I embrace it because it works for me.

My partner fundamentally does think an individual can escape suffering and this is where we see things different, and can't have common ground.

I don't want it to come across like I know something my partner does not, or she's unnecessarily argumentative. She's actually not argumentative. In my view, she is in a reality trap she doesn't quite fathom the depths of, that we humans must suffer because a) it's the main way we evolve our spirit and b) we are not at the apex, in fact, something feeds on us.

Despite this divide in view, I'd say the thing that holds a relationship together is the deep realisation that you do have a partnership. If you will, that's the sun in the center of your solar system that you both orbit.

Looking into the mirror, is some of the stuff she gets annoyed about genuinely true... Yup, 100%. But is it the end of the world bad? Nope ! 🫣

Anyways, it's all interesting this male v female stuff. One thing I learnt from my crazy boss, a man I chose to suffer, is that you know what, you don't need perfect harmony in everything, in fact, you can make peace with a bit of discomfort and tension, assuming it's not out of control and pathological. I'm not saying this regarding my relationship to my partner, I'm saying it with regard my relationship to life.
 
Edit: I should add that I wasn’t around then, it comes from watching old movies, listening to my parents talking about those times, their photos from back then & their social norms (they weren’t allowed to be alone & had to have a chaperone).
Spoken like someone who experienced the 50s 🤔.

Haha, just joking. Uhm, maybe the 50s were like you say, or like @axj says. It's hard to know. 🤷

What I do know is that outward appearances are sometimes a poor reflection of internal realities i.e. the reality people felt. In the main, I am inclined to think that internal realities have remained persistent as the man/woman in the 50s wasn't necessarily more evolved, spiritually or whathaveyou compared to the man/woman before them, or those of us that have come after. I imagine women felt terrorised by their husbands, perhaps they felt they didn't need a man, and I imagine men still abused alcohol, or ignored their wives or thought they knew it all whilst knowing very little. 🤷

What I am trying to say is that , were the 50s better than today? Given the choice, would you have the prime of your life in the 50s, or today, this time we occupy? Personally, I'd choose today but that's likely because this is what I know viscerally whereas some bygone era is more an idealistic impression in my mind.
 
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Could your friend "fall" into the category of narcissistic personality disorder?
Just something to consider. It's not a diagnosis.

She might be anxiously attached. This particuliar behaviour is done out of fear of abandonment according to me. Narcissists can act out of the same fear.

However, according to the DSM-5, Narcissistic Personality Disorder (NPD) is characterized by a pervasive pattern of grandiosity, a need for admiration, and a lack of empathy, beginning by early adulthood and present in various contexts. Individuals with NPD exhibit at least five out of nine listed traits.

These traits are:

• Grandiose sense of self-importance: Exaggerating achievements and talents, expecting to be recognized as superior without commensurate achievements.


• Preoccupation with fantasies of unlimited success, power, brilliance, beauty, or ideal love: Constantly dwelling on idealized versions of themselves and their lives.

• Belief that they are special and unique and can only be understood by, or should associate with, other special or high-status people or institutions: Feeling entitled to associate only with people they deem to be of high status.

• Need for excessive admiration: Requiring constant praise and attention from others.

• Sense of entitlement: Expecting favorable treatment and compliance with their wishes.

• Interpersonally exploitative behavior: Taking advantage of others to achieve their own goals.

• Lack of empathy: Inability or unwillingness to recognize or identify with the feelings and needs of others.

• Envy of others or belief that others are envious of them: Feeling envious of others' successes or believing others are envious of them.

• Arrogant, haughty behaviors or attitudes: Behaving in a superior and condescending manner.
 
And he does all of that with no promise of anything, unaware that in her head, he is guilty for his broken marriage because he made his wife cheat.

And again I stress, my friend is not an overtly malicious person. It’s so hard to hold all of that together.

She might not be malicious consciously, but she does seem like a spoiled type of a woman that no self respecting strong man would entertain. The main issue is, there is a lot of weak men, men who weren't taught to self respect and what their value is. And mix those men with those types of spoiled women and you get abuse against men. And that leads to fall of marriages, families and societies.

Today we need masculinism more than feminism. Make men strong (self love and light/knowledge is the real power) again by educating them about male and female natures. And there are communities with that goal (of making men stronger and smarter about life) starting to appear as a response to purposeful taking of power from and weakening of men done by feminism and similar 'liberal' ideologies.

We need it to prevent Shiva the destroyer from manifesting (who might have been a personification of the destruction/disasters that happened during times when 'negative feminine side' got 'out of control' and men were too weak to bring the order/'logos' back in. So chaos prevailed. But that's just idea. 🤷🏻
 
And yes it is personal in a way that I personally experienced in my personal life and through lives of people around me, the negative consequences of a weak man (too little power) and a weak woman (too much power too little responsibility) combination.

West needs MMGA make men great again. And that would naturally lead to MWGA. OSIT 💜
 
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