Session 21 September 2024

Session Date: September 21st 2024

Laura and Andromeda at the board

Niall, Joe, Gaby, Ark, PoB, Chu, Scottie, Princess Leia, Bella, Falkor, The Lunar Module

FOTCM Members attending via Zoom:

3DStudent, A Jay, Adobe US, Aeneas, Aiming, Alana, Alejo, Aliana, Altair, anartist, AndrewMn, Approaching Infinity, Aya, Bluefyre, bobo08, brandon, Breton, cassandra, Cosmos, Deliverance, Dugdeep, Eboard10, Ellipse, fabric, Finduilas495, France, Gawan, Glenn, Gottathink, goyacobol, Harmony99, Herondancer, Hesper, Hesperides, Honzap, iamthatis, IrjO, iscreamsandwish, Jacques, JeanneT, JEEP, Jefferson, Jenn, Joan, Jono, Josi, Keyhole, KJN, Korzik18, Laurentien2, Laurs, Learner, Lilou, loreta, LQB, Luis Miguel, marek760, Mari, Mark, Mark7, Martina, Mike, Mikkael, Mililea, mkrnhr, Mrs. Peel, Natus Videre, Navigator, Nicholas, Nienna, Ollie, Oxajil, Pecha, PopHistorian, Redfox, Redrock12, Regulattor, Ryan, Ryu, Saman, seek10, Stoneboss, sToRmR1dR, Thorbjorn, Timótheos, Tristan, Turgon, Voyageur, whitecoast, Windmill knight, Yas, Ysus

Q: (L) [Looking at list of questions from forum] So I went through some of these questions, or actually I went through ALL of these questions, and... I have to tell you... Did you search the sessions, Niall, for anything about Newgrange?

(Niall) Yeah.

(L) Yeah. And was there anything that was even remotely close?

(Niall) Stonehenge, but that's a different island.

(L) Nothing about Newgrange.

(Niall) No, and there's several millennia between them.

(L) Okay. And seek10, did you search the transcripts on everything about India and the Aryan invasion and all of these other...?

(seek10) Yeah. Yes, Laura, I searched it quite a number of times.

(L) And did you put it all together into a document for easy reading?

(seek10) Actually, I have the thread I've been posting, it's a little bit like a rabbit hole type of thing. There's so many things that, there's so many controversies out there...

(L) Okay. Have you read David Reich's book, Who We Are and How We Got Here?

(seek10) Yes, Laura. I did.

(L) And did you extract the relevant excerpts about so-called Aryan invasions and so forth?

[This was difficult to understand:]

(seek10) Yes, Laura? That question needs a little bit of modification based on what the C's said a couple of sessions back. So the general theory is that around the second millennium BC, Aryans came, but the C's already put that back into the sixth millennium BC (6000 BC). They already said that. But a couple of sessions back, they said that these Aryans started compiling the Vedas in the transit - that is in the BMAC (Bactria–Margiana Archaeological Complex) region - but most of the Vedas were created in Indian region The Vedas contain all Himalayan disasters and comet activity, the tribal warfare, and all that type of stuff. So I have to modify that question. I put it in the chat. My question to them is this. C’s told us that the Aryan invasion happened around 6000 BC. But at the same time, they're saying that it is the Aryans who started compiling the Vedas in 16000 BC. And most of the action is related to North India and the Himalayas. So my question was, did the Aryans come to the Himalayan region, but when the Younger Dryas event happened, they migrated back to Iran? That's where the Aryan religion got split into two parts, the Zoroastrian part and Vedic part. It is this Vedic part that came back at 6000 BC to India. Is that true? That is the question.

(L) Okay. Well, I'm, I'm not going to ask this tonight because I would rather do some research because the C's are always onto us: Can we figure the answer out ourselves? And that's part of it. But the other thing is, is that as you probably can guess by now, after reading everything I've written about the various cataclysms that I've been able to identify, I mean what the 10 or 15-part series of articles on SOTT that was turned into the book about cataclysms, and then the Horns of Moses where I talked about cataclysms and the early Greek philosophers and so forth, and then Pierre's book on Earth Changes... And we dug into all of this stuff for freaking years - and finally came to the conclusion that there have been many, many cataclysms. Some of them have been global, some of them have been local or fairly, not local-local, but there have been local ones and there have been regional and continental ones and so on. And history is so messed up that it's almost impossible to try to sort it out because we tried with the historical database, trying to find out where these peaks were. And we could see from that that things were just going all over the place. And I'll tell you the truth, the honest truth is I lost interest in trying to figure it out because I came to the realization that it goes on all the time. It happens everywhere at some time or another. I mean, you can almost guess when you see some kind of discontinuity in a culture or a history or if you see or you find...

(Niall) A big split.

(L) Yeah, you find splits. And when you find archeological evidence that goes in those directions, that is something that has happened there. And then you also come to the realization from reading David Reich that - and several other books on genetics. I have to recommend Carleton S. Coon, and there's another one that I recommended at some point. It was really good. And he showed how the graph of how the different, so-called ethnicities or races, if we can call 'em races, we understand that it's in the same terms that the French call breeds of dogs "races". That’s the different breeds of people interact together with each other. And there's been so much intermixing. Then, people will isolate themselves and inbreed and create some kinds of definite characteristics of a particular group. And then somewhere along the way, another thousand years go by and they all get messed up. And the problem is that it's one of those things, it's just the nature of our world. And civilizations have come and gone, and come and gone, and you find one buried under another. And there are some things that stand out as particularly catastrophic, such things as the 70 KYA event, which some researchers have attributed to the eruption of the Toba volcano, which just happens to correlate with what the C's called the explosion of the planet Kantek.

Now was the explosion of the planet Kantek and the Toba eruption somehow interrelated? Was there something going on in the solar system as a whole and at large at that time that contributed in some way to the destruction of Kantek? We know for a fact that, oh, beginning some 20 years ago, back when we were reporting and recording these things, that all of these new moons were being discovered on Jupiter and that there were changes in Jupiter's weather and there was global warming on Mars, and there was global warming on Venus, and there was apparently global warming on other planets so that the so-called global warming that was going on on Earth wasn't an isolated event.

So we got some idea that when these things happen in a solar system-wide way, things can happen on Earth, they can happen on another planet. So we got that. So we understood that. But there can be things that give off very large signals like the Toba event and then the 12,000 KYA event, the Younger Dryas event that wiped out the megafauna of, or whatever megafauna was supposedly still wandering around after the alleged destruction of the dinosaurs 65 million years ago, they say. But then of course we have suspicions about that because there are artifacts that depict dinosaurs with human beings. And there are human footprints, I believe, that have been found impressed in larger dinosaur footprints that have been preserved. So... [SIGH] The mess is such that I don't know that it is the best use of our time and energy to pursue these kinds of things endlessly. We did it for years about... We touched on probably every country in the world, and we hit India particularly hard because they had interesting things going on there.

But I don't know that it's the best use of our time. I don't know that it's the best use of my time because frankly, I'm no longer curious about it. I know it's a mess. And I know that so much stuff has happened on this planet, and so much stuff has been messed with on this planet by our evil archon overlords. They have messed with our history. They have messed with our minds. They have messed with our propaganda. They have messed with our archeology. They have done so much against us and to confuse us that I don't think, except in the most general of terms, that it can ever be sorted out. There are some things that can be identified, there are some things that can be nailed down, and there are some things that we have some kind of a written text for plus an archeological or geological context to fit it into. But for the most part we don't - and we won't.

Do you get what I'm saying here? I mean, does everybody understand what I'm saying? I mean, it is not that I wouldn't like to get answers to every single thing on the planet, but I think we know enough about these kinds of things to know that it's all messed up and there are issues and elements of things going on on the planet in the here and now that are of far more interest and import than solving all the historical mysteries. I mean, I went wild trying to do it because there were so many things. I mean, there were the lost civilizations and books full of all these pictures of these ruins and so on and so forth. And I was curious and I was asking questions like crazy. But I ran out of juice on that because I spent so many years, I mean, YEARS...

(Joe) Graham Hancock's doing a good job of it.

(L) Yeah, Graham Hancock's doing a real good job of it.

(Joe) He's got part two on his Netflix series coming out next month. Did you watch the first one?

(L) No.

(Niall) Oh! You should.

(L) Yeah?

(Andromeda) Second one's got Keanu Reeves in it.

(L) Oh yeah? Well... I guess I'll have to watch it. So anyway, I mean, do you have anything to add?

(seek10) Yeah, I got that, Laura. The reason I try to figure it out is, it has a relation to the current political and intellectual battle of ‘left vs right’ in India. That includes the question of Aryans, north India vs south India and all types of other things. That is where my interest came from. I'm fine if we skip those questions.

(L) Well, if you can put together a short two-page document or something for me with what the C's have said, with what you can get from David Reich, from any other sources to show me a really good justification for a question or two in that area, I am open to it. But right now I'm a little sleepy and looking at that question and I just think I can't even rustle up the energy to be interested in it. And I have a feeling that if I'm not interested in it, I don't think we'll get a very good answer.

(seek10) Yeah, no problem.

(L) And I'm also not interested in Niall's question about the megalithic 'passage tombs' and whether or not St. Patrick was a real historical figure. I think you can do some reading and research and be able to draw some kind of a conclusion about that.

(Niall) I can. It'll go against the entire body of work that says he's a real historical person, but I'm sure he isn't because he fits our pattern of someone who arrived on the scene. There's a whole body of work in his name, it becomes a founding document, and then there's two centuries before there's even a commentary on it.

(L) Well, it's like retroactive continuity as they call it. They throw it back. I mean, it's like the Books of Enoch. They were written in an archaic style and they were claimed to be written by Enoch. And of course the claim was also put in there that they were supposed to be hidden for a period of time and only revealed later. And the authors were very careful to not let anything about their own identity slip into it. And people weren't stupid back then. They had pretty good brain power. I mean, even if they didn't have tech search and AI, they still were able to pull these frauds off. And then of course, you have to go through a whole lot of song and dance research to figure out where they got the stuff that went into these documents. And of course, it's been pretty much figured out by researchers that a lot of what went in there was stuff that the Babylonians had in their tablets and in their information banks that was picked up by the Jews during their exile or whatever. And then they created what were political protest documents. So we know that.

(Niall) And then they retrojected it into the past.

(L) Retrojected into the past. And the same thing with the Book of Daniel. The Book of Daniel was another one of those retroactive continuity documents as they call that it was pretended to be written by Daniel who was back in Babylon, but it was actually written around 272 BC during the time of the Maccabees. And there's evidence to prove that point…

(Niall) For pressing political reasons…

(L) For political reasons. So the same thing would probably be true for St. Patrick. And you can find these kinds of similarities. And that's also something you might want to think about, seek10, in those same terms: some of these documents that get written about in various religious things and so forth and histories. I mean, how much of that is retrojected into the past and pretended to be very ancient when in fact it's not. Because of course, when you retroject something into the past and it claims to have been written by an ancient person of high esteem, who apparently in his document has predicted things that really happened. Of course, the person who wrote it knew those things really happened. It’s because he was writing from a point in the future and he knew what had already happened in the past. So he wrote about these things, but he wrote about it from the point of view of somebody saying, "Oh, I predict this and so this and so this." And people say, "Oh my God, he was such a great guy!" And I mean, he's so incredible. He predicted all these things and look, they happened!

(Niall) He must be close to God, so I must stay close to him.

(L) Yeah. Anyway, so…

(Joe) The passage tomb thing is kind of more than just Newgrange in the sense that unlike Stonehenge, you have most of the megalithic sites around Europe are all these maybe a circle around, but in the center of it or part of it is like a passageway that may have been covered at one point and you don't see that at Stonehenge. It may be at Stonehenge, but you don't see that at Stonehenge. But they are well preserved all around Europe and they're all very similar and that they're just like a series of stones. And either they have a cover on them or maybe they've lost the cover, but then just the passage part is left and it's just a series of stones opening into a small or bigger or chamber at the end. And that's it. And they're all called burial tombs, it's where they found bones.

(L) Well, we have the idea they're not burial tombs.

(Joe) Right. What were they? Did they serve a similar function to what they said about Stonehenge? Or were they something else? Because they're all so similar, but not like Stonehenge? It's not extant. It's not existing anymore. Stonehenge is just a circle, right?

(L) Didn't we ask what they were used for?

(Joe) No.

(L) Well you see, that would be an interesting question. Okay... And now Z has a question about the Dinaric race. Have you read David Reich, Z?

(Chu) I don't think he's here.

(L) He's not here?

(Chu) No.

(L) Why is he not here?

(Chu) I don't know.

(Joe) He's here in question form only.

(L) Well, he's not here to clarify. So we'd scratch that one off, too. Next is dugdeep's question about Dr. Joe Dispenza's documentary Source: It's Within You… his book Becoming Supernatural… seemingly miraculous healings. And then well, we'll come to that. And this one is about… Keit, where do you come up with these weird things? I mean, do you just spend your time? I mean, I know it's…

(Chu) She's also not here.

(L) Keit, you're not here? Well, if you're not here to talk to me, okay. We've got some guy I never met before in my life: Hyperdimensional Ape on the Cassiopaean Experiment substack: "Why would the removal of an implant cause death?" I think he should read what Approaching Infinity wrote and do some thinking, or if he hasn't, has he read the Wave, Approaching Infinity?

(Approaching Infinity) I'm not sure that was, so that was a response to the article on alien implants. And he asked two questions. So I threw 'em on the forum just thinking, "Hey, maybe we'd want to answer a couple substack questions to show that we're listening." I think I responded to 'em that the question about why would an implant cause death? Is it, my only speculation was that those questions were probably in reference to implants deep within one's brain. So I think it might just not be physically possible to remove something that's embedded in a central, essential part of your nervous system without making it go kaflooey.

(L) Yeah, I wouldn't want to do that. And then you've got this weird question, which I don't even know why you're asking the question because it's kind of explained in the C's transcript that's provided here about everything living is connected to 5D. "So it sounds like one can literally take an elevator to 5D in such an environment." That's pretty much what the C's said. Yeah... "Is there any other ways to enter five D without dying?" Well, part of you is always there kind of. So I mean that's kind of like self-explanatory in my mind. What about you? I mean, if part of you's always connected there and you can enter there and you can communicate with people there.

(Approaching Infinity) Some of the ideas that we came up with on the forum were like perhaps in dreams and in meditative states, like when you go astral traveling or something, then you can actually visit. And that's an actual entering into a 5D state. I don't know, but that's what I thought

(L) I would think so. So that's a lot of people have written about it and talked about experiences along that line. And here’s another question from Altair... He always gets these questions: "Can some 4D beings enter at will the 5D environment without dying?" Which is similar to the question that you were asking. Well, I guess they can in that way, but they cannot, I would say that they would be restricted from entering it with their full sensorium because that would be prevented because the part of them that is connected to it would be able to enter. They may have the ability to enter some of them. Now, how many of y'all watched that interview that I just did last week? And there I was talking about the spectrum. I was explaining the whole thing to the guy, and Approaching Infinity was with me, so he knows what I was talking about. But I was explaining about the spectrum of creatures on 2D, the animal kingdom. And you can go from a single celled organism right up to the most elaborate 2D beings, like gorillas and apes, dogs and cats, elephants. And then it is not just a spectrum, a unidirectional spectrum, it's like a mosaic spectrum. You have all kinds of creatures, for example, octopi that are pretty darn smart and pretty darn freaky. I mean as far as their physiology goes. And then there's other kinds of creatures. So, 2D has this amazing spectrum of creatures that we look upon and examine and consider in zoological terms, write books about 'em and do experiments.

And people like Jane Goodall spend their lives living in the jungle, watching 'em and observing them so that they can write things about 'em. So there's a spectrum. And then I pointed out that we should imagine that we have a similar spectrum in 3D, so that we have from the lowest level human looking beings that are just barely amoebas, so to speak. They may be without souls or without individuated souls as we consider higher level humans to have. But there's also not just a unidirectional or vertical spectrum, there's also probably a mosaic spectrum, all kinds of different beings and types of beings and levels of beings and abilities of beings and all of the uniqueness of the types and so forth. And the next thing that we should also naturally assume, I mean if we're considering our hermetic maxims being of any use is that 4D similarly has a spectrum - and not just a vertical spectrum, but a mosaic spectrum of all kinds of beings and creatures, and that they can do all kinds of things. Having said that, there is a possibility at some higher level or in some narrow category of 4D beings, there are those who can at least with their inner self - assuming that 4D beings have inner selves - can enter and exit 5D, maybe at will. And a whole bunch of 'em can't, except in the sense that we possibly do…

(Joe) Who would want to?

(L) Yeah, I'm not sure, but I remember what's his name, Michael Topper. And I'm pretty sure, I think I referenced it in my article on stalking - Michael Topper, stalking - that a 5D STS being was incredibly contractile, gravitation… I mean, you would think of it as the laziest thing on the planet because it's so contractile, it doesn't even move. It doesn't even stir… I mean, almost like a black hole, and maybe it's close to a black hole. Maybe that's what black holes are: they are these contractile 5D STS beings floating around in the universe. Maybe the universe is 5D for all we know.

(Joe) So you've got physical existence, human beings, 4D, whatever, semi-physical, whatever. There's a lifespan. We see it as human beings. We see it as pretty short. And then after that, you go with 5D and you spend however long, and then 5D's a contemplation zone. So you get to 5D and do your contemplating for as long as you want, as long as you choose maybe, right?

(L) Or however long you need.

(Joe) Or however long you need. So incarnation is quite limited, quite short, let's say, in that sense and limited.

(L) And it may also be extremely attractive in the sense, and I'm not saying that you look at it and it’s attractive to you, but it may be attractive in the sense of gravitationally attractive, that it attracts... Once certain things have been cleansed from your beingness or have been balanced or whatever, then the attraction, the gravitational pull of 3D existence or 4D existence, depending on the nature of your being, once again pulls you back into incarnation. But on that point, going back to the spectrum of 4D beings, one would have to imagine that at the lower levels, there would be those that are quite physical, quite definitely, and almost perpetually physical. But of course as C's have said, that 4D is where your body is a home and not a prison, that you have some more control and choices over it. Well, things like this Dispenza thing, it sounds like people that are moving to a 4D type of existence and how many of us may or may not be manifesting things. I mean, we've certainly been practicing it with our little SRT expeditions and episodes and practicing working with a hyperdimensional reality and creating it and operating in it to some extent. So, 4D beings have a spectrum from the most physical of 4D, which is probably a lot less physical than what we consider to be physical, to absolutely almost totally ethereal at the higher level, but much beyond that sort of speculation, I don't think we can go there because we simply…

(Joe) Well, it's the contemplation zone, right? Which implies contemplation after your incarnation to go and contemplate, figure things out, learn some stuff, reflect blah, blah, blah. So why would you do that in the middle of the experience in 3D that is necessary for you to go and contemplate? If you go to 5D, you'd be checking out definitively. It doesn't seem like it would make any sense to do. "Hang on, I'm just going to go and check in 5D to see how I've been doing so far in my 3D existence, and then I'll come back to 3D!"

(L) Yeah, it almost seems like it would be precluded. I mean, if you just sit and talk about it and think about it, it seems like going to 5D from 3D or 4D, other than in touching into it through…

(Andromeda) The part of you that's already there…

(L) The part of you that's already there. And momentarily, people who have near-death experiences or people who have encounters with their loved ones while they're dreaming or maybe in a meditative state. And if you've read enough about these near-death experiences, there have been people who have died or having the near death experience where they sort of die and then they go there and they encounter someone who says, no, you can't go beyond this point. You must go back. So that happens often enough to maybe give us the idea that you can't go there fully. You can stand, maybe you can be like Moses and get up on the mountain and see the promised land in a distance, but you can't go there. So having said all that, well, that was the last page of questions. So as you can see, most of these questions, if we would just sit around and discuss them and talk about 'em and think about 'em even there are things that, I mean, if you have a personal, you got a Jones about a certain thing that interests you intensely, and you want to do research on it and compile it and write a document on it, that maybe even a book about it. I don't see why some of y'all aren't. If you have your particular, I mean seek10, you should be writing a book about all this research you've been doing, put everything together!

And so out of all of this… I'm not sure if these are even appropriate questions about Joe Dispenza, who is Joe Dispenza, anyway? I hear that name quite a bit, but…

(Joe) He wrote Breaking the Habit of Being Yourself.

(Gaby) And The Placebo Effect.

(L) Well, I mean, this is dugdeep who's asking this question and he's asking: Are the healings presented in Dispenza's film true as portrayed?" And the C's are going to say "close". And then he asks: "And were these healings a direct result of doing Dr. Joe Dispenza's meditations or were there other factors involved?" And they're going to say, "other factors", and then I ain't gonna have the time or the energy to go through all that. "Are Dispenzas meditations safe to practice?" Well, have you examined them? dugdeep, where are you?

(Chu) They don't have a camera for some reason.

(L) Where are you people? I don't see you, dugdeep. Where are you?

(The Farm) We have technological problems!

(L) How can you be having technological problems when you got techies down there?

(Joe) We don't need to see you. We can hear you.

(L) Okay. dugdeep, have you examined these meditations?

(dugdeep) Somewhat. Not extensively, no.

(L) And is there anything in 'em that raises a red flag in your mind?

(dugdeep) Well, nothing I can necessarily put my finger on. The way he talks to 'em is kind of weird. But beyond that, I can't really say that anything is jumping out as being a super red flag.

(Gaby) I have read some of them. Yeah, there's a red flag. Like I will not use that as a seed. It is too…

(L) So he's using meditation with seed?

(Chu) And Mark7 is saying that he's playing with kundalini, it seems.

(dugdeep) Yeah, one of the meditations does sound like that.

(L) Well, you should have made your question more specific in that way. You're asking such general questions. I mean, you didn't even…

(Niall) He's got people who go to his retreats and they're cured from the long-term cancer. They were terminal. So then he gets on board and they made a documentary of that called The Source. He gets on board a whole bunch of specialists who monitor blood and other brainwave functions during the whole course of the retreat. And they do produce astonishing results. Like there's suddenly no more cancers or byproducts in the blood post retreat. They are indeed cured medically. It doesn't happen to everyone, but it happens to a lot of people.

(Joe) Belief. Same as going to Lourdes.

(Niall) Yeah, it's probably in the ballpark of that.

(Gaby) It's a belief center gets turned on, and people with higher centers that are very stressed and diseased, and then they have…

(L) Well, I would like to see…

(Chu) Okay, Mark7 says he just came back from a week-long Dispenza retreat.

(Joe) Did you get cured?

(Mark7) Hello? Can you hear me?

(L) Yeah.

(Mark7) Yeah, I just got back. I just got back a few hours ago. I mean, my partner, she talked me into going, and she's been a fan of his. He has this breathing exercise where you contract, it's not breathing… You contract your lower top of muscles and your buttocks and stomach all the way up, tighten your chest and then squeeze and arch your back and hold your neck up and just squeeze real hard. And he says that it forces the spinal fluid up and puts pressure on the pineal gland. And the pineal gland, he says is full of crystals. And when you do that, you get this piezoelectric effect that lights up the brain and you can communicate with the quantum field. Everything is science to him. He does have a scientist there. And he showed a lot of bar charts and graphs, heat maps and stuff.

And they do seem to show that meditation has an effect on a lot of people over a week. And he's got some pretty outrageous claims about healing people. I mean, he charges a lot of money. I see a profit motive, and I'm really skeptical having been there. I came in very skeptical. I didn't want to discount what he said, but it would be nice to get, do some research on this idea of the piezoelectric effects on your pineal gland to communicate with what he calls the quantum field. I think there's some truth in it, but I also feel like he's really subjecting people to danger. We were there the other night and they had one of the meditations, his meditations, the longest one was five hours. And he does walking meditation. But anyway, some women started laughing and then half the room started laughing. Just this ridiculous, I don't know, laughing. It sounded like almost satanic to me! And some people will just start screaming and stuff like that. It doesn't sound like they're communing with The One at all or anything like that. It's a little bit disturbing. I think that he does seem like he does want to help people, but I don't know. I think he has some blind spots, but I really don't know. I don't know. I don't really want to go back to another one of those things, but…

[laughter]

(Chu) That says something!

(L) That sounds like being in a charismatic holy roller church.

(Mark7) Well, the placebo comes into play here a lot - or could. People get healed at these holy roller events sometimes I think when they really believe. They get into a suggestive state when you're meditating and he's up there guiding you, you can put people in a state where they're highly suggestible. And they can maybe heal themselves, but I think they could maybe get a spirit attachment too, or just all kinds of things. I think he doesn't have enough knowledge to be teaching what he does. And I'm curious about this theory he has about pressing the spinal fluid up and putting pressure on the pineal gland to create piezoelectric effects. I mean, I saw piezoelectric effects when I was a kid, but I had to bust the rock with a hammer to get it to happen.

(L) Something you just said made me make a little bit of a connection, picking up attachments, because we've discussed, I'm pretty sure, the fact that when people have dissociative identity disorder, that if one identity is in control and it claims certain physiological parameters for its identity… And the example used that I recall was one where one of the identities was diabetic and the other one wasn't. And when the diabetic identity was in control, all of the physiological markers for diabetes were present. I mean, even in the blood and so on and so forth. And then there was the other identity that was blind. And when it was in control, the individual was blind. And I mean, they did the tests with lights and things like that, and there were no reactions from the eyes or from the brain - for the seeing part of the brain. And then when the identity that was able to see took over, then the part of the brain that controls seeing was once again active. So we know that this happens with dissociative identity disorder, and it may just be that this activity could be breaking people into dissociation, into these identities, or they could be, maybe somebody who has, DID has different attachments, and when they are in charge, then their energy prevails and causes the physiological changes. There are a number of explanations for this type of thing.

So that just jumping up and deciding that this is the best thing since sliced bread and marketing it the way he's doing without fully understanding what's going on… And of course, he's got all these scientists, I guess, that are coming in that are trying to back him up, or at least some of 'em. I don't know. I haven't looked into it enough to know. Y'all have to give me the information. But it sounds like he's pulling in, everything's all about science for him and I'm not even sure that I have ever seen any evidence whatsoever that the pineal gland is full of crystals. I mean, has anybody ever seen any such evidence? Have you, Gaby?

(Gaby) No.

(L) I mean, it is just a gland and it produces what…

(Chu) See Gottathinks comment on the chat.

"Piezoelectric effects are commonplace in the fascia. Any fascia work that is clinically effective will induce the parasympathetic nervous system. So that can induce pineal gland activity whilst the person is still in conscious control."

(L) Well, we don't know that it's inducing pineal gland activity. We don't know that piezoelectric actions have any effect on the pineal gland at all.

(Mark7) The C's didn't talk about the pineal gland. It was the pituitary.

(L) Yeah, the C's have talked about the pituitary as being the primary gland that connects with information field or whatever - not the pineal gland. What does the pineal gland produce, growth hormone?

(Gaby) Melatonin.

(L) So anyhow, I think that we should be extremely cautious about this. And you've got red flags and dugdeep says that he got some red flags from these meditations. And you said, Gaby, that you…?

(Gaby) Some of the seeds are really… contractile, in a sense.

(L) So yeah.

(dugdeep) I was just flipping through the book and he apparently has some pictures of the crystals in the pineal gland.

(L) He has pictures of them.

(dugdeep) He says he does.

(L) And where did these pictures come from?

(dugdeep) Calcite crystals in the pineal gland. I think he references it…

(L) So basically calcium.

(dugdeep) I don't know.

(Joe) Which means you've got a clogged pineal gland.

(L) Yeah, it means it's atrophying. [laughter] Okay. So, it probably would be useful to ask these questions maybe in some way or another because - I mean just for the point of getting it into a public format so other people can read it. So we're going to, okay, I'm going to skip through this and we're going to ask a few of these questions. And boy, we just sat around and had such a good time talking about it that, I mean, who are the C's? [laughter]

(Andromeda) They've gone to sleep.

(L) Yeah, they got bored. All right. And poor Scottie is going to have to transcribe all of that discussion! [laughter] He's going to hate us.

(Joe) Don't worry, AI will help him.

(L) You got AI help on that, Scottie?

(Scottie) Yeah.

(L) Wow. You are techno!

(Joe) He's not gonna get the kudos for slaving away. [laughter]

(Chu) Come on now. Correcting all the mistakes from AI?

(L) All right, this is, what is today's date? It's the 21st of September 2024. Tomorrow is the Autumnal Equinox. It'll be about 11:47 in the morning here. So y'all have to figure out where it is in your places. So, okay, today is the 21st of September, 2024. We've got the usual crew: [Review of those present] Is anybody there?

A: Great discussion! True networking! 4D STO is active in all of you tonight! Viconneaeil here of Cassiopaea.

Q: (L) Whatever. All right? So yes, some of the questions will need to be asked, but y'all just hold off a second. Ark told me that he has questions and he always gets left out because we get so tired before he gets to ask his questions that then he says, no, I don't have any. So he gets to ask his questions first.

(Ark) Okay. And we had exercises with remote viewing. And well, they were simple exercises, but I was reading about remote viewing in general. So there are good remote viewers like mediums known from literature of the paranormal. People are not just able to see or to tell you what kind of a picture is in the envelope, but they are able to tell you what is exactly written on the note that is hidden somewhere. And so I started thinking what can be the, let's call it mechanism, of such reading. Yes? And it came to me that there are two evident possibilities. One possibility is a medium, say, is using something like an X-ray vision, right? See with his rays what is inside the particular envelope or a drawer or whatever, right? Or another possibility is that this envelope and whatever is inside is only the address to the information that is there. And since the time when someone wrote it down, the information is already somewhere in the information field or something like that. And so there is no x-ray vision, but there is communication with global things that collects all information about everything that was ever in anybody's thoughts, even thoughts, right? They are not lost. Provided you know the address somehow, once in a while some people can access it. So is this the first possibility or the second?

A: 2nd.

(Ark) Okay, I expected that but now question is, I am thinking: I use the term information field, but 'field' is something that is, when I say temperature field, it means temperature here, temperature there, and so on. Electromagnetic field, it's in space. But I don't think that 'information field' is a good term. It's like 'information' what - space? And what is it, how to describe it, where this information is, what kind of an animal it is?

A: Consciousness of God for lack of a precise term.

Q: (Joe) Now Arky you have to ask the question: Where is consciousness of God - or anybody?

(Chu) And why can't it be a field?

(Ark) Because it has nothing to do with space. It's not located to space.

(L) Right. A field is in space.

(Ark) It has to have something to do with space. Okay? Now, but consciousness, what is it? I don't know. I know the meaning of the word, but there are thousands of views about what consciousness is. Can you kind of make it closer for a physicist?

A: This is unfortunately, where words break down.

Q: (Ark) Okay? Words break down. Maybe mathematical formulas will help?

A: Yes

Q: (Ark) You suggest some part of mathematics. Can you?

A: Pranalytical.

Q: (Ark) Okay, I'll have to ask Grok. Grok will tell me what it means.

(Joe) You need a board with mathematical symbols on it.

(L) Oh lord. Don't give him any ideas! [laughter]

(Ark) No, but you see this is a new term, not existing, pranalytical, right?

(Joe) I don't know.

(Ark) I have to dream on it, sleep on it…

(Ark) But I can ask Grok. Okay? Grok will tell me. [laughter]

The term "pranalytical" interpreted by ChatGPT:

Exploring "pranalytical mathematics" as a phase of mathematical thinking before formal analysis leads us to a fascinating concept: the intuitive, creative process that precedes the structured, rigorous methods of modern mathematics. Here are a few areas where this kind of pre-analytical thinking could be relevant:

1. Mathematical Intuition and Creativity

Mathematical breakthroughs often arise not from pure formalism, but from an intuitive understanding of patterns and relationships. Mathematicians like Ramanujan, for example, are famous for their almost mystical insights into complex mathematical relationships, many of which were later rigorously proven, but began in a highly intuitive and "pre-analytical" way. Pranalytical mathematics could refer to this raw, creative exploration—thinking without yet adhering to strict rules of logic.

2. Historical Development of Mathematics

Before modern analytical methods like calculus or formal set theory were developed, mathematicians worked with rough, approximate ideas. Ancient mathematics, from the Greeks and Babylonians, relied heavily on geometric and visual reasoning rather than the abstract symbolic methods we use today. Pranalytical mathematics could refer to these early forms of problem-solving and discovery that relied more on visual intuition or practical applications.

3. Philosophy of Mathematics

In philosophy, there is a debate about the origin of mathematical knowledge. Some argue that mathematical concepts are discovered, not invented, and that they exist independently of formal systems. In this view, pranalytical mathematics could be the cognitive or metaphysical exploration of these concepts—an attempt to tap into the inherent structures of the universe before codifying them into symbols and formulas.

For instance, imagine a mathematician contemplating the nature of infinity before rigorously defining it. Their early, pre-analytical thoughts might involve broad philosophical musings about endlessness, the universe, or the nature of existence—ideas that are later captured in formal concepts like cardinality and limits.

4. Exploratory Mathematical Play

Pranalytical thinking can also occur when someone is "playing" with mathematical ideas without specific rules in mind. This can be seen in puzzle-solving, where someone might tinker with an idea intuitively, trying different approaches, drawing diagrams, and experimenting before coming to a formal solution. This creative phase can often lead to insights that are later formalized into coherent systems of thought.

5. Learning and Cognitive Development

When we learn mathematics, particularly at an early age, we don't immediately jump into formal systems. Children, for example, develop an understanding of numbers through hands-on activities, visualizations, and intuitive grasping of concepts like "more" or "less" before they are able to manipulate symbols algebraically. Pranalytical mathematics could describe this early stage of learning, where abstract reasoning is not yet dominant, and insights are gained through sensory experiences and conceptual play.

6. Speculative Mathematical Exploration

There are areas of speculative mathematical research where the rigorous proof has not yet caught up with creative ideas. Mathematicians might propose bold conjectures or models (such as in string theory or the multiverse hypothesis) based on intuition, patterns, or partial insights. The speculative, imaginative phase where these ideas take shape but haven’t yet been proven rigorously could be considered "pranalytical."

7. A Bridge Between Art and Mathematics

In many ways, this pre-analytical phase resembles artistic creation. Just as a painter sketches rough forms before refining them into detailed works, mathematicians may sketch "rough" ideas or visual representations. For instance, mathematical models often begin as rough diagrams or intuitive sketches on a board before being fleshed out with precise logic and equations.

How Could This Influence the Study of Mathematics?

Emphasizing pranalytical mathematics in education or research could foster more creativity and innovation. Encouraging students or researchers to dwell in the intuitive, exploratory phase before focusing on strict formalism might lead to new and unconventional insights.

Education: Educators could create environments where students are encouraged to think creatively and explore concepts through experimentation before being taught the rigorous analytical methods. This might involve more emphasis on puzzles, visual reasoning, and open-ended questions.

Research: Mathematicians might benefit from deliberately spending time in a pre-analytical mode, using brainstorming sessions, visual models, and even philosophical reflection as tools to generate new ideas that can later be formalized.

In short, "pranalytical mathematics" could represent an essential but often under-appreciated phase of mathematical thinking—one that bridges the gap between raw intuition and the logical, formal processes that follow.

(Ark) Next time I'll know what it means. Okay, kissy!

(L) Kissy. All right. I want to throw this question in there. I thought it was interesting. seek10 asked:

(seek10) What is the average height of the man during the Atlantean period?

A: 7 feet.

Q: (L) Well, Z asks about the Adriatic race. He wants to know where they came from, the Ilyrians, and they were tall. They're very tall people. Are these Ilyrian peoples that kind of appeared in the Balkan Peninsula, or are they like Atlantean refugees?

A: Descendants.

Q: (L) And we could have figured that out. Okay. Now I do want to ask about the Joe Dispenza thing.

(dugdeep) Are the healings presented in Dispenza's film true as portrayed?

A: Not as portrayed.

Q: (L) What do you mean they're not true as portrayed?

A: The reasons and mechanisms are based on poor science and assumptions.

Q: (L) So was our discussion about it getting closer to some of the things that were going on behind these healings, than what HE claims?

A: Yes.

Q: (dugdeep) All right. Are Dispenza's meditations safe to practice as they are?

A: Not particularly.

Q: (dugdeep) Is there some kind of STS tinkering involved?

A: Indeed. Similar to psychic surgery.

Q: (L) And the Cs already had something to say about psychic surgery. Does anybody remember it? No? Well, we'll have to look it up.

(whitecoast) I remember they said "avoid it at all costs".

Q: (L) We already discussed the issue of pineal gland, but…

(dugdeep) …he says the meditator de-identifies with material reality.

A: Yes!

Q: (L) So you say that because it was something like what I was talking about, "de-identifies" as in "dissociative identity disorder"? [Laughter]

A: Yes.

Q: (dugdeep) The changes made then trickle down into material reality. Is this assessment true?

A: No.

Q: (L) Okay. [Reading Keit's question]. People were getting some kind of mysterious disease in New Brunswick, Canada.

(Gaby) A Zombie disease.

(Andromeda) I remember reading about it a couple of years ago.

(L) Can you tell us anything about the zombie disease?

A: Microbial passage of manipulated genome. Bioweapon. Can be passed by ticks.

Q: (Joe) Stay out of the garden.

(L) Well, and they don't have any cure, right? I don't see anything here saying anything about a cure.

(Joe) No, it wasn't a lot of people.

(Andromeda) Weren't there some animals as well? Animals and people. I can't remember exactly.

(Gaby) Maybe some deer.

(Joe) Yeah, deer.

A: Yes.

Q: (L) There was no mystery illness, they just…

(Joe) They just test the odd bioweapon now and again, on a limited release.

(L) Yeah, I guess so.

(Hyperdimensional Ape on the Cassiopaean Experiment substack) Why would the removal of an implant cause death?

A: Not all implants, only those associated with direct organ function. Most implants are such.

Q: (L) When you say organ function, what organs do you mean in particular?

A: Mainly brain.

Q: (Hyperdimensional Ape on the Cassiopaean Experiment substack) I always thought that the abductions were on a much larger scale, but just 2% and people from the sessions being among them and abducted from young age…

(L) Okay, so this is a very poorly framed question. Let me start with just 2%.

A: 2% of the population is a large number.

Q: (L) Do you mean, global population?

A: Yes.

Q: (L) So 2% of 8 billion is how many? All right, you mathematicians, get out your calculators.

(IrjO) 160 million.

(L) That's a lot of people. It's a lot of activity.

(Joe) Like the entire population of a large country like Russia.

(L) Yeah! It's like the entire population of Russia. The US has 300 and some million. So it would be about half the US population.

(Niall) Or a third! We don't know what the US population is. [Laughter]

(Andromeda) Oh yeah, good point.

(L) And I guess you're talking about it being concentrated in some areas, and especially the US, because the US gave permission for it, right? So it would be a lot of people in the US. That's a lot of people! Okay.

(Hyperdimensional Ape on the Cassiopaean Experiment substack) …Abducted them from young age. Why are they being abducted from such a young age?

(Joe) Who is asking that question? That's a super basic question. Has that person not read the sessions?

(Chu) It's a reader on Substack.

(Joe) You answer those questions, Approaching Infinity.

(L) Yeah, answer those questions, Approaching Infinity. "And people having an affinity for this stuff." Well, that's pretty obvious. These are all very basic questions. Okay, so much for that.

(irjO) What is the relationship between the so-called Illuminati with the Rothschild family? Because Laura wondered on the forum if the Rothschilds are even really 'Illuminati'.

A: Front men and red herrings.

Q: (L) Do the Rothschilds know or have any interactions with actual Illuminati family persons?

A: Yes.

Q: (Andromeda) Knowingly?

A: Yes.

Q: (Niall) Do they want to be Illuminati but they can't get in?

A: Yes.

Q: (irjO) Can I ask a follow up question on that? Does the same apply to the other types of families, like the Rockefellers and Soros, and all those?

A: Yes.

Q: (L) They're front men and red herrings.

(Niall) That's why we know about them.

(L) Are they set up by the Illuminati to be front men and red herrings?

A: Yes.

Q: (L) To keep the heat off the real Illuminati?

A: Yes.

Q: (L) Well, so I guess it's probably pretty useless for us to ask for any names?

A: Yes. [Laughter]

Q: (Niall) But if we name some names, could we get a yes or no?

A: Violation!

Q: (L) That would be a violation. Okay.

(Ryan) I was wondering… Are any of the Illuminati registered people within governments? Do they have official birth registration papers, or anything like that? Or are they totally off the grid, so to speak?

A: Varies.

Q: (L) What do you mean, varies?

(Chu) Some are, and some aren't.

(Niall) They come in and out as needed.

(L) I bet they can make any kind records about themselves and disappear if they want to.

A: Yes.

Q: (Joe) Or create them.

(L) Or create fake records.

A: Yes.

Q: (Niall) Like Brigitte Macron. [Laughter]

(L) I don't think she's an Illuminati.

(Niall) No, but she might be from a place that's… Well, nah, too many assumptions.

(L) All right. Now we want to ask about these so-called nanobots that are being seen from the Pfizer vaxx, incubated in distilled water for various days of… okay, What are these things?

A: Antennae for future use.

Q: (Joe) And are they coded in the mRNA in the shot to produce these things in bodies?

A: Yes.

Q: (Joe) So we're talking about super, super high tech.

(L) When you say future, how much future do you mean?

A: Future from time of injection.

Q: (L) So some of these nanobots could be doing whatever it is they do now, since so many people have had these injections. Yeah?

A: Yes.

Q: (L) And are some of the things that they're used for to generate cancers, or illnesses, or diseases?

A: Some, yes.

Q: (Joe) There was another paper with a claim that this kind of nanotech was in dental anesthetic. I suppose in some cases it was found in dental anesthetic. Is that true?

A: Yes.

Q: (Joe) Was that very widespread?

A: No. Experimental. You should be aware that the extent of this type of experimentation is far more than widespread than you can imagine. Correct error of transmission please.

Q: (Joe) "is far more widespread than you can imagine." Is that what you meant to say?

A: Yes.

Q: (Joe) And so, just on that point, are we talking about in foods as well?

A: Yes.

Q: (Joe) In water supplies?

A: Yes.

Q: (Joe) But this is all experimental, right?

A: Yes.

Q: (Joe) So the experimentation is widespread, but it's not widespread in terms of application.

(L) Right.

A: Yes.

Q: (Joe) Okay, so should we not go to the dentist anymore?

A: No!

Q: (Andromeda) Gaby was right! [Laughter]

(Joe) Gaby was recommending non anesthetic dental treatment the other day.

(Niall) Just take the pain! [Laughter]

A: The human body is not without defenses that can be augmented by physiological and psychological means.

Q: (L) So in other words, we could actually…

(Chu) …fight it off.

(L) I mean, if we're healthy and whatever, we can get macrophages to go in there and eat these things up?

A: Close.

Q: (Joe) In the study that was done showing one of these nano objects or nano bots in anesthetic, they used nicotine and it was observed to destroy them. Was that true?

A: Yes. We have often pointed out the benefits of nicotine. Why do you think there was such a concerted campaign to eradicate its use?

Q: (Joe) How does nicotine do that? What is about nicotine?

A: How does mental blocking work?

Q: (L) Mental blocking is a certain attitude of mind, and whatever. And…

(Joe) …information.

A: Produces acetylcholine

Q: (Joe) So nicotine produces acetylcholine, or mental blocking does?

(L) Mental blocking produces acetylcholine?

A: Yes.

Q: (Joe) So we should be asking, how does acetylcholine…

(L) Well, we know that nicotine increases the production of acetylcholine in the brain.

(Joe) Chemically it's very similar to the structure of acetylcholine.

A: Yes.

Q: (Joe) So then the question is, how would acetylcholine destroy physical artifacts like nanobots, in that sense? It's information?

A: Yes.

Q: (Joe) So it's at that level that it's working.

(Gaby) So nanobots act like anticholinergics, like with paralyzing effects…

(L) Yeah. Okay. Have we had enough of that?

(Joe) Did you hear about 23andMe being sold up?

(All) Yeah.

(Joe) Does the fact that we have submitted our saliva to places like 23andMe, pose any risk to us from whatever quarter?

A: No.

Q: (Joe) Good. I was going to shut down my account and instruct them to destroy my saliva.

(L) Well, we can write to them and ask them to destroy our samples, and to destroy any records.

(Andromeda) That'll just take our records suspicious. They'll put us on a special list. [Laughter]

(Scottie) They won't delete it anyway because no one ever deletes any data anymore.

(Andromeda) They'll be like, "Thank you for highlighting yourself!"

(L) Yeah, maybe we should just be quiet. I mean, they've got so many millions of samples, ours can get lost in the shuffle.

(Niall) Did Trump's latest would-be assassin have any help, or was just a Ukrainian looper?

A: Yes.

Q: (L) He had help.

(Niall) I know it.

(Joe) In the terms of information?

A: Yes.

Q: (Niall) So they're still going for it. They want to still take him out, but they're being blocked.

A: Trying while trying to look innocent. Those free will violations are tricky on this scale.

Q: (Joe) Yeah, for sure. And when you're doing something like that and you're trying to make it look innocent, that really restricts your effectiveness.

(L) All right. I'm tired. Do we have anything that's absolutely urgent?

(Joe) Oh, there's research showing that ivermectin may be a toxin, specifically for reproduction.

(L) Is that true, Gaby?

(Gaby) I don't think so. I think that there are worse things for your reproductive health than ivermectin.

(L) Can it be toxic to reproduction?

A: In high doses.

Q: (Joe) So it was just an attempt to smear ivermectin, probably. It's what they always do.

(L) Like they give too little of something to run a test and say it doesn't work, or they give too much and run a test and say it kills everybody.

(Joe) We gave a mouse two kilos of ivermectin and…

(L) All right. If there's anything we need to ask or should have asked what we didn't ask that's essential to our wellbeing or whatever, please consider it asked.

A: Not now! You have enough for now. Explosive revelations and events coming! Goodbye.

Q: (Joe) Well there have been explosive events all over the place.

(Niall) Israel is getting…

(L) Yeah, I don't know if things can get any weirder than they already are. I should not say that! Please, I take it back! [Laughter] It can always get weirder. Do y'all get the feeling that we are living in a really, really weird reality now? I mean, that things are in this huge transition, that there are ethereal things happening and manifesting, and people are not yet acknowledging that that's what they're seeing? And that people are in denial? It's like the craziest thing I've ever seen!

(Andromeda) And people living in different realities all over the place.

(L) Yeah. So do you all get that feeling? I mean, am I not the only one?

[Many attendees raise their hands.]

(Joe) I got that meme of the guy sitting in his living room, and the living room is on fire. And he's saying, "this is normal".

(Niall) This is fine.

(Joe) This is fine. It's like literally the world is blowing up and burning and psychos are off the leash and most of the world seems to be, "Yeah, it's fine!"

(L) I mean, it's like evil is so blatant and so out there and so in everybody's faces…

(Andromeda) With photographic evidence.

(L) Yeah! It's nuts.

END OF SESSION

Thanks to everyone for the session. A couple of months ago, I had two teeth extracted within a month of each other. And both times the dentist warned me not to smoke for at least an hour or two after the tooth extraction. Of course, I did not listen to her, thinking that she does not know the benefits of tobacco.

Hvala svima na sesiji. Prije par mjeseci izvađena su mi dva zuba u razmaku od mjesec dana. I oba puta zubarica me upozorila da ne pušim duhan barem sat ili dva nakon vađenja zuba. Naravno, nisam je poslušao smatrajući da ona ne zna dobrobiti duhana.
 
(L) Are they set up by the Illuminati to be front men and red herrings?
A: Yes.
Q: (L) To keep the heat off the real Illuminati?
A: Yes.
Q: (L) Well, so I guess it's probably pretty useless for us to ask for any names?
A: Yes. [Laughter]
Q: (Niall) But if we name some names, could we get a yes or no?
A: Violation!
So I was thinking maybe a Free Will Violation Shield is in front of souled people preventing direct clairvoyant scans? But my sister went to a palm reader - Ireland or the British Isles, gave him her hand in the tent at the bazaar and he - the psychic, as the placket said on his tent, enumerated surprisingly accurate details about her life. Was it because she gave tacit permission - via instinctive subconscious curiosity, so no free will was violated? As it usually happens with people during a visit to a psychic?
- "I want to go and I find it laughable-embarrassing at the same time?" - So I go in secret so my friends won't know?

During work-hours in 2003 - as she walked by my box - I saw my female colleague's mother sulking after her as a phantom mirage trail - a Castaneda-style apparition - at our big company workplace with tens of dozens of office boxes. I asked her about her mothers height, how she looked - to determine if I saw the truth? She made big eyes and shuddered, but answered yes. I freaked her out for good. That wasn't asking permission for a psychic reading.

Here is Laura remarking in her latest - highly recommended interview:

01:08:17,759 --> 01:08:23,920
[..] years when you know that human beings are instant gratification creatures and that's what you come to[..]
This came to my mind today, while taking a break to rest my eyes outside watching the rain.

Necessary social psychology research - reading lots of videogame reviews - negative mainly - (on Steam) to try to determine what people want, made me conclude:
instant_gratification_creatures.png

A day or two before Christmas, as a child, I dreamed about playing with a nice and elegant white matchbox car. When we - all the children from the families of my grandmother - unpacked our presents together, that exact white car was unboxed. I reached for it - as a 7 year old? - exclaiming in wonderment:
- That's exactly what I dreamed about!
But before me touching it, at least three parents looked at each other and said:
- Um.. that's not yours!
It was the toy car gifted to my cousin.

I doubt all those Illuminati Frontmen psychos - the names of those that were asked about in the session - all have souls. Some of them could be OPs. But since they are human embodied persons, OPs as well must have this same free will violation protection shield, the C's respect.

So because I didn't see that 'dark sinister Lizzie presence' hovering above Dispenza's head to give the heads-up, I consider this clairvoyance read a failure. All I saw was Dispenza's genuine amazement about his healing. I thought about what the Lizzies did to Billy Meier. Maybe they abducted Dispenza, took him to a TDARM-ride, fixed his spine and instilled thoughts into his head that he can heal themselves by assertively imagining a very detailed healing process. Which process - power of mind - could have been fully functioning during the Garden of Eden times, but not nowadays with humanity's fully broken and cut DNA, relegating all that wonderful extra into a ruined, dysfunctional Junk DNA.

So Dispenza's maybe genuinely heartfelt ideas and possible willingness to help people may even be ancient memories - self-treatment healing processes that are no longer possible thanks to Lizzies - but mixed with the usual Orion STS hijack, muddling and lies.

A tragedy really.
 
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Well this is touchy for sure.
What about protecting children with nicotine?
I certainly don’t want to encourage my 11 year old to smoke, but she out of everyone at home is the most sensitive and weak in immune response, I have considered putting a patch on her for may be just an hour a day. Is that crazy?

Has anyone made homemade patches using tobacco? I itch like crazy if I wear a nicotine patch and wonder what else is in them. I was thinking if a pea sized piece of tobacco was dampened a little, dmso on the skin and then covered with some waterproof medical tape that could work?
You can smoke in front of your kid, no problem.
There is a tradition in Portugal where one day children smoke cigarettes.


SALGUEIRO, Portugal — The Epiphany celebrations in the Portuguese village of Vale de Salgueiro feature a tradition that each year causes an outcry among outsiders: Parents encouraging their children, some as young as 5, to smoke cigarettes.

Locals say the practice has been passed down for centuries as part of a celebration of life tied to the Christian Epiphany and the winter solstice — but nobody is sure what it symbolizes or exactly why parents buy the packs of cigarettes for their children and encourage them to take part.

The two-day celebrations, which start Friday and end Saturday with a Mass, include dancing around bonfires, a piper playing music and an elected “king” who distributes plentiful wine and snacks.

The legal age to purchase tobacco in Portugal is 18, but nothing prohibits parents from giving kids cigarettes and Portuguese authorities don’t intervene to stop the practice.

Guilhermina Mateus, a 35-year-old coffee shop owner, cites custom as the reason why she gives her daughter cigarettes.


“I can’t explain why. I don’t see any harm in that because they don’t really smoke, they inhale and immediately exhale, of course,” Mateus said Saturday. “And it’s only on these days, today and tomorrow. They never ask for cigarettes again.”

Jose Ribeirinha, a writer who has published a book on the Vale do Salgueiro festivities, said the roots of the tradition are unknown but may have to do with celebrating the rebirth of nature and human life.

He said the village is in a region that adheres to many traditions dating back to pagan times and that since Roman times, during the winter solstice period villagers here have taken the liberty to do things that would be out of the norm in the rest of the year.


Ribeirinha also believes the relative seclusion of the remote village — 280 miles northeast of the capital Lisbon — has helped keep the tradition alive. He said that the surrounding Tras os Montes region “has always been the furthest from Lisbon, the most ‘forgotten one.’”
Portugal, like many other European countries, has taken steps to reduce smoking, including a partial ban on smoking indoors
.

And here some cute pictures.

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Well...instant satisfaction has been our hook from our beginnings in this school. I don't call it espionage, I call it surveillance when I am weak because in fact it is treason. Treason to our higher selves. Surrender to it or resist. Which one will it be. Some of us are very clear which side we live and fight for and instant satisfaction cuts our breathing line. It is not our friend.
 
I started doing that years ago after reading some studies about it. I cannot smoke, I have a history with asthma and bronchitis and so anything that tickles my lungs are a problem.
I tried nicotine gum and was not satisfied because of the disgusting feeling in my stomach. Now I use nicotine spray, which is not so aggressive towards the digestive tract (just avoid swallowing until it is absorbed). I think it's a better solution than smoking, which introduces a lot of unnecessary chemicals. I also don't want to become addicted to nicotine, but I'm far from it because I use it very rarely.
 
. Maybe they abducted Dispenza, took him to a TDARM-ride, fixed his spine and instilled thoughts into his head that he can heal themselves by assertively imagining a very detailed healing process. Which process - power of mind - could have been fully functioning during the Garden of Eden times, but not nowadays with humanity's fully broken and cut DNA, relegating all that wonderful extra into a ruined, dysfunctional Junk DNA.
Healing by the power of the mind is possible, we all have this power here to do it, I don't know about the spine, but I did it, some time ago, with my toe which was fractured and impossible to put my foot in a shoe, the next morning I had nothing left and I could put my shoe on without problem and without any pain.
 
Well this is touchy for sure.
What about protecting children with nicotine?
I certainly don’t want to encourage my 11 year old to smoke, but she out of everyone at home is the most sensitive and weak in immune response, I have considered putting a patch on her for may be just an hour a day. Is that crazy?

Has anyone made homemade patches using tobacco? I itch like crazy if I wear a nicotine patch and wonder what else is in them. I was thinking if a pea sized piece of tobacco was dampened a little, dmso on the skin and then covered with some waterproof medical tape that could work?

I dunno, I'd hesitate to give a child nicotine without doing more research - which would be hard to find, as I'm guessing there isn't much objective data on child smoking or child use of nicotine.

As far as I know, nicotine is addictive, and giving it to a kid or a baby may mess with their psychological and neurological development. I think one could protect them in other ways, such as good nutrition, passing along knowledge, supplements, exercise, etc. Then let them choose nicotine if they want later in life. Or give them a pack of nice smokes for their 13th birthday or something.

I wouldn't use the DMSO method you mentioned above as the DMSO will also probably pull the waterproof medical tape chemicals into the body, and across the blood brain barrier. Best to use DMSO on the skin and not cover it with anything you don't want in your body until it's dry.
 
Nicotine is not addictive as explained by Dr. Ardis - is anyone addicted to eggplant, the highest nicotine containing food of all the food that contains nicotine?
I think it is the chemicals added to most cigarettes that cause physical addiction, while pure tobacco does not. The habit of smoking could potentially be addiction-like too, kind of like a program. That is if smoking is used to check out and dissociate from reality.
 
I've quit smoking for a few months. I don't actually recommend quitting, but I felt like I've gone through enough that I may as well also go through quitting. I may also have had more sensitive lungs over the past year.

What I've noticed: The ph level or some state of the body is different for smokers. Baking soda is a big help.

It felt like divorce for a few weeks. I do consider it an addiction. But, addiction is not as negative a term to me as to most. We're addicted to living here, aren't we?

I was less patient with people, while I was a smoker, because cigarettes were prioritized over them. There is, however, not as much of a change now as this statement would usually suggest to others.

Ginseng sometimes helps to wake me, but I don't take it often. Hopefully pork has enough choline, and there's also B vitamins. Legumes and nuts are a big negative for me, they throw me into serious depression for no reason. Eggs are ok but they smell.

Vaping hurt my throat when I tried it. Other nicotine alternatives are expensive, and will make me think I should just pick up smoking again, clearly. During winter, that might become something I feel like I must do anyway.
 
Nicotine is not addictive as explained by Dr. Ardis - is anyone addicted to eggplant, the highest nicotine containing food of all the food that contains nicotine? Again, begin at 1:17:00 for a full explanation:


I base my comments on years of smoking a lot of organic tobacco, then reducing the amount significantly. Let's just say that the effect on me was quite unpleasant. I think it's addictive, though not in the way the medical establishment suggests - after all, it changes the brain chemistry. If anyone here who smokes wants to test the hypothesis, trying stopping for a while and see what happens. It's probably different for everyone.

About eggplant, seems it's an apples-and-oranges comparison to me, or the logical fallacy of false equivalence. They both may have nicotine, but that doesn't necessarily make them comparable. Different method of intake, different chemical composition, different daily amounts, so my guess is that the result is in different physiological changes. So yeah, I don't really buy that.

This study below suggests that yes, nicotine is addictive - not the additives in tobacco, but nicotine itself - and describes the various biological pathways that nicotine affects. To my very untrained eye, it looks like it hits the dopamine pathway pretty hard, and chemical dopamine withdrawal is no joke.


Many other investigators had also provided even more ideas as about action of nicotine in brain. The production of nicotine central effect is through nAChRs. The cholinergic receptors are one of the largest receptors and contain numerous elements identified as subunits. Nicotinic receptors consist of XII subunits which participate in autonomic communication [29]. The nicotinic receptors located in brain are diverse gated-ion channels and mainly constitute of 5 subunits. Diverse association of receptors makes its different combinations, which differ in conditions of affinity and confined inside the brain. The b subunit had been newly concerned for showing addictive property of nicotine [30]. The maximum sensitivity by nicotine is on alpha 4-beta 2 subunit arrangement. By means of extremely complicated bioengineering instrumentation, a new strain of mice was generated and the beta 2 subunit which was responsible for addictive property was removed. These mice were called “knockout” mice. Knockout mice were not able to create b subunit due to which mice was not showing nicotine self administration property [31].

[...]


Nicotine is a psychoactive substance easily available in all corners of the world. Nicotine as whole serve as a major enforcer in the form of tobacco, cigarettes etc. in the human beings. It shows a complex mechanism involving neuronal system in the brain. Various studies have shown that nicotine increases the activity of dopaminergic system, its release leading to the craving and withdrawal effect. Further the study of nicotine on different brain system such as cholinergic, serotonergic, GABAergic and noradrenergic may also be involved in evoking pleasurable effect of nicotine. Molecular mechanism of nicotine addiction is still a challenging task for the researchers as so many brain systems are involved in it. The combination of molecular modern techniques with behavioral analysis may provide a exact mechanism and knowledge about nicotine addiction.

This study looks like it corroborates what was mentioned in the first study regarding GMO mice.


Nicotine, the major reinforcing component of tobacco smoke, acts in the brain through the neuronal nicotinic acetylcholine receptors (nAChRs). The nAChRs are allosterically regulated, ligand-gated ion channels consisting of five membrane-spanning subunits. Twelve mammalian α subunits (α2-α10) and three β subunits (β2-β4) have been cloned. The predominant nAChR subtypes in mammalian brain are those containing α4 and β2 subunits (denoted as α4β2* nAChRs). The α4β2* nAChRs mediate many behaviors related to nicotine addiction and are the primary targets for currently approved smoking cessation agents. Considering the large number of nAChR subunits in the brain, it is likely that nAChRs containing subunits in addition to α4 and β2 also play a role in tobacco smoking. Indeed, genetic variation in the CHRNA5-CHRNA3-CHRNB4 gene cluster, encoding the α5, α3, and β4 nAChR subunits, respectively, has been shown to increase vulnerability to tobacco dependence and smoking-associated diseases including lung cancer. Moreover, mice, in which expression of α5 or β4 subunits has been genetically modified, have profoundly altered patterns of nicotine consumption. In addition to the reinforcing properties of nicotine, the effects of nicotine on appetite, attention, and mood are also thought to contribute to establishment and maintenance of the tobacco smoking habit. Here, we review recent insights into the behavioral actions of nicotine, and the nAChR subtypes involved, which likely contribute to the development of tobacco dependence in smokers.

This study also mentions those poor rodents. Probably a better study than the other two, more well-rounded and easier to read. Though not much effort is made to distinguish normal smoking (with all its associated chemicals) from nicotine intake alone. I suppose one could also find a study comparing addictiveness of industrial smokes vs. healthy ones. But yeah, based on personal experience and these articles, I'm willing to claim that I think nicotine is addictive.

This article focuses on nicotine as a determinant of addiction to tobacco and the pharmacologic effects of nicotine that sustain cigarette smoking. Tobacco addiction (like all drug addictions) involves the interplay of pharmacology, learned or conditioned factors, genetics, and social and environmental factors (including tobacco product design and marketing)4 (Fig. 1).

NICOTINIC ACETYLCHOLINE RECEPTORS​

Inhalation of smoke from a cigarette distills nicotine from the tobacco in the cigarette. Smoke particles carry the nicotine into the lungs, where it is rapidly absorbed into the pulmonary venous circulation. The nicotine then enters the arterial circulation and moves quickly from the lungs to the brain, where it binds to nicotinic cholinergic receptors (ligand-gated ion channels that normally bind acetylcholine). The binding of nicotine at the interface between two subunits of the receptor opens the channel, thereby allowing the entry of sodium or calcium.5 The entry of these cations into the cell further activates voltage-dependent calcium channels, allowing more calcium to enter. One of the effects of the entry of calcium into a neuron is the release of neurotransmitters.

The nicotinic cholinergic receptor consists of five subunits.6 The mammalian brain expresses nine α subunits (α2 through α10) and three β subunits (β2 through β4). The most abundant receptors are α4β2, α3β4, and α7, the latter of which are homomeric. The α4β2* receptor (the asterisk indicates that other subunits may be present in this receptor) is the principal mediator of nicotine dependence. In mice, disruption of the β2 subunit gene eliminates the behavioral effects of nicotine; reinserting the gene into the ventral tegmental area restores behavioral responses to nicotine.7,8 The α4 subunit is an important determinant of sensitivity to nicotine. A mutation affecting a single nucleotide in the pore-forming region of the mouse receptor gene makes it hypersensitive to the effects of nicotine.9 Other subunits can form functional receptors. The presence of an α5 subunit combined with α4β2 increases calcium conductance seven times; α5 gene variants also alter nicotine responsiveness in cultured human cells.10,11 The α3β4 subtype probably mediates the cardiovascular effects of nicotine.12 The α7 homomeric receptors are involved in rapid synaptic transmission and long-term potentiation to dopaminergic neurons at excitatory inputs and have a role in learning and sensory gating.1316

NICOTINE AND NEUROTRANSMITTER RELEASE​

Stimulation of nicotinic cholinergic receptors releases a variety of neurotransmitters in the brain.5,17 One of them, dopamine, signals a pleasurable experience and is critical for the reinforcing effects (effects that promote self-administration) of nicotine and other drugs of abuse, as well as for compelling drives such as eating.18 Experimentally induced lesions in dopamine-releasing neurons prevent self-administration of nicotine in rats. Nicotine releases dopamine in the mesolimbic area, the corpus striatum, and the frontal cortex (Fig. 2). The dopaminergic neurons in the ventral tegmental area of the midbrain and in the shell of the nucleus accumbens are critical in drug-induced reward (both regions have a role in perceptions of pleasure and reward).6,18

Nicotine also augments both glutamate release, which facilitates the release of dopamine, and γ-aminobutyric acid (GABA) release, which inhibits dopamine release.15,16 With long-term exposure to nicotine, some nicotinic cholinergic receptors become desensitized but some do not. As a result, GABA-mediated inhibitory tone diminishes while glutamate-mediated excitation persists, thereby increasing excitation of dopaminergic neurons and enhancing responsiveness to nicotine.

A measure of the function of the reward system in rats is the threshold for electrical self-stimulation in the medial forebrain: a lower threshold indicates increased responsiveness to rewarding stimuli. Nicotine lowers the threshold for reward, an effect that can last for more than 30 days.19 It also increases activity in the prefrontal cortex, thalamus, and visual system, reflecting activation of corticobasal ganglia–thalamic brain circuits (part of the reward network), and releases dopamine in the striatum.20 Other neurotransmitters that may be involved in nicotine addiction are the hypocretins, neuropeptides produced in the lateral hypothalamus that regulate the stimulatory effects of nicotine on reward centers in the brain and modulate self-administration of nicotine in rodents.21

MONAMINE OXIDASE​

Constituents of cigarette smoke other than nicotine contribute to nicotine addiction. Monoamine oxidases, enzymes located in catecholaminergic and other neurons, catalyze the metabolism of dopamine, norepinephrine, and serotonin. Condensation products of acetaldehyde in cigarette smoke with biogenic amines inhibit the activity of monoamine oxidase type A and monoamine oxidase type B, and there is evidence that inhibition of monoamine oxidase contributes to the addictiveness of smoking by reducing the metabolism of dopamine.22,23

NEUROADAPTATION​

With repeated exposure to nicotine, neuroadaptation (tolerance) to some of the effects of nicotine develops.24 As neuroadaptation develops, the number of binding sites on the nicotinic cholinergic receptors in the brain increases, probably in response to nicotine-mediated desensitization of receptors.25 Desensitization — ligand-induced closure and unresponsiveness of the receptor — is believed to play a role in tolerance and dependence: the symptoms of craving and withdrawal begin in smokers when desensitized α4 β2* nicotinic cholinergic receptors become responsive during periods of abstinence, such as nighttime sleep.26 Nicotine binding of these receptors during smoking alleviates craving and withdrawal.
Cigarette smoking in amounts that are typical for daily smokers maintains near-complete saturation — and thus desensitization — of the α4 β2* nicotinic cholinergic receptors.27 Thus, smokers are probably attempting to avoid withdrawal symptoms when maintaining a desensitized state. By sustaining sufficient levels of plasma nicotine to prevent withdrawal symptoms, they also derive rewarding effects from the conditioned reinforcements associated with smoking, such as the taste and feel of smoke.28

Nicotine withdrawal causes anxiety and stress, both of which are powerful incentives to take up smoking again.29 The negative affect that typifies the response to nicotine withdrawal probably results in part from a cascade of events involving increased levels of extrahypothalamic corticotropin-releasing factor (CRF) and increased binding of CRF to corticotropin-releasing factor 1 (CRF1) receptors in the brain, thereby activating the CRF–CRF1 receptor system, which mediates responses to stress. In rats, anxiety-like behavior and the release of CRF in the central nucleus of the amygdala occur during nicotine withdrawal.30 CRF causes anxiety, whereas the pharmacologic blockade of CRF1 receptors inhibits the anxiogenic effects of nicotine withdrawal. The blockade of CRF1 receptors also prevents the increase in self-administration of nicotine that occurs during abstinence from forced nicotine administration in rats. Thus, both underactivity of the dopaminergic system and activation of the CRF–CRF1 receptor system contribute to the symptoms of nicotine withdrawal that often precipitate relapse.


PSYCHOACTIVE EFFECTS OF NICOTINE​

Nicotine induces pleasure and reduces stress and anxiety. Smokers use it to modulate levels of arousal and to control mood. Smoking improves concentration, reaction time, and performance of certain tasks. Relief from withdrawal symptoms is probably the primary reason for this enhanced performance and heightened mood.31 Cessation of smoking causes the emergence of withdrawal symptoms: irritability, depressed mood, restlessness, and anxiety.32 The intensity of these mood disturbances is similar to that found in psychiatric outpatients.33 Anhedonia — the feeling that there is little pleasure in life — can also occur with withdrawal from nicotine, and from other drugs of abuse.34

The basis of nicotine addiction is a combination of positive reinforcements, including enhancement of mood and avoidance of withdrawal symptoms (Fig. 3).35 In addition, conditioning has an important role in the development of tobacco addiction.

CONDITIONED BEHAVIOR​

When a person who is addicted to nicotine stops smoking, the urge to resume is recurrent and persists long after withdrawal symptoms dissipate. With regular smoking, the smoker comes to associate specific moods, situations, or environmental factors — smoking-related cues — with the rewarding effects of nicotine. Typically, these cues trigger relapse.
The association between such cues and the anticipated effects of nicotine, and the resulting urge to use nicotine, constitute a form of conditioning. Studies in animals show that nicotine exposure causes changes in the protein expression of brain cells and in their synaptic connections — a process termed neural plasticity — which underlie conditioning.36,37 Nicotine also enhances behavioral responses to conditioned stimuli, which may contribute to compulsive smoking.38 Furthermore, studies in nicotine-dependent rats show that conditioned stimuli associated with nicotine withdrawal increase the magnitude of withdrawal through an elevation of the brain’s reward threshold.39 Thus, cues associated with nicotine withdrawal can decrease the function of the brain’s reward systems.

The desire to smoke is maintained, in part, by such conditioning. Smokers usually take a cigarette after a meal, with a cup of coffee or an alcoholic drink, or with friends who smoke. When repeated many times, such situations become a powerful cue for the urge to smoke. Aspects of smoking itself — the manipulation of smoking materials, or the taste, smell, or feel of smoke in the throat — also become associated with the pleasurable effects of smoking.40,41 Even unpleasant moods can become conditioned cues for smoking: a smoker may learn that not having a cigarette provokes irritability and that smoking one provides relief. After repeated experiences like this, a smoker can sense irritability from any source as a cue for smoking. Functional imaging studies have shown that exposure to drug-associated cues activates cortical regions of the brain, including the insula (a structure in the cortex associated with certain basic emotions). Smokers who sustain damage to the insula (e.g., brain trauma) are more likely to quit smoking soon after the injury, and to remain abstinent, and are less likely to have conscious urges to smoke than smokers with brain injury that does not affect the insula.42

THE TOBACCO ADDICTION CYCLE​

Smoking is a highly efficient form of drug administration. Inhaled nicotine enters the circulation rapidly through the lungs and moves into the brain within seconds. Rapid rates of absorption and entry into the brain cause a strongly felt “rush” and reinforce the effects of the drug. In animals, rapid administration of nicotine potentiates locomotor sensitization, which is linked to reward, and neuroplastic changes in the brain.43 The smoking process also provides rapid reinforcement and allows for precise dosing, making it possible for a smoker to obtain desired effects without toxicity. Unlike cigarettes, nicotine medications marketed to promote smoking cessation deliver nicotine slowly, and the risk of abuse is low.44 In addition to delivering nicotine to the brain quickly, cigarettes have been designed with additives and engineering features to enhance its addictiveness.45

There is considerable peak-to-trough oscillation in blood levels of nicotine from cigarette to cigarette. Nevertheless, it accumulates in the body over the course of 6 to 9 hours of regular smoking and results in 24 hours of exposure. Arteriovenous differences in nicotine concentrations during cigarette smoking are substantial, with arterial levels up to 10 times as high as venous levels.46 The persistence of nicotine in the brain throughout the day and night changes the structure and function of nicotinic receptors, stimulating intracellular processes of neuroadaptation.

The pharmacologic basis of nicotine addiction is thus a combination of positive reinforcements, such as enhancement of mood and mental or physical functioning, and avoidance of withdrawal symptoms when nicotine is not available. Figure 4 shows a typical daily smoking cycle.47

Smokers tend to take in the same amount of nicotine from day to day to achieve the desired effects. They adjust their smoking behavior to compensate for changes in the availability of nicotine (e.g., when switching from regular to low-yield cigarettes) to regulate the body’s level of nicotine.48 Light smokers (those who smoke ≤5 cigarettes per day) and occasional smokers smoke primarily for the positive reinforcing effects of nicotine and have minimal or no withdrawal symptoms.49 They smoke primarily in association with particular activities (after eating a meal or while drinking alcohol), and are less likely to smoke in response to negative affect. Although withdrawal symptoms may not be prominent, many light and occasional smokers have difficulty quitting. Some of them have a high level of dependence, but with pharmacodynamics that differ from those in heavier smokers.

GENETICS OF NICOTINE ADDICTION​

Studies in twins have shown a high degree of heritability of cigarette smoking (≥50%), including the level of dependence and the number of cigarettes smoked daily.50 These studies have also revealed the heritability of the particular symptoms that occur when a smoker stops smoking.51

Numerous attempts have been made to identify genes underlying nicotine addiction.50 Such studies are problematic because multiple genes and environmental factors determine complex behavior, and the many different dependence phenotypes may have different genetic underpinnings. Candidate genes coding for nicotine-receptor subtypes, dopamine receptors and dopamine transporters, GABA receptors, opiate and cannabinoid receptors, and other types of receptors have been associated with different aspects of smoking behavior.52 Subsequent research, however, has not replicated many of the initial findings.

Recent genomewide association studies point to several promising genetic determinants of nicotine dependence. Bierut et al. compared the genomes of smokers who became dependent on nicotine with the genomes of smokers who did not.53 Signals from genomewide association studies guided a second-phase candidate-gene association study by Saccone et al. in which several strong genetic associations were uncovered.54 Most prominent were genes within the α5/α3/β4 nicotinic cholinergic receptor gene complex on chromosome 15. This and other genomewide association studies of tobacco addiction have also identified genes affecting cell adhesion and extracellular matrix molecules, which are common among various addictions. These findings are consistent with the idea that neural plasticity and learning are key determinants of individual differences in vulnerability to nicotine dependence and other drug addictions.55

Variants associated with nicotine dependence in the α5/α3/β4 gene region (chromosome 15, 15q25) also have a significant association with the number of cigarettes smoked per day, plasma levels of cotinine (a biomarker of nicotine intake), urine levels of tobacco-smoke carcinogens, and the risks of smoking-related diseases.11,5662 The mechanisms of the associations between these variants and disease are probably related to the level of dependence and therefore the level of intake of tobacco-smoke toxins; however, nicotinic cholinergic receptors also modulate inflammatory responses, angiogenesis, and apoptosis, and thus account for additional mechanisms through which nicotine could affect the risk of disease.63

VULNERABILITY TO ADDICTION​

Tobacco use typically begins in childhood or adolescence — 80% of smokers begin smoking by 18 years of age.64 Although two thirds of young people try cigarette smoking, only 20 to 25% of them become dependent daily smokers, usually as adults.65,66 Risk factors for smoking in childhood or adolescence include peer and parental influences, behavioral problems (e.g., poor school performance), personality characteristics (rebelliousness, risk taking, depression, and anxiety), and genetic influences.64

The risk of dependence increases when smoking begins early.64 Studies of the developing brain in animals suggest that nicotine can induce permanent changes that lead to addiction. Brain changes in adolescent rats exposed to nicotine are greater than those in exposed adult rats. Adolescent rats that have been exposed to nicotine have higher rates of nicotine self-administration as adults, which is consistent with the idea that early exposure to nicotine increases the severity of dependence.67,68

Tobacco addiction is highly prevalent among persons with mental illness or substance-abuse disorders.69,70 The mechanisms of this association are likely to include a shared genetic predisposition, the capacity of nicotine to alleviate some psychiatric symptoms, and the inhibitory effects of tobacco smoke on monoamine oxidase.23,71,72

Smoking behavior in women is more strongly influenced by conditioned cues and negative affect; men are more likely to smoke in response to pharmacologic cues, regulating their intake of nicotine more precisely than women.73 On average, women metabolize nicotine more quickly than men,74 which may contribute to their increased susceptibility to nicotine addiction and may help to explain why, among smokers, it is more difficult for women to quit.75

Insofar as smokers regulate their intake of nicotine to maintain particular levels throughout the day, those who metabolize nicotine rapidly take in more cigarette smoke per day than those who metabolize nicotine slowly. Nicotine is metabolized to cotinine primarily by the liver enzyme CYP2A6.76 Persons with a genetic basis for slow metabolism (those with variant CYP2A6 genes that are associated with reduced enzyme activity) smoke fewer cigarettes daily than persons with faster metabolism.77 The observation that the fraction of smokers with genetically slow metabolism in the population of smokers decreases with the increasing age of the cohort of smokers suggests that those with slow metabolism are more likely to quit than those with faster metabolism. Rapid metabolism of nicotine is associated with more severe withdrawal symptoms and a lower probability of success in quitting during nicotine-patch treatment.78,79

CONCLUSIONS​

Nicotine sustains tobacco addiction, a major cause of disability and premature death, by acting on nicotinic cholinergic receptors in the brain to trigger the release of dopamine and other neurotransmitters. Release of dopamine, glutamate, and GABA is particularly important in the development of nicotine dependence, and CRF may play a key role in withdrawal. Neuroadaptation and tolerance involve changes in nicotinic receptors and neural plasticity. Nicotine addiction occurs when smokers come to rely on smoking to modulate mood and arousal, relieve withdrawal symptoms, or both. Light or occasional smokers smoke mainly for positive reinforcement in specific situations. Genetic studies indicate that nicotinic receptor subtypes and the genes involved in neuroplasticity and learning play a part in the development of dependence. People with psychiatric or substance-abuse disorders, who account for a large proportion of current smokers, have an increased susceptibility to tobacco addiction. Nicotine is metabolized primarily by the enzyme CYP2A6, and variation in the rate of nicotine metabolism contributes to differences in vulnerability to tobacco dependence and the response to smoking-cessation treatment. An increased understanding of the mechanisms of nicotine addiction has led to the development of novel medications (e.g., varenicline) that act on specific nicotinic receptor subtypes.80 The development of other drugs that act on nicotinic receptors and other mediators of nicotine addiction is likely to further enhance the effectiveness of smoking-cessation pharmacotherapy.
 
I have wondered, if a person is deficient in something, and then finds that adding that something makes them feel better, is this an addiction? When stopping that something makes them feel worse and they want to go back to using that something? Is this addiction, or just a normal response to a deficiency of something needed?

To make the question very simple, are people "addicted" to vitamin C? Or other vitamins? Is scurvy just a withdrawal effect of escaping vitamin C addiction? Or for the B vitamins, beri-beri or rickets? How about goiter after stopping an "iodine addiction"?
 
(L) All right. Now we want to ask about these so-called nanobots that are being seen from the Pfizer vaxx, incubated in distilled water for various days of… okay, What are these things?

A: Antennae for future use.

To connect a few dots, this most certainly relates to, "strange waves":

(L) Is it in the vaccine, or is it something that accumulates from within the body itself?

A: Body.

Q: (L) Is there something psychic about it?

A: Yes

Q: (L) So it's not purely a physiological reaction?

A: No. Nano particles act as antennae for strange waves which then send signals to the body inducing modification on the next level of physicality.

Q:
(PoB) What are strange waves?

(Pierre) We have to assume that in the next level of physicality, entities are magnetic.

And I'd like to emphasize, per the Cs, that one of the future uses of these nano-antennae is when we make the jump to the next level of physicality. So like Joe said, super super high tech.

(L) What do you mean by 'strange waves'?

A: Nothing in 3D is relatable.

Q: (L) So it's like a 4D wave... Are you saying this is like a 4D wave that, by way of these nanoparticles, is able to cross the border between 4D and 3D?

A: Yes

Q: (Joe) So are they saying that the magnetism is ultimately like paraphysical in a sense? The weird thing is how any function in your body can produce such a strong magnetism from a tiny little... 1 mL of whatever...

A: There is much about the body that is still unknown.

Q: (Joe) So there are things that the body can do or produce that can be switched on by these strange waves that are received by nanoparticles in the vaccine.

A: DNA can be upregulated in specific regions and perform specialized functions.

Q: (Andromeda) What's the difference between the people this works on and the people that it doesn't?

A: Usually DNA damage.

Which connects to Folic Acid (vitamin B9, essential for DNA repair):

(L) Both vaccinated and people who just had COVID that they were… lacking.

(Gaby) Bifidobacteria.

(L) Bifidobacteria in their intestines that somehow COVID killed it all off.

(Gaby) And that creates a folic acid deficiency that I've been seeing since the COVID. You know, everybody's deficient in folic acid...

(L) Folic acid deficiency.

(Joe) As a result of good bacterial die-off.

(Andromeda) It helps produce the folic acid. And that's hard to replace with just regular probiotics.

(L) Yeah, but if the COVID causes it and practically everybody's had it, are there people who can have it and it doesn't destroy all their bifidobacteria?

A: Yes but it is largely destructive in that way.

So take your vitamins and light em up!
 

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