Legalize pot? An Aura Reading perspective
October 21st, 2009 by Rose RosetreeHow do you respond, as demands to legalize pot become increasingly insistent? Politically, I can see arguments pro and con.
At this point, I’m leaning toward letting people do to themselves what they like, allowing valuable prison cells to be populated by those who are socially dangerous. As long as pot smokers don’t inflict their fumes on others, why should their personal choice be anyone else’s business?
Keep in mind however, that today’s tales of train conductors smashing their vehicles while chatting on cellphone (which happened recently here in the D.C. subways) are nothing compared to what we may find with pot legalized. What will happen when people who feel they must be distracted at all costs, when they can legally swap the electronic lovey for dilated pupils?
But the really important part of the story not being discussed is what pot actually does to a person on the level of causation rather than surface, the level of auras.
- Today I read in the Washington Post about someone who uses marijuana to ease her asthma.
- In other reporting, via NPR, I’ve heard that, in one city, medical marijuana outlets outnumber the Starbucks.
There are other ways to ease severe pain and asthma. Hypnosis, for instance, has a great track record for helping people to use the power of the subconscious mind to ease pain. I do fear that bringing in the approval of doctors adds to the idea that marijuana is just an innocuous substance, probably no worse than alcohol or drugs.
And surely one way to pick a pothead out of a crowd is to ask this simple question: “Do you think that regular tobacco cigarettes are more dangerous than reefer?”
In the throes of a pot addiction, a formerly sensible person can turn sanctimonious purist. “I don’t sully myself with coffee or cigarettes.” To me, that shows the person has no clue about the level of auras and what pot does, beyond the surface value of life.
As an Aura Reader it would be really smart to add perspective to anyone you know who suffers from the myth that pot is a mildly amusing, non-addictive, “healthy” way to relax.
So what does pot do, from the perspective of Aura Reading?
Some consequences happen to everyone, right from the very first puff. Long-term consequences are more personal. Think of the fault lines of a personality exposed to shaking and quaking high on the Richter Scale.
Here I want to summarize the universal dynamic I’ve found, reading auras of people on pot. Mostly this has happened in sessions of Aura Reading Research where my client has me read the aura of a spouse with a pot addiction. I’ve been able to read in detail what happens to many chakra databanks now, also compare how that loved one has changed.
That research is heartbreaking every time. Because here is the common denominator:
Usually as human beings, we identify with earth life. We feel a part of life here, and our perception shows us the spectrum of human experience: Sight, sound, taste, etc.
We treat people and experiences as “real.” This helps us to be effective in our life, to treat loved ones as though they matter, and to evolve spiritually.
Pot gives a person access to perception at a mid-range astral level.
- This higher vibration is available to angels, spirit guides, ancestors, etc.
- It is available for perception in life to people like you and me, without any pot whatsoever, by doing techniques of Aura Reading and Skilled Empath Merge.
- It is available for inner perception through quality techniques of meditation, contemplation, etc.
Giving the system an artificial, chemical boost into this level will make a person feel high. However:
The chemical pathways used to create the artificial high puts deposits into the system at the level of auras, what I call “STUFF.” That will persist unless removed purposely. It won’t just wear off over time. And this STUFF deadens perception of life when someone comes back to the regular human level.
Energy Release Regression Therapy is one way to do it. In Kundalini Yoga, there are specific techniques that must be practiced for long periods of time in order to start removing the STUFF from marijuana use.
When you do meditation or Aura Reading, you expand your consciousness in a way that contributes to long-term spiritual evolution.
By contrast, pot or other drugs will slow down spiritual evolution.
And there’s more. (What you wouldn’t hear in a pot infomercial)
Furthermore, long-term pot use causes the smoker to feel superior, developing primary loyalty to other potheads. Allegiance is moving to the astral level, rather than the human level. And this isn’t merely a philosophical problem but an neuro-physiological and aura-level problem.
When you have a human body, you have no membership card to live only at the astral level. Pot creates detachment of perception, like a slow poison.
Depending on the smoker, patterns of STUFF will develop that bring on problems like impotence. Doing Aura Reading Research with one client, Gladys, I found that her husband Joe now found it “too much work” to get an erection. He’d rather fantisize about sex while high.
Gladys confirmed that her husband had indeed become impotent.
We could have 20 posts here, each devoted to a human problem caused by the shift-in-allegiance that happens from smoking pot. If you know a pothead, you don’t need to read those posts. You live the tragedy.
Problems for empaths who live with potheads
Even non-empaths have heard the term “contact high.” When you are an empath, and not yet skilled, there will be frequent Unskilled Empath Merges where you move in and out of other people’s auras with your consciousness.
At this blog, and at my website for empaths now under construction — www.empoweredempath.com — you’ll learn in detail how STUFF from others can enter your aura before you are skilled. And how I can definitely teach you how to use your consciousness to become a fully skilled empath. That makes life better in so many ways!
Otherwise, here is the bottom line: Even if you had no other motivation for becoming a skilled empath, you would be wise to become one if you live with a pothead. Otherwise you will be taking on many pothead problems, even without lighting up.
And whether or not marijuana ever becomes legal, with the way empath gifts work, the transfer of STUFF to your aura will be inevitable. Don’t let someone else’s choice to evolve slowly become contagious for you!
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As someone who spends most of her time with college kids, you can imagine how often I hear people going off about how “harmless” pot is. It seems a lot of the time to just be a line they’ve been fed and love to believe, because anyone who’s smoked pot knows that it’s doing SOMETHING to you. It’s like everyone knows deep down that it’s harmful, but they’re all just excited that they’re getting away with it, and that there actually seems to be widespread approval for pot smoking. They’re also daring you to say something against pot, because wow, what a goody-two-shoes conservative evil right-winger you must be if you don’t think pot is a miracle drug.
I had a friend this summer who is a major pothead. She said something to me once about wanting to have a conversation with me about my spiritual ideas. She told me that the things she had heard me talk about were similar to things her pothead druggie friends would mention when they were high, except that they made no sense and were whacked out of their skulls. We never had the conversation, but I thought it was interesting that she said that.
Sure when you’re high you sometimes get that feeling of understanding everything, infinite knowledge, everything making sense. But then it goes away, and there are consequences. And apparently, you can’t bring that wisdom back with you into real life when you get it through chemical means.
Nowadays when I see someone high or drunk, I just think “I am SO GLAD I don’t do that anymore!!!” And I really really am. Though I should definitely release some related frozen blocks, ick!
PS – how on earth does marijuana help someone’s asthma??? Does it sound like her problem is more with anxiety than something purely physical?
I am also super curious about what alcohol does to an aura compared with other drugs. It’s obviously a less vivid experience – I guess it’s more about picking stuff up from other people at this level, than moving into an astral plane or anything like that?
I haven’t had a drink for three years. This summer, I had a sip of a friend’s chardonnay “kir” because it’s a local speciality where I’m living in Dijon, France. I guess my sip was a little too big because a second later I could feel that buzzy feeling… and I absolutely HATED it. It was like my consciousness was leaking out of my head! Drinking must make empath’s extreeeemely vulnerable. I just sat there for thirty seconds telling myself (silently, of course, haha) to “get back in here!!”
JORDAN, these are great comments. Thanks so much.
I would love to do a blog post about someone, using a normal photo and then using a photo when the same person is drunk.
Would any of you Blog-Buddies like to supply a couple of URLs with photo links to a celebrity of interest? One famous example might be Mel Gibson, who apparently has had his DUI conviction overturned and removed from the record.
I will gladly choose one set of photos from those sent in!
What I’m doing right now is packing away for the one-month trip to Japan. It starts in less than a week….
Ms. Rosetree,
There are often times that I find myself scouring the web in search of a higher perspective on cannabis abstinence, and in this article I have come closer to finding it than from what I’ve seen by any other author.
What is most interesting, to me, is that the experience of using the drug described here serves to make the substance seem more inviting and respectable than any description ever has before.
I might be reading between the lines a little heavily, but with the warnings of certain doom left out all I see is the most righteous guide to using marijuana effectively that’s yet to come to my attention.
These words are helping me to understand how best to explain to people what the marijuana they use is allowing them to do for themselves, and also serves to cast the experience I’ve had with being encouraged to seek it out as a medicine.
Thank you for the opportunity to broaden horizons.
- Seth
Asthma is one thing, cancer and MS are something else again. Narcotics simply DON’T get to the level a person needs, to get relief from these. I suggest you read Montel Williams’ “Climbing Higher,” which details his struggles with MS. “Climbing Higher” in this case does not refer to “getting high” — it’s a reference to mountains, as it’s the sequel to his first book “Mountain, Get Out of My Way.”
ROSANNA, good to have you commenting here.
I do want to clarify my position, that any relief from narcotics comes with a heavy price. Whether the illness is asthma or anything else!
Pot brings STUFF into your aura and, sooner or later, you will need to release it. Moreover, as long as you have that STUFF, your quality of life will be diminished, and you’re at risk for becoming addicted.
Alternatives to pot are available. HYPNOSIS is an excellent one. There are others. Personally, I would help clients with HYPNOSIS as part of ENERGY RELEASE REGRESSION THERAPY.
When doctors today prescribe medical marijuana, they have no clue about the harm it does at subtler levels of life. When doctors can read auras in depth and detail, they’ll appreciate these consequences.
You know, back in the day, Rosanna, my mother was described morphine by her family physician. She used to get severe cramps during her periods. And, back then, doctors prescribed morphine routinely for pain relief. You know, as many are prescribing marijuana today.
If, later on, it became known that morphine was seriously addictive and damaging, oops! Doctors know a lot and work hard to help people, but they don’t know everything. All too often, people become guinea pigs for experiments that bring serious harm.
I haven’t read Montel’s book but I do wish him well in his struggles with M.S.
All your perspectives are fascinating. It’s very helpful too, as a lot of my life is currently lived in paradoxes of spiritual healing and personal challenges with health science and autism spectrum disorders.
One of my most powerful and beloved healing modalities is plant medicine. This has been part of me since I was a child. Marijuana is definitely a plant and can be a valuable medicine if used correctly. Plant medicines in their purer forms are almost always self-limiting in terms of addiction. In other words, most of the few plants that are biologically addictive also make you feel pretty bad in some specific way. Opium is a good example of that. Tendencies to addiction are generally caused by a fine mix of nervous system imbalances, behavioral entrainment, cultural standards, and perhaps most of all, an intense desire to feel better. This is where a healer can really help a person sort these issues out so the best approach is chosen for the individual.
The pragmatic view that citizens and governments have more urgent work at hand than criminalizing pot users and that removing marijuana profits from the black market economy of hard drugs, weapons, and human trafficking could improve social conditions rapidly is appealing to me. Governments are beginning to find legalization appealing because they need the crime fighting funds for other things and would are desperate for new tax revenues.
The article at the URL below tipped the scales for me on the issue of legalization, along with my bias as a plant medicine healer, and awareness of the challenges some of us face in helping children with neurodevelopmental disorders, such as autism.
http://www.theautismnews.com/2009/10/12/why-i-give-my-9-year-old-pot/
There are a lot of ways to look at things, but as the article reminds us, “First do no harm.” Then, with whole heart, wisdom, and common sense, healing comes. If someone’s healing path is first marked by a relatively benign plant directly from Nature, pay attention.
AIMED, it’s great to hear your perspective. And thanks for the link.
I must say, however, that if you were to pursue aura reading with as much interest and care as you have pursued plants, I very much doubt that you would consider marijuana to be a “relatively benign” plant.
Only on the surface value of life is it benign. On the level of auras, it is nothing less than a poison.
This just in from a Blog-Buddy: Pothead gives himself heart attack after this speech on youtube:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2h0rcUS4bSk
“Sam” watched so you don’t have to. Apparently, Jack Herer goes up on stage to talk about how benign marijuana is, working himself up into such a rage that he’s been in the hospital unable to speak ever since.
Sam concludes, “I doubt that the weight of any of this is lost on you.”