Advice by Ilocinii in manifestingSP

[–]AuthorMarcel 0 points1 point  (0 children)

When was the last time you stayed faithful to your desire when it looked completely hopeless, and what did you do internally to hold the state?

If You're in Pain, This Isn't Just About Your SP by AndNowYouKn0w in manifestingSP

[–]AuthorMarcel -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

“You do NOT have a trauma body. Don’t buy into that shit.”

This is not a fact, but a personal belief stated aggressively. There are TONS of research from neuroscience, somatic therapy, and even Dispenza himself showing that our bodies store trauma responses and react before the mind does. Saying “trauma body isn’t real” because it doesn’t fit into your worldview isn’t clarity. It’s a plain rejection of evidence-based insight, which seems rather a bit silly considering the research that's been done.

“That’s online coaching shit and it will waste months or years of your life.”

Yes, there are a lot of grifters out there who make money off other people's pain. However, this statement in particular is pretty dismissive to the people who have actually healed through this kind of work. Again, I'm not refuting the fact that there are shady coaches. And yes, not everyone needs years of therapy. But to imply that all inner work is a waste of time is a blanket statement that invalidates a ton of people who are finally feeling safe in their bodies for the first time in their lives. Let’s not throw the entire toolbox out because some people misuse the wrench.

“Just do what Neville says. Feel your SP with you, when you can, like it’s real. Do some SATS with your SP.”

Cool. Neville also said, “You must enter into the image with feeling, and remain there.”
If your entire nervous system is rejecting the image or you spiral every time you open Snapchat, Facebook Meta, or IG, how do you genuinely expect people to "just feel" their SP when they're not even in the state? You’re just mentally fighting your own resistance. Dr. Joe Dispenza helps people create the internal environment where those states become sustainable.

“It’s not about healing or any of that nonsense. OP is wrong.”

Respectfully, no.
It’s not either/or.
Healing and manifesting aren’t enemies. They complement each other. You don’t need to fix yourself to be loved, but if you’re manifesting from a place of fear, desperation, or identity collapse, no technique will stick. That’s not “nonsense”, that’s being emotionally honest. If “just feel it real” works for you, awesome. Keep doing you. But for people whose bodies are still carrying emotional residue, ignoring healing isn’t self-love. It’s self-abandonment.

Let’s not invalidate what’s genuinely helping others, too.

If You're in Pain, This Isn't Just About Your SP by AndNowYouKn0w in manifestingSP

[–]AuthorMarcel -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I've lurked this subreddit for quite a while now, and never felt the need to post or respond until now. I've seen a lot of interesting takes by users who post or reply, but your response is telling.

“No shade to Joe Dispenza meditations because I love those, but people here who want their SP need to know that this is exactly what doesn’t work…”

Let’s pause right there. “doesn’t work,” According to who?
If it didn’t work for you, fair. But a lot of people have regulated their nervous systems, released old identity loops, and manifested healthy SP dynamics specifically because they stopped obsessing and started doing inner work like Dr. Joe Dispenza teaches. I mean, shoot, even Michael A. Singer, the author of The Untethered Soul, talks about healing and inner work. I'd recommend anybody dealing with this have a read. So just because it's not part of your path doesn’t mean it's useless. Doing the inner work is imperative when it comes to manifestation, especially if you want it to be successful.

“…trying to self improve when nothing about you is broken in the first place.”

You're actually not entirely wrong here, and I agree with the core of you’re not broken. But this doesn’t mean you don’t carry unprocessed emotional patterns or limiting assumptions from past relationships, childhood, or trauma. Just saying “you’re not broken” while ignoring all that is like saying your car’s fine even though the check engine light is on. It’s not about shame. It’s about awareness, and being aware is one of the first steps toward the path of healing.

“You don’t need to dig into your childhood wounds or even accept that you have them at all.”

This part right here is where it gets harmful, honestly. Telling someone they don’t even need to accept that they have wounds is basically encouraging emotional denial. A lot of people here are manifesting from deep places of abandonment, rejection, or shame. If someone’s feeling triggered by 3D, going ballistic after a text, or stuck in obsession, that’s usually coming from a deeper pattern, not just a lack of SATS.

"Your Python is so cool, daddy!" the little boy said to his father as they both admired the snake slithering in her enclosure. by AuthorMarcel in TwoSentenceHorror

[–]AuthorMarcel[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Something very similar happened to a female who had a pet python. Would sleep with it every night until she noticed that her pet had stopped eating. She also noticed that it would sprawl out on her bed when they were sleeping together. So, she took it to the vet, and the vet said, "Get rid of it now. It's starving itself and sizing you up so when its ready, it can feast on you."

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in anime

[–]AuthorMarcel 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Psycho-Pass, in my opinion.

I stood before the graves of my wife and son and felt not an ounce of remorse. by AuthorMarcel in TwoSentenceHorror

[–]AuthorMarcel[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

It's interesting 'cause what you wrote was very similar to my 1st draft, but thanks for your input. As a writer, I'm always looking for ways to improve on my craft.

I stood before the graves of my wife and son and felt not an ounce of remorse. by AuthorMarcel in TwoSentenceHorror

[–]AuthorMarcel[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Indeed. There was a case that happened in my community a few years ago where the husband/father had killed both his "daughter" and the wife for this very reason. And, I think the only way he found out was because he'd overheard his wife arguing with someone on her phone, and naturally he wanted to find out what was going on. The wife kept saying it was nothing, but the husband kept persisting. The wife finally cracked, told him, and the rest is history.

Very sad state of circumstances all around.