Tuesday, January 6, 2026

Is knowing things before they happen useful? Sometimes.

It is most useful in trying to stay alive and not having car accidents, not getting shot, not getting poisoned, not being physically harmed, helping your family and friends survive better in a myriad of different ways.

HOWEVER, there are always unintended consequences with all of this and this might be important to realize too.

Whenever you are shown the future (or more precisely a potential future) if you do something different than what you see happen it changes all time and space into the future.

Everyone is potentially precognitive (can see the future). This is something important to know.

However, when you see one thing happening and you change something all time and space also changes too.

However, God designed humans to be able to do this too. So, seeing where that arrow is coming from and stepping out of that arrow or sword or not being where these things are at all is a part of human survival and natural selection.

In other words, the people who use these gifts often survive and those who don't use these gifts die in a rain or flood, or are eaten by a volcano or have bad things happen to them so they are no longer a part of the breeding pool.

This is why most people alive on earth have precognition to one degree or another (seeing the future) because everyone who doesn't have this ability died and might not have bred at all during the last 200,000 years or more. 

So, because of this everyone alive now likely has some form of precognition and uses it to survive in some way, shape or form. 

So, in this sense EVERYONE is changing the future by seeing what happens before it happens and then doing something better usually.

This is really important for all of you to realize as human beings on earth right now.

Meditate on how you can survive this century now because it's going to be a doozy of a Century much more intense than the 20th Century on totally different levels of consciousness. So, meditate on how you survive this century so you actually can do it. 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

No comments: