
Every physical manifestation is a result of thought as I said in my last post. But it’s not just as simple as a thought coming by and it happens to be an externally visible. It’s much more to do with the subconscious patterns one carries daily.
With that said here’s my perspective on the relationship between thought, energy and reality.
There’s no real way to measure the amount of thought or intangible energy a person gives to a particular misfortune or circumstance. It takes a highly, if not entirely hyper-conscious individual (which is extremely rare) to analyse each and every thought, then accurately determine which of them has given power to an external influence. That is why I preach optimism as a safeguard against this as much as possible. It shifts the mind into a literally favourable internal state, which later translates into external positive feedback. Much like the saying thinking positive things gives you positive things.
The difference is actually easy to recognise. The death of a parent who, let’s say, died of old age happened because it happened. Their body had simply forfeited and given up after years of living. But say that same parent died because they ate excessive junk food, became obese, and passed away. That was a conscious pattern of decisions they knew could inevitably lead to death. Or say they died in a car crash. A few poor choices, originating from thought, such as drunk driving on their part, could have caused it. Or in a rarer case, it happened seemingly from nowhere. No mechanical faults from either person who crashed. No poor driving decisions. Just a sudden collision that led to death. And I’m quite sure statistically that is uncommon. At some point, negative energy, bad thought, ill intention, or some lingering subconscious force had existed there. It could have been that before that moment they had already imagined they would crash. Or years of subconscious and conscious negativity had been breeding, and this happened to be its manifestation.
These catastrophic outcomes are, for the most part, a result of thought processes manifested through collective action, decisions, and choices. These things can be overcome, so long as the individual’s positive energy remains unwavering and presses through. But it is much easier for humans to give in to negativity, because that is simply human nature as we know it.
Every singular component that emerges within large-scale phenomena is a product of thought, yes? Only later manifested into an observable decision or action. Here lies the complexity. As I’ve said before, randomness or spontaneous ill fortune does not simply spawn out of nowhere. It is inevitably linked to contributions of subconscious or conscious thought that often go unrecognised by the individual or party involved. The key is precision: navigating thoughts and analysing each and every one of them. But that is among the hardest things a person can do. That is where the dilemma of unpredictability and doubt enters. Almost everyone struggles with this. It takes a formidable, if not divinely ordained person, to master such control. Not to talk of a whole group of people, or even a handful of them. It is not impossible, but it is extremely rare.