Dare to Question Reality: Unlock Your True Potential

Waking Up From the Script: Reclaiming the Mind Beyond Conditioned Reality

Waking Up From the Script: Reclaiming the Mind Beyond Conditioned RealitySonia Barrett – How much of your life is a suggested design—an inherited blueprint of expectations, beliefs, and conditioned perceptions? How much of it is automatically lived through habituated neural pathways that fire without question? And what could unfold if you truly woke up from that automatic script?

The truth is that we often fear such awakenings. Real self-recognition carries a level of responsibility that can feel intimidating, because it demands that we confront the architecture of our own mind.

I am not speaking of the superficial notion of “waking up.” I am speaking of the profound strength required to observe the workings of one’s perception with precision—to witness the unconscious programs shaped by early experiences, cultural conditioning, and neurobiological patterning.

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The Spiritually Dead gatekeepers of mainstream news

matrixJon Rappoport – A new series of realities is on the way.

Centralized information-reality is on the way out.

It’s going to be thrills and chills.

Major newspapers are dying. The internet is crushing them. And yet, if the NY Times and the Washington Post and the LA Times wanted to resuscitate themselves, they could.

I’m not talking about one-day headlines. I’m talking about investigations that pound and pound on issues of corruption day after day, month after month.

For example, these issues:

* The Federal Reserve/a clandestine private corporation.

* Medically caused death.

* Toxic vaccines.

* Trillions of dollars of missing US government money.

* The power of the Trilateral Commission over US government policy.

* The covert implementation of the UN agenda of destruction in US communities.

And a hundred more issues.

Expose these down to the core, and people would buy newspapers off the rack like they buy coffee and beer and video games and cell phones and gasoline and underwear and toilet paper and lipstick and fast food. The Times would have to schedule extra press runs just to keep up with the demand. Its financial bottom line would soon look like Christmas.

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