Jason Alexander and Julie Renee

Jason Alexander and Julie Renee

Remember Jason Alexander’s role in Pretty Woman?  Well a stroke of good fortune for the relatively unknown Jason, got him a role in a blockbuster. What a break? Well if you speak to Jason, you’ll know that it was a mixed bag. Playing a jerk who attempts to rape the lovable prostitute played by Julie Roberts creates a group mind (meme) that affects Jason for several years.

Woman all over began to dislike Jason. He says that he couldn’t get a date. The group mind in American women had Jason as a jerk in real life. Thank goodness for his long run in Seinfeld that set a more lovable funny tone, and the group mind softened.

Group mind is one of the reasons people are unable to heal, and sometimes is the cause of an illness.

The example of Jason’s short term problem with group mind is easy to understand.

In my upcoming book Your Divine Human Blueprint, I explore the concept of memes and miasms. The following is a deeper explanation of the condition. 

Memes

meme is a group agreement; it is group mind’s prodigy. It is all people thinking the same way. It is not truth. It is infectious, controlling and often a blind spot: it is insidious.

I am unaware is a positive meme, as it overrides your own reasoning and controls your thought and conclusion.

Memes are found in religious and political organizations. For example, in the Lutheran Church the group mind is in agreement to same sex relationships and homosexuality as a sin and against God’s will. When the tolerant Episcopal Church was attempting to merge with the Lutheran organization, a major disagreement from Lutheran members was the tolerance,  even actual acceptance of homosexuals in the Episcopal Church.

The attitude of the group, which was the group meme, was that homosexuality was a sin, therefore wrong and should not be tolerated.

A meme is restricted to the group mind influences of the individual’s lifetime.

Miasms

miasm is a group virus. It was discovered by the founder of homeopathy and defined a ‘sick’ or group virus mindset. Also contagious, though it expands in its reach back 300 years, affecting the individual or the ancestors of the individual experiencing the miasm.

While visiting the Mayan historical site, Chichen-Itza, I discovered the Mayans were masters at group mind control. The unique pyramid like structures were architecturally designed to affect sound and impact on group ceremony.  The amplification of noises the priests made and the gruesome human sacrifices done in a strategic way so as to convince the chosen individual they must comply, convinced it was the only choice.

The tour guide, an older gentleman of Mayan descent, shared with us his impressions of the goings on. He relayed the image of the recent movie Avatar, the seated chanting around the tree of life, as a scene that could have been taken from the Mayan history archives. Instead of a tree they had their pyramid, with a temple at the top. Chanting opened the worshippers to the group virus, as they chanted together, controlled by what they all saw and then felt together. The murderous slayings were said to secure an immortal life with the Gods.

When I asked our guide, Raphael, did they like it. He said, they were convinced, and so it was. The followers could have moved out of the metropolis, but instead it grew. At one point, 400,000 people lived in this city.

Healing Memes and Miasms

Although you don’t have to remember which is which, your kinesiology testing will be able to identify if the situation is a meme or a miasm.

During discovery and diagnosis, I will look for the nature of the group mind issue, and with muscle testing confirm I am on the right track.

To clear a meme or miasm simple requires identifying it, (with the miasm the time of it also) implanting rather than pumping gold energy to clear the issue.

They are relatively simple to clear, but should not be overlooked.   They can prevent a healing from holding, so they must be cleared.