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Speaking Truth to Power

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“The ‘word’ in West African cultures, once loosened from the lips as if drawing back the strings of a talisman pouch, diffuses a special force, the primal energy of creation itself. To speak is to exhale an active essence, Oro according to the Yoruba of Nigeria and Benin. For the Mande — ranging from coastal rainforests to the sparse Sahel and Sahara — the spoken word embodies the occult, generative, productive power of Nyama. With the talismanic power not only to protect but to alter the course of events, the word alone, by its very utterance, can cause change.
Nommo, the conception that life, its very actualization, rests ultimately on the word, reverberates throughout West Africa. The ancient, residual echo of the Bantu who once lived there. Among the Tiv in Northern Nigeria, the concept of vital force is known as tsav; and among the Fon of Benin it is se, both of which refer to ‘the power to cause to happen.’” The Power of Words https://www.culturesofwestafrica.com/power-of-words/
In recent posts, I have addressed the fact we are in the midst of a protracted spiritual war against adversaries who have an anti-life consciousness. They desire to play god and transform humanity, the planet, and nature itself into a dystopian hellscape based upon their megalomania and psychopathy. I shared that our only hope to derail their transhumanist anti-life agenda is through spiritual alchemy, using our innate ability to raise our consciousness, focus our imagination, visualization, and breathing techniques to elevate our vibrational energy to resonate with the DIVINE INTELLIGENCE/SPIRIT/ENERGY. Thus we attain a more enlightened sense of self, purpose, destiny, and lifestyle. Once we see ourselves differently by raising our consciousness, we will have the determination to reject the brainwashing and mind control of the globalist cabal seeking to rule the world.
We are spiritual beings living in a spiritually based multi-dimensional universe our thoughts and words are things that have power unto themselves. They can impact the outer world, the environment as well as our inner world of self. Even Western “science” knows we are energetic beings. They can measure our brain impulses on machines (electroencephalograms) and record our spoken words (sound waves) onto magnetic tape and digitally.
The area around us is charged with unseen vibrations and frequencies. Our thoughts and words when charged with emotion (either positive or negative) energize the energy field around us and they resonate with the corresponding frequencies once they enter the ethers. These processes set in motion energies that help manifest our fears, and our desires depending on the clarity of the images and intensity of emotion behind them.
In a previous article, I said words of power like the Kemetian Mdu Ntr (divine speech), the Yoruba word Ashe, and the Dogon word Nommo, etc are created, taught, framed, and used within a moral and ethical societal context. This is why Africans stress good character and values, good character being based upon right thought, words, actions, and behavior that maintain harmony and balance.
From an African perspective, people of bad character are considered possessed by demons/evil spirits or they are not fully human. “Indeed, although it is not possible here to explore the worldview of all ethnic groups, it appears nonetheless rather clear that, from West Africa to South Africa, there is a widespread belief that people of bad character are not truly human. In Nigeria, the Yoruba say: Ki I se eniyan (“He/she is not a person”). In South Africa, we find the expression Ga se Motho, and the Baluba people of Central Africa say Yao Ke Muntu (‘s/he is not human’) or I mufu unanga (‘S/he is a dead body walking’)… For the Baluba, as for many other Africans, to be is to be ethical. This implies not only the capacity to distinguish good from evil but the ability to choose to do good. An unethical person is muntu wa bumvu (‘a man of shame’) and Muntu bituhu (‘a zero-person’).” Bumuntu, the Encyclopedia of African Religion page 173.
This is why sorcery and witchcraft were so taboo in traditional African societies, because for anyone to use words, incantations, and rituals for harm to self, others, and the environment was considered pure evil and an affront to harmonious relationships and nature.
The psychopathic cabal that seeks to transform the earth into their own hellscape is evil; they pose a dire threat to humanity and nature. The good news is we have the power to stop them. We must use our words of power to thwart their evil agenda. We can only do this by raising our consciousness, living moral and ethical lives, and learning to vibrate on the higher frequencies, so we resonate with the sublime energies/intelligence and forces of the cosmos. This is the essence of spiritual alchemy, using thoughts and words of power to transform ourselves first and then impacting our surroundings.
Learn to speak truth to power.

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