Wrong Thought
Wrong Thought is thought that undermines and prevents Healing and Connection, and that causes Misalignment and Disjuncture.
Related Terms
Wrong Thought > Dhikr, Ideology
Notes
Wrong thought prevents healing by encouraging one to engage in practices that damage the body and mind and that prevent one from seeking proper treatment and engaging in proper healing practice (i.e. rest). Wrong thought undermines and prevents connection by distorting and disconnecting The Flow.
Wrong thought consists of Archetypes and Ideology. Also negative, hateful, hurtful, mean, malicious, and cruel thoughts.
Wrong thought is thought that diminishes you and makes you feel unworthy, impotent, and “less than" the Divine Spark you really are.
Wrong thought is thought that invokes hatred or the desire of harming another.
Wrong thought can subvert and prevent Healing and Connection in many ways. Wrong thought may prevent connection by a) encouraging ineffective practices, b) seeding confusion and disorientation, c) sowing fear, or d) encouraging the Bodily Ego to actively resist Consciousness and Connection.
The human species riddled through to the core with toxic, dank, diseased wrong thought and will have to clear this wrong thought away before it can properly Heal and Connect
Zoroastrianism: Good thoughts are "useful thoughts and wise thoughts and great thoughts and wholesome thoughts and kindly thoughts and virtuous thoughts and good thoughts." Bad thoughts are " idle thoughts and foolish thoughts and mean thoughts and malicious thoughts and cruel thoughts and vicious thoughts and evil thoughts."[1]
Wrong thought includes Spiritual Ideology.
Wrong thought can be “accidental” or it can be intentional. Accidental wrong thought occurs when we accidentally get the wrong idea in our head, and then accidentally stick with that wrong idea for years, even when it is clearly causing us grief, pain, and disconnection.
Accidental wrong thought happens, but more likely wrong thought enters into your head because it has been “seeded” by groups intent on reducing the transformative/revolutionary potential of connection to Consciousness. One example of this seeding is the modern Tarot deck which was created in the elite circles during the Industrial Revolution as a way to control the spirituality of both the elites and the masses.[2]
Footnotes
- ↑ Dhalla, Maneckji Nusservanji. History of Zoroastrianism. New York: Oxford University Press, 1938.
- ↑ Sosteric, Mike. “A Sociology of Tarot.” Canadian Journal of Sociology 39, no. 3 (2014). https://www.academia.edu/25055505/.