

Subconscious Energy
Mechanics
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Chapter 4: The Subconscious and the Body
So far we've primarily been focusing on the connection between the conscious mind and the subconscious mind. This relationship is certainly the most important as it relates to controlling your subconscious. However, I don’t believe you’ll ever be able to fully control your subconscious without understanding its connection to another major part of who and what you are. In fact for some people, it's actually the only thing you are. What I’m referring to is your own physical body. For the next few chapters, we're going to focus on the role that your body plays in the process of subconscious energy control. In this chapter in particular we’re going to look at some of the special subconscious frequencies that your body likes to switch your subconscious to. As you learn more about the connection between the subconscious and your body, you’ll gain greater insight and perspicuity into the operational nature of the subconscious mind. This will enable you to become even better at controlling your subconscious mind later.
CONNECTION BETWEEN THE BODY AND SUBCONSCIOUS
Throughout the book so far, I’ve mentioned that the subconscious is primarily controlled through intentions produced by the conscious mind. Now although we haven’t really talked too much about how to actually control the subconscious using intention, the main idea has been that the conscious mind commands the subconscious and tells it what to do. While this is still mostly correct, it actually doesn’t really represent the bigger picture that’s actually involved. This more simplified picture of the connection between the conscious mind and the subconscious mind was meant to help you get a good grasp on the fundamentals of subconscious energy. However, we’re now going to expand our focus and try to get a more complete view of how your subconscious actually operates in reality. It is true that the conscious mind tells the subconscious what to do and that the subconscious mind must listen to it. However, there is another commander involved here who is also able to give orders to your subconscious and for whom your subconscious must also obey – and that commander is your physical body.
Just as your conscious mind is able to use intent to control your subconscious, so too does your body have its own means of commanding your subconscious. Of course, your body doesn’t actually have a conscious mind of its own – that is separate from yours I mean – so it can’t exactly use intention to control your subconscious. But then how does your body send a command to your subconscious and what does this kind of control look like? Well, the answers to these particular questions are actually somewhat involved and will be answered in pieces throughout the next few chapters. I’d like to begin by first looking at the nature of the connection between the subconscious and the body – at least as I’ve come to perceive it. To be clear most of what we discuss in this book can be verified by your own experiences once you start controlling your subconscious energy directly on a conscious level. However, the ideas I present here regarding the connection between the body, conscious mind and subconscious are really just sort of stabs in the dark at a possible way in which it all works.
An interesting question I’ve wondered about has to do with the dichotomy between the positive and the negative minds and whether or not this same dichotomy exists in the afterlife or the spirit world where we don’t actually have a physical body anymore. I do of course believe in such a thing as an afterlife and that we exist in spirit form after we pass on from this world and that we’re in spirit form before we first enter it – presumably sometime after conception and before birth. Now there is obviously no way to test any kind of hypothesis or theories that would require me to not have a physical body since I’d no longer be alive to report my findings. So whatever properties or rules we learn about the subconscious here can only be verified to the extent that the condition “a person is also alive” allows us to. Perhaps all of the rules we learn about the subconscious here break down completely and can be thrown out the proverbial window the second you’re in spirit form and are without a physical body anymore. It could be that there is still a positive and negative mind in your spirit form and perhaps they function in pretty much the same way that’s described in this book. On the other hand, it could also be the case that, once in spirit form, your mind exists in a more singular form where its positive and negative qualities have simply combined. There could also be another possibility we’ve not yet considered and may not be capable of conceiving of while in our earthly physical form.
However, whatever the case, I believe that when we are born our spirit is first assigned to our physical body and then a special kind of bonding process occurs to basically “connect” them together. I like to believe that God acts as a kind of metaphysical engineer and performs this special bonding or sealing function. Once he does this, our spirit and body become intricately connected in a very special way that allows us to exist in the state that we call “alive”. When this occurs, it seems that our body is given a special kind of dominion or sovereignty over our conscious and subconscious minds. This allows us to perceive the physical world through the 5 senses of our body. To be more specific, this allows the body to essentially force us to perceive the world through its 5 senses. This demonstrates that the body is given a certain amount of control over our minds which I believe extends all the way down to the subconscious level. In fact I believe it is primarily the subconscious that our body is manipulating and communicating with when it influences our conscious mind – such as when it causes us to perceive reality through our 5 senses. This will be elaborated on further in chapter 7 of book II.
I believe this control from the body is also responsible for the properties of the negative and positive minds as well. To be clear, I’m not necessarily saying that the body creates the conscious mind and also creates the subconscious mind. But rather, it seems that the body gives the conscious mind the normal or non-transcendental properties that we’ve been discussing. Similarly, the properties of transcendental functions that we’ve been learning about also seem to manifest as a result of the influence on the subconscious that comes from your body. We’ll talk more about this theoretical subconscious model in the next chapter. Before moving on to the next section though, I’d like to mention an interesting phenomenon in the brain that seems to be in relatively tacit agreement with the idea that the body – more specifically the brain – gives your negative and positive minds their properties. In neuroscience, it is generally believed that the left hemisphere of the brain is strongly associated with logic, mathematics, linearity, and language. The right side of the brain on the other hand is often associated with creativity, imagination, art, and intuition. Looking at these two descriptions on the surface, it almost seems like the left hemisphere is strongly linked to the properties of the negative mind and that the right hemisphere is strongly linked to the properties of the positive mind. Of course, these descriptions of the two hemispheres of the brain are probably oversimplified and overgeneralized and we probably shouldn’t put too much stock into them. But I thought this connection was interesting enough to at least mention it here.
MY EXPERIENCE CHARGING EMOTION
Before going right into it, I’d like to once again recall a past experience I had with charging my subconscious. In the early days when this whole “charging my subconscious thing” all started, I got the bright idea of trying to solve my social anxiety problem through subconscious control. Growing up I always had really bad social anxiety when in a group of others and especially when I had to speak in front of a group of others. It really sucked and I often thought to myself how good people who don’t have that problem must have it. Surely they must all have been on a beach at one time or another, lying in a hammock with their cool shades on, sipping from a coconut and thinking to themselves, man my life is so great since I don’t have social anxiety – it must really suck for those that do have it. At least that’s how I would often picture them. I used to think that this problem would eventually just solve itself like it seemed to in the movies. But as I got older, I began to realize that this was not going to be the kind of problem that just goes away on its own. And to be fair some problems are kind of like that though, but this just wasn’t one of them. So I started proactively taking steps to work on my social anxiety more. I tried to be more social with others and interact with them more. And my efforts were really starting to pay off too. At my height, people who I’d just met often thought that I was some kind of naturally socially gregarious creature. Of course, I knew deep down that was not the case at all.
I like to think that over time I’d finally gotten a pretty good handle on my social anxiety. I learned that if I focus on having fun and a good time around others, this seemed to block out negative thoughts which brought about anxiety. So this ended up being my main go to move for years. Well, once I learned how to control my subconscious a little, although I didn’t know it was only a little at that time, I thought to myself...well, why don’t I just charge up the feeling of strength and confidence in these circumstances instead. I figured that not feeling these emotions at a strong enough level was clearly the problem and that this was why I felt so much anxiety. I figured if I kept imagining myself in these situations and charging the feeling of confidence and strength while doing so, then this charge would carry over to real world circumstances and allow me feel those same emotions very strongly. Probably not the worst sounding idea in the world on paper. But in reality, this in fact was probably one of the worst ideas I have ever come up with. This was because this approach backfired terribly. Not only did I not feel “stronger” as I’d been hoping to, but my social anxiety practically exploded. Eventually, it got so bad that I believe I started having panic attacks – which I think I only had one other time in my life which was during a speech I had to give in front of the classroom in college. Needless to say this created an extraordinarily crippling effect on me psychologically. Day in and day out, I kept having non-stop negative thoughts enter my mind which kept my anxiety alive and well. It was like an unchained beast allowed to roam freely and wreak havoc on my life.
That experience occurred years ago when I first started learning how to control my subconscious. I can tell you that it really sucked but the good news is that I’ve since grown out of that condition and have become much stronger and more confident as a result – or at least I’d like think so. This does, however, show that there can be negative side effects to controlling your subconscious if you don’t know what you’re doing. I didn’t realize it at the time but what I was trying to do was actually a rather advanced form of subconscious energy control that I was nowhere near ready for yet – although it’s a fairly easy charge for me to perform now. We’ll learn about the basic principles involved in a charge like this in chapter 13. That being said though, this experience does pose some curious questions you may be interested in asking. For one, how on earth did attempting to charge a feeling of confidence somehow backfire and cause me to start having panic attacks? Furthermore, why did this experience get so intense so quickly and why was it so persistent in nature? We will answer these questions by looking at one of the major ways in which the body likes to influence your subconscious mind.
PRIMAL EMOTIONS
Earlier I mentioned that I believe your body is the main force that gives your negative mind and your positive mind their properties. Well, the part of your body that I believe is most responsible for this effect is actually your brain. On top of regulating your body’s various systems, this organ also seems to have the task of regulating your subconscious energy. Looking at just your negative mind for the moment, it is actually your brain that commands your subconscious in a way that allows your conscious mind to freely exercise its will and do so without some powerful compulsion feeling like it’s constantly getting in the way. In a sense your brain holds your subconscious mind back and keeps it tame so that it doesn’t end up compelling you all over the place. This allows your negative mind to have the properties of logic, clarity, and freedom of expression of will. This makes sense since your body’s primary goal is to make sure that you survive. That’s usually going to be best accomplished when you have a clear mind and can think logically and don’t have some strong emotion impairing your judgment.
However, while this is true most of the time, there are still times when the body actually doesn’t like this clarity of thought from the negative mind. In these circumstances, it actually prefers that there be some compulsion to alter your perception and impair your judgment and logic. That may sound a bit strange but there’s actually a good reason for this. In these cases, our body has determined that our best chance for survival, and the survival of our species, is achieved by having the subconscious compel you and try to coerce you into engaging in a certain kind of behavior. The body can’t always just leave it to chance that the conscious mind will make a choice that ensures its survival. In order to essentially coerce the mind into making a certain kind of decision, the body will charge the subconscious and do so at a special kind of subconscious frequency. This charge will then cause the subconscious mind to compel the conscious mind in a way that makes certain actions and decisions much more likely and other actions and decisions much less likely. The special set of frequencies that the body likes to charge in this manner has a corresponding set of emotions that I like to call primal emotions. An important property to note about these kinds of emotions and their subconscious frequencies is that they generally charge a lot faster than regular emotions and their corresponding subconscious frequencies due to the fact that the body is charging them directly instead of just the mind alone. This also means that they tend to charge with a lot less effort since the body is doing all of the work – we’ll talk more about this later. There are probably only a few different primal emotions altogether but we’ll discuss the main ones, which I’ve come to classify as such, in this chapter.
An important question one might ask is how the body knows when to charge a primal emotion to help us to survive? For example how can it possibly know when some specific behavior is going to provide us with our best chances for survival? Well, for the most part, it doesn’t know. Your body doesn’t start charging some primal emotion in response to environmental conditions directly but it will generally do so in response to your own intention. I like to think of your body as having a kind of subconscious energy frequency meter that allows it to always know what frequency your subconscious is currently switched to. This frequency measuring ability comes from the natural connection – created by God – between you and your body. Thus whenever you express a certain kind of intention, your subconscious switches to a particular frequency in response. Your body then reads this frequency and uses that information to try to know what’s going on in the world around you. We’ll talk about this connection between intention and subconscious frequency in more detail in chapter 7. However, when your subconscious switches to a particular frequency, your body will determine from there whether or not to charge a primal emotion and, if so, what primal emotion to charge.
THE ANXIETY EMOTION
The first primal emotion I'd like to discuss is actually one that we've already spoken about earlier – the anxiety emotion. This is the emotion you generally feel when you perceive something as being a threat to you. For example let’s say that you’re walking down the street and suddenly a large, viscous-looking dog starts running toward you out of nowhere. You might feel a sense of panic and fear at the thought of the dog biting you. As you see this dog coming toward you, you actually produce an intention that says “wow, this dog is probably going to bite me and cause harm to me”. This intention causes your subconscious to switch to a particular frequency that your body recognizes and takes as a cue that you’re in danger somehow. As a result, your body then commands your subconscious to switch to the anxiety frequency and then begins charging your subconscious up at that frequency. I believe this subconscious phenomenon is largely referenced by the well-known bodily response called “fight or flight”.
It is important to recognize that, by charging our subconscious at the anxiety frequency, it will be hard to charge our subconscious at another frequency at the same time. For example, when your body induces the flight or response response, it is not generally the case that you’re also able to feel all kinds of different emotions all the while. If I’m experiencing fight or flight from some perceived threat, it would be hard for me to also feel like I’m having lots of fun while my body is inducing this response. Instead, I will usually mostly feel the relatively negative emotion of anxiety during time. As your body charges your subconscious at this frequency, your perception will be altered to become highly focused on whatever the perceived threat is and to find it highly rational to try to avoid it. This makes us want to sort of run away from the threat – such as the dog from my earlier example. However, if we’re unable to run from the threat, then we will need to face it head-on. Either way, the hormonal response from our body, an increase in adrenaline and cortisol, will temporarily increase our physical capabilities and help us to face this threat or run away from it.
For the body, it is too important to avoid physical danger to be left for the conscious mind to sort of lackadaisically come to such a conclusion on its own. On the other hand, if you think you’re going to have a good time, then your body becomes aware of this by reading the frequency your subconscious has switched to in response to that thought. It usually doesn’t mind what you’re doing in that case and tends to let you enjoy yourself. It doesn’t send a command to the subconscious to strongly compel you in response. However, the moment you think that you’re going to be harmed, your body has a vested interest in interfering with the normal freedom that your negative mind has been granted. Of course, the body can’t completely control your negative mind and override its free will since the conscious mind will always still have this ability intact no matter how strong a compulsion is. However, the body can still make sure this compulsion is very strong and that it is very difficult for the conscious mind to resist. If the body didn’t induce this subconscious compulsion, we’d be much more likely to take stupid risks and potentially harm our bodies.
Now while this system works pretty well for keeping you out of real danger, it is not without its flaws. For example, there are times when your body will induce a fight or flight response and cause you to feel a great deal of anxiety even when you’re not actually in any physical danger. For example, if I have to give a speech in front of a large group, I will generally feel a great deal of the anxiety emotion. This is because the thought of giving a speech causes me to produce an intention that’s very similar to the one I might produce if I were falling off a building or getting attacked by an animal. As a result of this intention, my subconscious will switch to a frequency that my body reads and interprets as saying that I’m in physical danger. In response, it charges up the anxiety frequency to help me avoid this danger even though there actually isn’t any. In the modern civilized world today, I’d argue that our bodies probably induce this response in circumstances where it is not needed much more often than when it is. This tends to make it feel as though anxiety is a problem that hurts us much more than it helps us.
Let’s now go back to the experience I mentioned earlier where I suddenly started to get anxiety in response to trying to charge the confidence emotion. Why exactly did this occur? Well, there’s actually a lot of reasons for this that we're not quite ready to discuss in detail just yet. As I mentioned earlier, what I was trying to do is actually a fairly advanced usage of subconscious energy. However, the main reason this occurred was because my body was charging anxiety in response to my intention but I didn’t fully realize this at the time since I didn’t know about subconscious charging or primal emotions yet. During the mental exercises I’d often perform during that time, I’d constantly focus on a particular imaginary circumstance, go out of my way to think of it as difficult or threatening in some way and then try to mentally charge a feeling of confidence from there. I figured that this would mean that I’d feel that same level of confidence in response to some difficult or threatening real-world circumstance.
However, the problem with this was that my body kept responding to these thoughts as though I was in danger and kept charging the anxiety frequency in response. And since I wasn’t all that good yet at charging altogether, very little of the confidence emotion was actually getting charged during these exercises. Thus I just kept charging the anxiety emotion, with the help of my body, to higher and higher levels of intensity until eventually I started having panic attacks. Over time I noticed that the feeling of anxiety was coming in a little too strongly and too quickly and didn’t seem to be behaving like other emotions I’d tried to charge at that time. These other emotions charged much slower and with more effort compared to anxiety. Something was clearly different about the nature of the anxiety emotion but I couldn't quite put my finger on what it was. Eventually, I came to the conclusion that my body was somehow involved in this charge in a way that it generally wasn’t for other kinds of charges. This of course led me to conceive of the concept of primal emotions.
THE SEXUAL EMOTION
Another primal emotion we experience is one that usually feels more positive in nature and helps us to reproduce as a species. This primal emotion of course is the sexual emotion. Now what makes the sexual primal emotion so unique is in the specificity of how our subconscious both reads and commands our subconscious as it relates to charging it. Recall that every intention has a specific subject that the command held within that intention is directed toward. Well, usually our body will induce some primal emotion in response to our intent overall but it doesn’t really care all that much about what the underlying subject was that the command in the intention was directed toward. This is why we’re able to have anxiety about something like a school test, which isn’t actually a physical threat to us at all. Since the body doesn’t care about the subject of the intention in this case, we’re pretty much able to feel anxiety for just about anything – or any subject. However, this is not the case with the sexual primal emotion. In this case, your body goes out of its way to read your subconscious frequency with such a level of scrutiny that it can even tell what the subject of your intention is. Depending on what the subject is, your body may or may not charge the sexual primal emotion. Of course, the subject our bodies are mainly looking to detect is going to either be a man or a woman, depending on the sex you’re attracted to.
Again we’ll talk more about the details involved in this as far as the relationship between your intention and the subconscious in chapter 7. But by reading our subconscious frequency with such a high level of specificity, our body can not only tell whether or not we’re looking at a woman – if you’re attracted to women – but it can also tell whether or not that woman is healthy, fit and of breeding age. To accomplish this, our bodies have essentially been preprogrammed to respond in a certain way whenever we focus on a woman that has certain physically observable parameters that it has determined to be ideal for breeding. We colloquially refer to women who match these parameters as “sexy”. And when our body becomes aware that we are looking at such a female – which again it does by monitoring the way our subconscious is responding to our intention – it will generally induce the sexual subconscious frequency and charge that frequency as a result. This charge alters our sensory perception to become highly focused on the physical body of the woman. Certain parts of her body – such as her ass, legs or breasts – will become easier to notice while other parts of her body become harder to notice. This altered perception will also affect what seems logical to us and will generally make it so that the thought of having sex with this woman becomes highly rational. To this end, it also causes our body to become physically excited so that we’re actually able to perform the physical act of sex as well.
This primal emotion of course helps to induce a compulsory urge which, in the end, generally ensures that we’ll end up reproducing. Our body has deemed reproduction to be too important an activity to be left to the whims of our own free will. Instead, it must make sure to charge our subconscious to compel us to have sex in order to make it much more likely that we propagate our species. It should be noted that there are also things that can go wrong with this charging process too. For example, what is considered a healthy person of breeding age – or sexy – is generally different for both men and woman. In other words for this charge to work properly, a man’s body must charge the sexual frequency in response to the physically ideal woman and a woman’s body must charge the sexual frequency in response to the physically ideal man. However, sometimes, due to biological errors in DNA, this process gets flipped and a person’s body will charge their subconscious to be attracted to the same sex rather than the opposite one. This results in homosexuality where reproduction is not possible.
THE DANGER EMOTION
Another primal emotion I’d like to discuss is one that’s not necessarily all that obvious but is one that I’ve come to believe exists as a result of my own experience with the subconscious and from behaviors I’ve observed in others. The next primal emotion is one that I’ve come to refer to as the danger emotion. Now based on its name, you might naturally think that this should be the same as the anxiety emotion we discussed earlier. When you believe something is a threat to you and that you’re in danger, your body goes into fight or flight mode and causes you to feel the anxiety emotion. However, I’m actually not talking about that particular primal emotion in this case. The feeling of being in danger, as it relates to this primal emotion, actually involves a completely different bodily response than fight or fight.
To explain this emotion and the corresponding bodily response more thoroughly, let me first just say that I believe that the body actually has two levels of what you might call its “threat assessment”. Your body reads your subconscious frequency and essentially classifies frequencies that indicate a potential danger into two categories. The first category involves more serious threats that cause you to have anxiety and go into fight or flight mode. We’ve already discussed this category in great detail earlier in the chapter. But there is also second category that treats a threat as less serious and not as big of a deal. Threats in this category actually don’t induce the same kind of panic or “fight or flight” based response as threats in the more serious category do. On the contrary, threats in this category actually induce a response from the body that is somewhat pleasurable in nature believe it or not. Because the threat is generally not considered to be very high, this primal emotion actually feels more like the risk emotion and is more akin to what you might call the risk subconscious frequency.
In general, when something is “risky” to you, it means that there is some kind of danger present that may possibly harm you in some way. However, it is also not necessarily a guarantee that it will harm you. There’s a chance that you can still avoid the present danger. Well naturally, in the process of life, our bodies would expect us to face these kinds of circumstances all the time whether it be in regards to finding food, shelter or vying for a potential mate. When we find ourselves facing such circumstances, our bodies seem to charge our subconscious at what I’ve come to call the danger frequency. This frequency actually alters our perception to be more of a daredevil and risk taker so that we’re better able to take a chance and gain some valuable resource such as food through the act of hunting for example. I’ve actually come to find, in my experience, that this frequency operates very antithetically to the anxiety frequency. Namely when you feel the danger primal emotion very strongly, you tend to have a much harder time feeling the anxiety emotion and vice versa.
I believe this primal emotion is meant to help counteract the anxiety emotion and prevent us from overcharging anxiety. This makes sense since, if we feel too much anxiety, we may be so inhibited from taking risks that it actually hurts our chances for survival instead of helping them. This is why the danger emotion actually feels somewhat pleasurable. This is our body’s way of encouraging us to take a risk. I believe the emotional feeling we get when dopamine is released in our brain is strongly related to the feeling of this primal emotion. That being said there are, as usual, things that can go with this charge. For one, our modern society tends to make great use of this primal emotion when it comes to trying to entertain us. There are two main reasons why this happens to be the case. For one, as mentioned earlier, the danger emotion generally has a somewhat pleasurable feeling to it. This makes it useful in any scenario where our goal is to feel emotional pleasure. Plus, since the body is doing most of the work, it will charge this primal emotion fairly quickly and without as much effort from your negative mind as is generally required for a non-primal emotion. The second main reason has to do with what you might call the universality of this emotion. Similar to anxiety, you can feel this sense of danger for just about anything – not just hunting for food or climbing trees for berries. Because of this, the entertainment industry will often try to entertain us in ways that cause us to feel a low enough threat of danger that our bodies end up charging this emotion.
This basically means that we’ll be emotionally stimulated by the supposedly entertaining activity and will feel a rather pleasurable rush from it. Furthermore, our perception will be altered to find it logical to keep taking risks – which, in this context, just means continuing to engage this entertaining activity. The entertainment industry induces this primal emotion within us by simulating environments – through many different forms of entertainment – that have a mild sense of danger to them. For example, when you watch almost any movie, you may notice that the story pretty much always contains some theme that is based in conflict or risk and has many scenes throughout the movie that exemplify this conflict. Video games will almost always simulate an environment where someone or something is trying to destroy you and thus you must either get away from this threat or destroy it first. Sports competitions simulate risk, not only as it relates to the game, but risk in terms of reputation – either for a team or an individual. I could keep going but I think the point has been sufficiently made. The most common forms of entertainment in our society actually use the primal emotion of danger to help us to become more entertained by their products.
On the surface, this might not seem like such a bad thing but I think there may actually be consequences for doing this. By constantly overstimulating our brain to respond to our environment by charging the danger emotion, it’s possible that we may begin to build a tolerance to certain chemicals in our brain and have a harder time feeling the danger emotion as time goes on. If true, then not only would we have a harder time tasking risks at this point but we would also be more vulnerable to the anxiety emotion as well. This means that we would find it unusually difficult to take a risk – so much so that it would actually be unhealthy. I’m of course not a neuroscientist and don’t even know if such a thing is possible. But I believe there’s a decent chance that this may be a condition that occurs after you’ve spent years and years of overstimulating your brain through certain kinds of entertainment. I remember watching a really awesome movie called “White House Down” when I was younger and feeling so much adrenaline during the movie that I actually started to feel quite fatigued from it. While the experience itself was still pretty awesome, I could tell that feeling this much of an adrenal rush probably wasn’t too healthy. That being said, when you learn how to charge your subconscious energy directly, you will find that you’re able to do so without focusing on any kind of conflict or danger at all. This is because you won’t be charging your energy in a way that piggybacks off this primal emotion as you generally do when engaged in many modern forms of entertainment.
Another interesting thing I’ve learned about the danger emotion that I think is worth mentioning has to do with the way it alters our perception of supposedly “bad” things. I believe that this emotion is generally the reason why we sometimes like to root for the bad guys in movies or why we may prefer anti-heroes like the Punisher or certain versions of Batman. Sometimes a villainous character in a story can very easily stimulate our danger frequency too and cause us to inadvertently become attracted to that character as a result. I’ve learned through my experience that woman especially love to be emotionally stimulated by this frequency in very particular ways. Us men are more interested in experiencing this frequency through different forms of entertainment such as sports, action movies, playing video games, working out or even gambling. But I’ve noticed that women tend to prefer being stimulated by this feeling in the form social interactions and social events with others. They especially like to combine the danger primal emotion with the sexual primal emotion as well – which us men don't feel the need to do anywhere near as much. This is where the classic idea of woman liking bad boys comes from. It’s not that they actually like the "bad" part of a man’s personality – especially when that part causes them to feel anxiety. But rather they like the part that causes them to feel danger and often confuse that with being attracted to the man’s negative qualities. These kinds of relationships often become very destructive over time because it becomes harder and harder for the supposed “bad boy” to stimulate the danger frequency within the woman as time goes on. Why this is the case will be discussed in chapter 9.
OTHER PRIMAL EMOTIONS
There may be more primal more emotions than the ones mentioned above as they’re sometimes hard to pinpoint but these are the main ones I know about. It can be difficult in practice to know precisely when your subconscious is charging due to commands coming from your negative mind or due to those coming from the body. Although primal emotions do generally charge faster than usual, it can still sometimes be difficult to tell. One thing I will say is that our body does seems to charge another kind of primal emotion when we’re hungry. This emotion causes us to feel the urge to want to eat something. It can also grow in strength until it feels more like a kind of survival-type emotion that goes beyond just the urge to want to eat. I believe this will occur when we're so hungry that our body starts eating away at itself, including healthy tissue. An experience like this occurred with me when I was in high school. I'd gone almost 3 days without eating and felt as though some kind of strong survival instinct started to kick in within me. It became harder and harder to focus on normal things and instead, all I could think about was food. Furthermore, I didn’t have the same aversion to eating crap that I normally do. During this time, I remember seeing an open bag of peanuts laying on the ground in the street and giving almost every bit of effort I had to not to pick it up and start eating it. Although I didn’t actually do it, it seemed relatively easy for me to eat half-eaten food on the street or in the garbage. The thought of doing such things didn’t bother me at all. I remember thinking to myself that I now understood how animals are able to eat the crap that they eat. I believe this survival instinct that I felt during this time actually represents another kind of primal emotion. Hopefully though no one reading this has ever had to experience anything like that to verify for themselves if that feels like a primal emotion.
ACTIVATION PHASE AND MENTAL TAKEOVER
One last comment I’d like to make about primal emotions has to do with their rather temporary nature of peak intensity. In general, your body will start off a primal emotion charge in a relatively intense initial burst that usually only lasts a few minutes. After that, the body does still continue to charge the primal emotion but at a much lower level of intensity. For example, you may have noticed that whenever you’ve had some daunting fear in your past and finally worked up the courage to face it head on, the experience wasn’t nearly as bad as you thought it would be – at least from an emotional perspective. You probably did feel a sense of anxiety and panic when you faced your fear but it was likely only for the first few minutes of the experience. You may have noticed that these feelings suddenly got much weaker as the experience went on. At the very least, they became much more dull and less intense after about a minute or two. Similarly, you may have noticed that whenever you become really sexually excited and then immediately start engaging in some sexual activity as a result, your excitement actually begins to drop from this peak level after only a few minutes. This short burst of some primal emotion is a period of time that I like to refer to as the activation phase. Now once this phase of some primal emotion is over, your body will dramatically weaken in how strongly it’s charging this emotion. However, this doesn’t necessarily mean that you will no longer feel this emotion very intensely. In some cases, you still might feel it very strongly and feel it that way for a very long time.
But then how can this be the case if the body is no longer charging that emotion so strongly? Well because the mind can then take over and continue to charge that emotion instead of the body. We will talk more about how charging with the mind differs from charging with the body in the coming chapters. However, it is possible for the mind to continue charging some primal emotion or an emotion that’s very close in frequency to it. In fact I believe that this is ultimately the goal of your body overall. The body makes sure to charge your subconscious with a fairly intense initial burst which causes your subconscious to compel your conscious mind very strongly as a result. This compulsion then causes your conscious mind to feel the urge to start producing intentions that continue to charge that primal emotion. The body then only weakly charges that emotion from there while the mind continues to keep charging it as well, even if much more slowly. Thus if you’re not used to having anxious thoughts and then suddenly experience anxiety, it will be intense for a relatively short period of time and then taper off if you resist the urge to continue producing intentions that charge the anxiety frequency. If you’re used to having anxious thoughts and continue to charge anxiety even after your body’s activation phase has ended, then you’ll be able to keep feeling anxiety relatively intensely for an indefinite period of time. When I mentioned watching “White House Down” earlier and feeling the danger emotion throughout the movie, I most likely only experienced the danger emotion very intensely for a few minutes early on in the movie. After that, my mind likely took over and kept charging the danger frequency so that it maintained a relatively high level of intensity – although my body was still weakly charging this frequency too.
You may have also noticed these phenomena occurring sexually as well. When you’re very excited and feel the sexual primal emotion very powerfully, you may have noticed that this emotion is at peak intensity for the first few minutes that you’re excited. After that, its intensity actually tapers off. The reason you’re generally able to keep feeling this emotion rather strongly anyway is because your mind takes over the charge. What’s even more interesting about this is what happens when you climax. Although I honestly can’t speak too much about how it feels for women, I can say that for men – our sexual excitement drops dramatically after we climax. This is because our brain actually releases hormones that dampen the sexual primal emotion and makes it harder for the body, and mind, to charge it. Presumably, this is an anti-addiction measure to ensure that we don’t continuously attempt to have sex non-stop. However, the mind can still attempt to keep charging the sexual emotion anyway in spite of this dampening effect. It’s definitely harder to charge this emotion under these conditions but it can still be done. It feels incredibly amazing though when this dampening effect is completely gone, long after your last climax, and you charge the sexual emotion through both the mind and the body. It’s like a huge charging boost that enables you to have a really euphoric sexual experience. Again this will make a bit more sense when we talk about how charging through the mind works later in the book.
Footnotes
1. This principle will make more sense when we start going over techniques for charging the subconscious.
2. It should be noted that the entertainment industry likes to use the sexual primal frequency to emotionally stimulate you as well. However, because the subject isn’t allowed to be just anything like with the danger emotion, it’s not quite as universal as the danger frequency. So the sexual primal emotion, though also pleasurable as far as primal emotions go, is not nearly as useful as the danger primal emotion when it comes to entertaining you.
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