
Credit: Psyblog
I don’t think we know much about … alright, alright, I know much about … the divine faculty called “the Will.”
Given the paradigm of empirical materialism, it’s hard to picture something that has no form and no apparent qualities.
I’m convinced that it does have qualities, but I have no databank of experience to consult on the matter.
When I go to observe my will, I begin to dissolve as an observer. The deeper I go, the more the observer disappears. Why that is, I don’t know.
I seem always therefore to remain an outside observer of the will or an inside actor, but not both at once.
While that makes sense when I see it in print, I’ve never switched from observer to participant so dramatically before.
Why is that?
The Will (for the purposes of discussion, let me capitalize it) is master and commander. The Will is the voice that says Go forward. Retreat. Execute. Fall back.
The Will orders action, reaction, and no action. It’s our Commander-in-Chief.
We feed it input and program it how to react and when. But when the critical time for action or withdrawal arrives, the Will assumes executive authority.
The Virtue of the Will is strength of purpose.
The Vice is forcefulness, unprovoked violence.
These days the frequent use of agents provocateurs, paid agitators, makes it difficult to know what is the real voice of the people and what a staged event.
While that is muddy to us on Earth, higher-dimensional beings in invisible ships around the planet regularly consult the “collective consciousness” to see where we’re at and initiate any needed action.
They respond to our “Will” as a planetary society.
The Will both speaks and acts for us. All of it invisibly. Undetected. Unwitnessed. Until we’re in an emergency. And then it makes itself known and plain.
