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Posted: Fri Sep 22, 2023 9:46 am
and you must agree to drink whiskey every day for at least ten years. You say, “Yes, I’m ready, I’ll drink,” and start doing it, and a week later, I say, “That’s it, stop drinking now.” You would be like, “What? Why?”
But you see, I know you psychologically, and I feel that you must stop drinking now. The whole point is for you to agree to drink for ten years. Or let’s say I tell someone, “Give me your car.” And he says, “OK, sure. Take it.” And I tell him, “I don’t need your car anymore.” Because he already agreed to it inside, you know? He already gave it to me. I don’t need it physically. It was about the process, and it had taken place already; it switched inside of his head. And the same with alcohol; if he decides to drink for ten years, and after doing it for a week, he understands that he does not have the resistance, then that’s it; he doesn’t have to do it for ten years. He’s already switched. The flip has happened. And “They,” Big Alexander, and I am with you – I know this flipping effect. Are you with me? You deprive a person of something to which he is attached, but when he lets it go, you allow him to do it again because he has found psychological sobriety. It’s so cool. Unique, different, you know?
How they communicate, what kind of mentality they have, and how they educate people are depicted very well in the movies “Peaceful Warrior,” “Whiplash,” and the Jackie Chan movie “The Karate Kid.” At one point, a boy throws his jacket on the ground and is told to hang it up, throw it back on the ground, and then pick it up again. Naturally, a person starts wondering with his mind, “What is all this for?” This is your chicken reaction. You are told, “Go on, do it,” you do it, and then this ignorance is knocked out of you. Are you with me? This ignorance prevents people from seeing the truth. I can go ahead and tell a person, “Pour soda into four glasses or into four bowls of soup.” Naturally, if I were told to do this, I would go ahead and pour it without asking anything. But if I ask a person to do it, instead of just doing it, they will pick my brain for half an hour, asking questions like, “Why four plates? What if someone sees it? Why is there soup?” etc. And there are a million of these stupid questions. Are you with me? This is a human, and therefore, when they ask me, “Alex, what are you saying? “you, people. “Are you not human?” Yes, I’m ashamed to be a human; I’m not a human.
But you see, I know you psychologically, and I feel that you must stop drinking now. The whole point is for you to agree to drink for ten years. Or let’s say I tell someone, “Give me your car.” And he says, “OK, sure. Take it.” And I tell him, “I don’t need your car anymore.” Because he already agreed to it inside, you know? He already gave it to me. I don’t need it physically. It was about the process, and it had taken place already; it switched inside of his head. And the same with alcohol; if he decides to drink for ten years, and after doing it for a week, he understands that he does not have the resistance, then that’s it; he doesn’t have to do it for ten years. He’s already switched. The flip has happened. And “They,” Big Alexander, and I am with you – I know this flipping effect. Are you with me? You deprive a person of something to which he is attached, but when he lets it go, you allow him to do it again because he has found psychological sobriety. It’s so cool. Unique, different, you know?
How they communicate, what kind of mentality they have, and how they educate people are depicted very well in the movies “Peaceful Warrior,” “Whiplash,” and the Jackie Chan movie “The Karate Kid.” At one point, a boy throws his jacket on the ground and is told to hang it up, throw it back on the ground, and then pick it up again. Naturally, a person starts wondering with his mind, “What is all this for?” This is your chicken reaction. You are told, “Go on, do it,” you do it, and then this ignorance is knocked out of you. Are you with me? This ignorance prevents people from seeing the truth. I can go ahead and tell a person, “Pour soda into four glasses or into four bowls of soup.” Naturally, if I were told to do this, I would go ahead and pour it without asking anything. But if I ask a person to do it, instead of just doing it, they will pick my brain for half an hour, asking questions like, “Why four plates? What if someone sees it? Why is there soup?” etc. And there are a million of these stupid questions. Are you with me? This is a human, and therefore, when they ask me, “Alex, what are you saying? “you, people. “Are you not human?” Yes, I’m ashamed to be a human; I’m not a human.