Post by J Doe on Nov 1, 2017 20:10:55 GMT 8
As you do your constant prayer (New Information For TI's P11-15), you will see and feel yourself change. Some might be in ways you expect and hope for. Some may be in ways you never thought of.
I had always been terrified of spiders and hated them around me. I kept spray cans of insect killer in every room of my house and sprayed every spider I saw from the smallest to the largest. I never enjoyed this. I always felt bad killing another species because I didn't like their shape. I know spiders are important for the environment. But I did it because spiders seemed to be magnetically drawn to me. I would find them in my clothes, in my bed, they would drop from the ceiling and dangle in front of me, I would look down and there was one crawling on me. It was constant and my reaction to it was extreme. (When I was a fast asleep, mind controlled robot) I believed I had arachnophobia because my heart would be racing, skin crawling, covered in goosebumps, cold sweats, the hairs on the back of my neck standing up, then I would have nightmares for days.
But recently my fear of spiders has fallen away; not something I asked for or expected but something I am so pleased about. Now I pick them up using a beaker and a piece of card and put them outside.
When I read recently that spiders are the main killers of flies, mosquitos and even cockroaches, the main disease spreaders on the planet, and how without spiders all human life would be wiped out in a matter of days, (1-2 days according to the story I read) I understood why our enemies mind control so many, to fear and kill spiders. That is something we will regret, something that will hurt *us* in the future but in line with the rules of the game they are playing - we did it to ourselves.
A few months ago I started feeding the birds in my garden: seeds and mealworms. I had no idea of the incredible understanding this would lead me to of spiders and their intelligence. As I put out the food everyday, I had no idea spiders were watching me. With the birds being fed mealworms, they stopped hunting spiders (a bird delicacy). And the spiders started communicating with me.
One day I saw a bee caught in a web and moved him with a stick to see if he was alive; if he was, I was going to let him go. I don't mind spiders killing flies but bees are vitally important to human survival (that will be its own thread later). He was dead but in moving him I broke quite a lot of the web.
Around 2 weeks later I happened to be standing by the same web when another bee flew into the broken part of it. A spider came rushing out and tried to grab him but he managed to fly away. The spider saw me and grabbed the dead bee, holding it, with his upper body and front legs draped over the top of the bee, while looking at me. I felt strongly he was saying "This is my food. That is why it is here. Don't take my food or break my web again." I haven't touched the web again and it has been rebuilt.
One day I noticed the door to my shed was open. I thought a bird or hedgehog might have got inside so couldn't just close it and walk away. I put 2 dishes in the shed, 1 with seed and 1 with water. The next day when I went back to see if the seed had been eaten, there was a spider floating in the water. I thought he was dead but got a leaf and fished him out anyway. He was alive and I placed him on the ground to go on his way. This happened the next 2 days in a row until I put tiny washed gravel in the bottom of the dish and formed a slope up the side. The spiders hadn't struggled until they were exhausted, then drowned. They had floated and waited patiently.
There was a spider on the ceiling in my living room, next to the window, a few feet from where I sat on the sofa. I was busy and so didn't remove him as I usually would, then forgot he was there. The next morning he was still in the exact same spot. I kept an eye on him throughout the day and he never moved so I just left him alone.
Over the next few days he stayed in that spot, occasionally moving a fraction to either side, very very slowly. I thought he was injured or dying and not knowing how to help, left him alone to die in peace. A week or so later he was still there, still alive. I decided to look online to see if there was something I could give him to eat (apart from live insects). Nope, that was a household spiders diet. But I learned spiders can go dormant in cold weather and not eat for long periods. They would be fine if they were lightly misted with water, so I did this. 1.5 hours later I looked up and he was on the ceiling directly above me. He was very cooperative about climbing into the beaker, I didn't even need the card, and after seeing he was fit and moving fine (came in to recover from an illness?) I placed him outside.
One day I looked up and there was a spider on the living room ceiling, directly above me. I went and got the ladder, beaker and card. As I placed the beaker over him, he dropped into it, I never needed the card at all. He fell so hard he made a thud even though he was tiny. The only thing I could think was he had died as I placed the beaker over him. But then he started walking around in it and was clearly uninjured. He had just released and allowed himself to fall, without even releasing a thread to lower himself from.
Now I leave spiders in my property alone unless they are in the living room and they seem to have learned this and stay out of there. And this doesn't mean the rest of my home is teeming with spiders; I have gone from them being constantly around me to almost never seeing them. And when I do it tends to be a small one. No more magnetic attraction. Things that make you go hmmmm.
Spiders look strange and scary to us but.... we look exactly the same to them! And one still tried to communicate with me about his web and his food. You can communicate with them too. And if your heart is racing, you are shaking or crying; just remember your enemies are doing this to you and if they want you to kill spiders, then it must be in your own worst interests. Do your prayer over the implanted/ induced reactions, buy a spider catcher and learn how to use it. If you have an outdoor space make it attractive to spiders by giving them water in a few shallow bowls with a pebble slope to get in and out. In winter you can make piles of leaves for them to hide in. As the leaves decompose they put out a lot of heat which is what spiders are looking for when they come into our homes. If you can remove the threat of birds and keep putting spiders in the leaves outside, they will learn to stay there.
Spiders mostly come into houses at dusk and dawn to escape the cold, and when its raining, so make sure windows are shut at this time. Cover air bricks with a fine mesh and seal gaps under skirting boards with filler. This way there may be spiders in the walls or under the floor, but they are less likely to find a way into your rooms.
How to use a spider catcher
There are 2 main types of spider catcher on the market; a box with a slide shut door and handle for smaller spiders, then 2 sets of bristles on a telescopic pole, for closing around a larger spider. I have seen people online complaining that spiders can push their way out of the bristles, so why not get a wide mouthed glass jug and put it on the floor to immediately drop the spider into
With the smaller spider catcher, people complained it would injure the spiders legs. But this was because in their implanted terror they would put the box over the spider and instantly slam the door closed before the spider knew what was going on and to get out of the way. I have used these spider catchers and they work perfectly if you remain calm and take it slow.
Place the box over the spider then just wait. The spider will take a minute or 2 to go around the edges of the side that is against the wall (where the door will slide shut). They try and get a leg out of the enclosure so the most important thing now is to hold it firmly against the wall; use both hands. I recommend you keep a small torch you can hold in your mouth next to the spider catcher. 9 times out of 10 they will then climb up onto the side or roof of the box and you can easily close the door. If they stay on the wall then start to *slowly* close the door. When it comes up to them, go even slower in a start-stop pattern. Most will eventually climb up. Others you may have to close the door against them and they will climb onto the door.
Sometimes when I see a spider I feel nothing and just deal with putting him outside. Other times directed energy beams are used to make my heart rise painfully high and beat madly, my head is filled with words of shock and fear. I ignore these while I grab the spider catcher or beaker but I have no doubt if I let them in, I would be back to spray cans of spider killer in every room.
I had always been terrified of spiders and hated them around me. I kept spray cans of insect killer in every room of my house and sprayed every spider I saw from the smallest to the largest. I never enjoyed this. I always felt bad killing another species because I didn't like their shape. I know spiders are important for the environment. But I did it because spiders seemed to be magnetically drawn to me. I would find them in my clothes, in my bed, they would drop from the ceiling and dangle in front of me, I would look down and there was one crawling on me. It was constant and my reaction to it was extreme. (When I was a fast asleep, mind controlled robot) I believed I had arachnophobia because my heart would be racing, skin crawling, covered in goosebumps, cold sweats, the hairs on the back of my neck standing up, then I would have nightmares for days.
But recently my fear of spiders has fallen away; not something I asked for or expected but something I am so pleased about. Now I pick them up using a beaker and a piece of card and put them outside.
When I read recently that spiders are the main killers of flies, mosquitos and even cockroaches, the main disease spreaders on the planet, and how without spiders all human life would be wiped out in a matter of days, (1-2 days according to the story I read) I understood why our enemies mind control so many, to fear and kill spiders. That is something we will regret, something that will hurt *us* in the future but in line with the rules of the game they are playing - we did it to ourselves.
A few months ago I started feeding the birds in my garden: seeds and mealworms. I had no idea of the incredible understanding this would lead me to of spiders and their intelligence. As I put out the food everyday, I had no idea spiders were watching me. With the birds being fed mealworms, they stopped hunting spiders (a bird delicacy). And the spiders started communicating with me.
One day I saw a bee caught in a web and moved him with a stick to see if he was alive; if he was, I was going to let him go. I don't mind spiders killing flies but bees are vitally important to human survival (that will be its own thread later). He was dead but in moving him I broke quite a lot of the web.
Around 2 weeks later I happened to be standing by the same web when another bee flew into the broken part of it. A spider came rushing out and tried to grab him but he managed to fly away. The spider saw me and grabbed the dead bee, holding it, with his upper body and front legs draped over the top of the bee, while looking at me. I felt strongly he was saying "This is my food. That is why it is here. Don't take my food or break my web again." I haven't touched the web again and it has been rebuilt.
One day I noticed the door to my shed was open. I thought a bird or hedgehog might have got inside so couldn't just close it and walk away. I put 2 dishes in the shed, 1 with seed and 1 with water. The next day when I went back to see if the seed had been eaten, there was a spider floating in the water. I thought he was dead but got a leaf and fished him out anyway. He was alive and I placed him on the ground to go on his way. This happened the next 2 days in a row until I put tiny washed gravel in the bottom of the dish and formed a slope up the side. The spiders hadn't struggled until they were exhausted, then drowned. They had floated and waited patiently.
There was a spider on the ceiling in my living room, next to the window, a few feet from where I sat on the sofa. I was busy and so didn't remove him as I usually would, then forgot he was there. The next morning he was still in the exact same spot. I kept an eye on him throughout the day and he never moved so I just left him alone.
Over the next few days he stayed in that spot, occasionally moving a fraction to either side, very very slowly. I thought he was injured or dying and not knowing how to help, left him alone to die in peace. A week or so later he was still there, still alive. I decided to look online to see if there was something I could give him to eat (apart from live insects). Nope, that was a household spiders diet. But I learned spiders can go dormant in cold weather and not eat for long periods. They would be fine if they were lightly misted with water, so I did this. 1.5 hours later I looked up and he was on the ceiling directly above me. He was very cooperative about climbing into the beaker, I didn't even need the card, and after seeing he was fit and moving fine (came in to recover from an illness?) I placed him outside.
One day I looked up and there was a spider on the living room ceiling, directly above me. I went and got the ladder, beaker and card. As I placed the beaker over him, he dropped into it, I never needed the card at all. He fell so hard he made a thud even though he was tiny. The only thing I could think was he had died as I placed the beaker over him. But then he started walking around in it and was clearly uninjured. He had just released and allowed himself to fall, without even releasing a thread to lower himself from.
Now I leave spiders in my property alone unless they are in the living room and they seem to have learned this and stay out of there. And this doesn't mean the rest of my home is teeming with spiders; I have gone from them being constantly around me to almost never seeing them. And when I do it tends to be a small one. No more magnetic attraction. Things that make you go hmmmm.
Spiders look strange and scary to us but.... we look exactly the same to them! And one still tried to communicate with me about his web and his food. You can communicate with them too. And if your heart is racing, you are shaking or crying; just remember your enemies are doing this to you and if they want you to kill spiders, then it must be in your own worst interests. Do your prayer over the implanted/ induced reactions, buy a spider catcher and learn how to use it. If you have an outdoor space make it attractive to spiders by giving them water in a few shallow bowls with a pebble slope to get in and out. In winter you can make piles of leaves for them to hide in. As the leaves decompose they put out a lot of heat which is what spiders are looking for when they come into our homes. If you can remove the threat of birds and keep putting spiders in the leaves outside, they will learn to stay there.
Spiders mostly come into houses at dusk and dawn to escape the cold, and when its raining, so make sure windows are shut at this time. Cover air bricks with a fine mesh and seal gaps under skirting boards with filler. This way there may be spiders in the walls or under the floor, but they are less likely to find a way into your rooms.
How to use a spider catcher
There are 2 main types of spider catcher on the market; a box with a slide shut door and handle for smaller spiders, then 2 sets of bristles on a telescopic pole, for closing around a larger spider. I have seen people online complaining that spiders can push their way out of the bristles, so why not get a wide mouthed glass jug and put it on the floor to immediately drop the spider into
With the smaller spider catcher, people complained it would injure the spiders legs. But this was because in their implanted terror they would put the box over the spider and instantly slam the door closed before the spider knew what was going on and to get out of the way. I have used these spider catchers and they work perfectly if you remain calm and take it slow.
Place the box over the spider then just wait. The spider will take a minute or 2 to go around the edges of the side that is against the wall (where the door will slide shut). They try and get a leg out of the enclosure so the most important thing now is to hold it firmly against the wall; use both hands. I recommend you keep a small torch you can hold in your mouth next to the spider catcher. 9 times out of 10 they will then climb up onto the side or roof of the box and you can easily close the door. If they stay on the wall then start to *slowly* close the door. When it comes up to them, go even slower in a start-stop pattern. Most will eventually climb up. Others you may have to close the door against them and they will climb onto the door.
Sometimes when I see a spider I feel nothing and just deal with putting him outside. Other times directed energy beams are used to make my heart rise painfully high and beat madly, my head is filled with words of shock and fear. I ignore these while I grab the spider catcher or beaker but I have no doubt if I let them in, I would be back to spray cans of spider killer in every room.