![Rose in Titanic disregards her wealth](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/646e38_5971519320704f00a89bc83859b770b6~mv2.webp/v1/fill/w_980,h_693,al_c,q_85,usm_0.66_1.00_0.01,enc_auto/646e38_5971519320704f00a89bc83859b770b6~mv2.webp)
*Plop* As Rose in Titanic drops her multi-million dollar diamond necklace into the cold dark depths of the North Atlantic Ocean, and with it the opportunity to set someone up for a financially stable life. *Cue tears*. But was the highest grossing movie of its time more than just an entertaining way-too-long movie about love and an iceberg? Were Leonardo DiCaprio and Kate Winslet actually subconsciously programming us for a life of poverty?
It is our right to be rich. We are here to live an abundant life and be happy, radiant and free. Therefore, we should have all the money we need to lead a full, joyous and prosperous life. But why then are most of us satisfied with just enough to go around, especially when we can enjoy the riches of our subconscious mind? We all desire to be rich and live a wonderful life, it is a cosmic urge. Money is merely a symbol for exchange, and with it comes the economic health of a nation. When blood is circulating freely in our body, we are healthy, when money is circulating freely in our life, we are economically healthy. "Money is the root of all evil" I would say, as I silently and openly condemned money, and in doing so what I condemned took wings and flew away, as we cannot attract what we criticise. I had cemented in place the feeling that there is some virtue to be found in poverty, but this was nothing but a negative subconscious pattern, all due to my early childhood downloads, superstition, and as per usual, the ruling class kindly reprogramming me to seek safety where no safety can be found.
Financial self-sabotage is extremely common today and is based entirely on the dynamics of group pressure, with the ruling class well aware that herd conformity and group pressure safety protocols are based on the size of the herd. The bigger the herd, the more our subconscious mind wants to seek safety inside it. The smaller the group, the more our subconscious is terrified of moving into that group. There is no smaller group than the wealthy group. When we turn on the TV we see a mind control program playing out that is all too common today in all Hollywood screen production. The poor people are framed as the most noble citizens, who always walk the high moral ground, and the rich people are portrayed as hated uncaring assholes that aren't welcome and face the world alone.
This subtle reward and punishment system programs our subconscious mind to believe there’s safety in struggling and being broke, and places fear inside wealth, abundance, and accomplishment. The wealthier folks are more often than not portrayed as only having one companion, their soulless pile of money. This is a scary thought for us given that what our subconscious fears the most is being alone. This is designed to trigger a programmed genetic fear, the fear of being alone or the fear of being vulnerable in the smaller group, keeping us poor and at the struggle end of the spectrum. The ruling class organise the repetitive content of our screen entertainment (or entrainment), to make sure we stay unhealthy, diseased, overweight, and financially impoverished, so we offer them very little push back or resistance. Repetition is the name of the game and the people running our society know that ruling a dis-empowered, childlike underclass is much easier than ruling a group of healthy, wealthy, strong, independent and informed adults.
From our government schools only teaching us how to write resumes instead of teaching us how to write business plans, to Jack Dawson in the movie Titanic having the most fun in the third-class cabin, the ruling class constantly drowns our subconscious mind pathways with repetitive media content that keeps us repelling wealth, abundance, and financial success. By portraying the poor person who struggles as the most honest, the most spiritual and the most moral, a fear of wealth is further reinforced, as being considered a bad person will quickly get us kicked out of the tribal circle where all that lovely "safety" is. It’s easy to program the subconscious with rewards and punishments. You simply reward the behaviours you want and punish the behaviours you don’t want, with the media setting who gets the rewards and who gets the punishments in full public display under “news” and “entertainment”. Once this reward and punishment program is set into our subconscious it can become our cruise control for all of our days, unless we learn how to reprogram. Most movies and TV shows are the same today and they are the same for a reason. The ruling class weaponise the repetitive content against the public, which is designed to keep us attacking ourselves (and others) before any of us get out of the gate toward our best lives. However, we can always learn how to weaponise repetitive content in our favour and in the direction of our dreams.
![Wolf of Wall Street encourages self-sabotage](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/646e38_98e175b20dd8474f86b7b422dfb36410~mv2.jpeg/v1/fill/w_980,h_649,al_c,q_85,usm_0.66_1.00_0.01,enc_auto/646e38_98e175b20dd8474f86b7b422dfb36410~mv2.jpeg)
If we do happen to break free wealth wise, we find another dormant program stored in our mental hard drive lying in wait to trip us up as well. That program revolves around us destroying ourself with the financial abundance we do happen to come across, through excessive materialism and self-abusive modalities like drugs and alcohol. From The Hangover to Bad Moms, we see self-sabotage glorified in everything we see. With the extra spending money I made I ran myself into the ground with this programming for most of my adult life, and would regrettably fantasise about a lifestyle like the Wolf of Wall Street, adopting the attitude that it was boring to be sober, and destroying myself with toxic substances was fun and a wise investment.
In the 7 minute video below two of the most popular movies of our generation are discussed, Titanic and Avatar, with an analysis of the clever tactics by which poverty programming is inserted into our minds.
I used to feel extremely guilty and shameful about money and would throw it away as fast as I could get, I believed I didn't deserve it. Having no money was one of my child-based attributes, kids are moneyless which contributes to them being defenceless and needing others to solve their problems, but as responsible adults we're not supposed to have childlike characteristics. I was often taught "if it is too good to be true it most likely is", or that "you can't have it all", or "you can’t have your cake and eat it too". Why would I want cake if I can't eat it? These were all learned behaviours and they all negatively wired my subconscious for shame and guilt around money. I also had zero real knowledge about business and was absent of a "business mindset". All of this was done on purpose of course by the ruling class, via my attendance at my government obedience training camp (called school), so that I struggled to build my financial pillar of strength. In the 6 minute video below Robert Kiyosaki, author of Rich Dad, Poor Dad, talks about how this is the case.
We've been trapped, ambushed in a mental quagmire that's been purposely inserted into the collective subconscious by rich people, who don't want any competition at the top of the financial pyramid. If we don't know this information, the masters of media and screen psychological manipulation will drown us in a tsunami of negative programming, from which we will rarely (if ever) escape from. If we are growing older and our life is getting harder with each year that passes (instead of easier), it simply means that the behaviour and belief programs we're carrying are no longer effective for guiding us towards success. We are all capable of being wealthy and reprogramming at anytime in order to tap into our full potential, so it's time to cash in by placing a bet on ourselves at the universal casino of life.
My new program Stop Playing Small is taking that bet, do you want to learn how to attract more wealth into your life? Our true source of wealth consists of ideas in our mind and of course, money can't buy happiness, but neither can poverty.
Stay tuned for more blog posts this that will discuss how we can stop self-sabotaging once and for all, and become more independent against a ruling class that wants our tents permanently pitched at base camp on success mountain. Thanks for reading!
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