Recently, a woman asked me a question: How was the last love spell you encountered cast?
I shrugged: It was the most common method of casting a love spell - through menstrual blood.
«How so?» the woman wondered.
«Simple. A woman adds a drop of her blood to a man's food or drink, and he becomes hers to command.»
«And what is the mechanism of the love spell?»
During menstruation, a potential future life disintegrates. Therefore, on one hand, a woman feels uncomfortable, but on the other hand, what she focuses on during this time can come true. If she prays during her period, tuning into the Divine, she saves her offspring.
However, if she engages in sexual activity during her period, she risks making her children impotent and destroying their future families and health. It's no coincidence that Judaism forbids sex during menstruation. As long as there's even a trace of blood, a woman engaging in sex during this time is essentially casting a love spell on her husband. Nowadays, many engage in sex during these days because conception is less likely, and then we wonder why the divorce rate is increasing and sick children are born.
Alright, during menstruation, a woman has very strong subtle energy. But at that moment, future children are disintegrating, meaning the mother's energy doesn't affect them. But what happens at the moment of conception?'
First of all, it does affect them: at the moment of disintegration, the focus shifts to the soul. The more painful the menstruation is for a woman, the more soul-related problems her children will have.
But the moment of conception is also very important.
In Judaism, there's a ritual: when a woman's body is ready for conception, about a week after her period, she must remove all her clothes, jewelry, etc., and immerse herself in water in a special bath, reciting prayers. This bath is called a mikvah. The water washes away surface energy, focusing on the Divine. On a subtle level, this resembles a natural mechanism: the death of a living being and its aspiration towards God. Here, it's done consciously, and thus the effect is greatly amplified. A friend once told me a story.
Her friend was infertile, and she advised her to «take a mikvah». Two months later, the friend came back saying, «It didn't work for me». «Don't rush», the woman replied, «you need to do it for at least three consecutive months». On the fourth month, her friend indeed became pregnant. It's not about Judaism, but about the laws of the Universe that are revealed and articulated in it. If Newton discovered the law of universal gravitation, it doesn't mean he owns it and only his descendants can use it.
The laws exist beyond the discoverer. The laws of morality and love for the Creator exist beyond religion. Inventors and founders of religions simply make the secret obvious.
S.N. Lazarov, «Karma Diagnostics 11»
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