| Psychological Insufficiencies and Its affect on Mind-Body-Soul | | Unit 9: Project | |
Kaplan university
CM 107
Authored by: Zaconia Turner
Kaplan university
CM 107
Authored by: Zaconia Turner
Mental Wellness is mandatory to living and maintaining a healthy life. Some people think mental disorders are hereditary, but on the contrary, this illness is more than hereditary. There are many causes to mental disorders (mind-body-soul); stress energy in the mind, along with malnutrition can contribute to the effect of unbalanced behaviors (mental), disease, injury, illness and depletion of organ functions throughout the body. Human beings are on a journey of awareness. Exposing the truths that are over shadowed will make humanity aware of why psychological insufficiencies exist (mental disorders) of the mind, body, and soul. The extraneous forces (Archons) through psychological sorcery, cast spells of misconception in the minds of Humanity. Here confrontation confronts an enigma of cosmic proportions. Where would these weird entities be situated in this evolutionary plot of Sophia mythos? Are they to be regarded as real entities, a species of their own or a non-terrestrial one? What is their relation to Gaia/Earth the intelligence of the biosphere? And how do the Archons in turn relate to Humanity? Gnostics explored these questions in a sober and consistent way. Gnostic seers had to be skilled in non-ordinary reason to interpret the experiences they underwent in states of heightened perception. Not everything in the cosmos or in the human psyche can be reduced to rational terms. The point is to bring sane and sober understanding to aspects of human experience that lie beyond the limits of ordinary sense and perception; do not expect the inquiry into the Archons to be rational, at least not in the ordinary sense of rationality.
References: Alien dreaming the enigma of Archons-meta history. (2002-2013). Retrieved by www.metahistory.org/nostique/archonfiles/AlienDreaming.php Gnostic return in Modernity. (2001). Retrieved by http://ehis.ebscohost.com.lib.kaplan.edu The Nag Hummadi library. (1945). Retrieved by www.naghumadilibrary.com