NEW PSYCHOLOGICAL TEST
AUGUST 23, 2011. As any sane person knows, routine psychological tests are absurd. For many reasons.
Most importantly, they don’t take CREATIVE POWER into account and give it its due.
But if they did, then psychology wouldn’t be psychology. It would be something else, and perhaps what it was, previously, would just disappear.
So, for interest’s sake, I’ve devised a different sort of test. This one has three questions. They are yes and no Qs, with essays attached.
ONE: If with the power of your mind/imagination alone, you could dissolve a serious hurricane before it reaches land, without diverting its effects to another location, would you do it? Explain.
TWO: If with the power of your mind/imagination alone, you could make a tree grow to a height of 5000 feet, without in any way disrupting the surrounding ecology, would you do it? Explain.
THREE: If with the power of your mind/imagination alone, you could shrink the universe down to the size of a peanut and put it in your pocket for an hour—and then reconstitute it just as it was, with no one recalling any “disruption of service”—would you do it?
There are no hidden tricks in these questions. They are what they are.
I’m not offering answers. I’m simply saying you would learn some very interesting things about a person from his answers and explanations. Aside from the essays, an interview with the person about his answers should also prove illuminating.
But very few people in this society care to explore creative power in a serious way. And maybe that’s just fine, because, knowing the mindset of “professionals,” they would prove to be absolutely useless.
Which, of course, raises the question, why are they involved in other people’s lives at all? For those patients who want to solve problems, a systems approach handled by a therapy-robot would certainly do. Software shouldn’t be too difficult to develop.
We really need to make a separation between the people who take everything you say and place it into their own problem-solving system, and those who see that the enormous energy of their own creative impulse is a different animal altogether.
We need to understand that those people who whine about power being a corrupting force—and ONLY a corrupting force—need to find out where they mislaid their own imaginations.
They also need to figure out that the curtailment of individual power is the central agenda of elites, whose aim, globalism, would reduce the energy of everyone except themselves, the elites.
From emails I receive, I correctly infer there are people out there who yearn for the kind of magic their own power can deliver to them. This is not a misplaced yearning. It’s real. It requires exiting from the swampy consensus reality that sinks all boats.
What do you have to lose? The illusion of a comfortable decay into old age? A stack of excuses and reasons why you never did what you really wanted to do?
Jon Rappoport