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Ickonic.Special.20240413.ZoeClews.x265.mkv | 39m21s | 1280x720 | HEVC | AAC | None |
Join Jaymie Icke on an enlightening journey into the world where fantasy meets reality. In London's Harley Street, hypnotherapist Zoe Clews delves into how magical thinking shapes our lives, from lottery dreams to personal growth barriers. This episode challenges viewers to confront their beliefs and take steps towards genuine change.
Comments
I recommend watching this. It
I recommend watching this. It deals with a simple concept that has a profound effect on our lives.
really.
couldn't get more than five minutes in.
Found her incoherent and contradicting herself, giving bad examples that suggest she doesn't really understand the concept she's talking about.
It's probably one of those
It's probably one of those things where it gets better later on, like half way or more into the video, where the light bulb moment goes off. I know there are movies like that where I never make it all the way through, to get to that point - like that movie 'Everything Everywhere, All at Once', or something like that.
This particular video might have something to do with Law of Attraction type psychology, and I guess belief systems that sometimes imprison people - or liberate them. I'd give it a go!
I think so.
The Law of Attraction obviously works, and works reliably.
Whether you think it works because it's a self-fulfilling prophecy, or because the hive mind influences the behaviour of humans, or because the universe itself responds to intention, is another matter.
But she's conflating that with children believing there is a monster under the bed, which isn't magical thinking at all, just superstition and fear.
She doesn't discuss the laws
She doesn't discuss the laws of attraction. She is talking about people believing things that aren't true, such as monsters under the bed. Also phobias like fear of elevators. Also obsessive compulsive disorders, such as believing you need to tap your wrist 3 times before opening a door or something horrible will happen. These are what she means by magical thinking.
https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/magical-thinking
Premature judgment often
Premature judgment often leads to misjudgment. She very much understands what she's talking about. Otherwise I wouldn't have recommended this.
https://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/magical-thinking