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Old 01-09-2010, 10:15 AM   #16
TraineeHuman
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Join Date: May 2009
Location: Sydney, Australia
Posts: 174
Default Re: Are you an Indigo person? Take a look at the charactersitics of an Indigo.

I have a few more to add to the 25:

(26) Your biggest psychological scars or wounds have to do with having been betrayed by the person or people in your life that you’re closest to, or were closest to. This is a really big one. David Wilcock has already mentioned it in one of his blogs, as being probably the biggest trap that a Wanderer/StarSeed needs to beware of. But it’s certainly worth mentioning this one again. As David also explains, the reason this deep emotional scar can be so psychologically damaging and limiting to you is that as a Wanderer you’re used (in your past lives, before you volunteered to come down to this density) to a much purer and truer form of “love” from anybody you’re intimate with in any sense.

(27) There are many consequences of no.26, and some of these have already been mentioned in the list of 25. One not mentioned so far is: you have had to learn to make yourself never smile in any business situation. The reason you have to do this is that whenever you give anybody a genuine smile, they immediately see that you look extremely generous (which, being a Wanderer, you of course are, big time). Many people will then jump to the conclusion that they can con you or steal from you or exploit you big time – because they believe that a person who is that generous will be so forgiving as not to properly protect their own interests. They assume that you'll just be so tolerant you'll make excuses for the damage they do. Also, they often subsequently discover, to their great surprise, that they were quite wrong about this you-not-protecting-your-interests bit.

(28) In Western cultures these days, it’s not considered normal to be or seem as “detached” as you, my Indigo friend, can often be or appear to be. People just don’t understand that being detached doesn’t necessarily mean you're being uninvolved, let alone “not present”. The truth is, a person can only fully be themselves, or be truly liberated or spiritually enlightened, or genuinely caring in a completely unneurotic way, unless they are very “fluent” at detachment and practice it quite often. People who are from Asian or indigenous cultures understand this, but most people in Western cultures don’t, even if they know you very well.

(29) You simply don’t get lonely, in any major sense. Loneliness is really just a form of sadness if not depression, and (assuming you are in at least your thirties) you’ve well and truly left falling victim to depression behind a long time ago.
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