I just had a realization. It looks like we’ve been keeping a big secret from ourselves. What is it?
Support groups. They’re everywhere. Someone has an issue with their weight. There’s Weight Watchers, plus hundreds of other groups. Someone has a problem with their drinking. There’s AA, plus other groups. Someone gets a cancer diagnosis. There are support groups.
As for those of us AWAKE to what is going on, there’s information through many alternative sources. There are alternative news sources, alternative blogs, video channels, social media. Plus there are lots of people passing on information.
But we don’t have support groups, or anyway none that I’m aware of.
There are studies showing how beneficial groups can be.
So why don’t we have support groups, I’ve wondered. Are we so fabulously self-sufficient, incredibly self-powered, that we don’t need any?
that we don’t have what every other group has – support groups. Actually I don’t believe it’s that we have been keeping the secret from ourselves. My sense is that we have been somehow blocked from recognizing and acting on this. Time for that to change, I would say and you would say.
I hear a lot about people frustrated, angry, not knowing what to do and not do, sometimes locked in conflict with family and friends, sometimes feeling isolated.
I’d say we’re often far from happily self-sufficient, basking in bliss and empowerment.
So I’ve created a support program for people AWAKE in a World Gone "Woke."
If you think this might interest you, you can contact me at:
elsa@fullflourishing.com
Posted January 4, 2023
How about CTA? Conspiracy Theorist Associates.
You have definitely touched upon a sensitive and essential subject, and your effort is well beyond heroic. :)
I've seen a number of support groups and, nearly exclusively, they were based on brain-washing and conformity.
Your site (and I hope, mine, too) is the REAL "support group," because the ONLY way people can be helped is by making them experience that only THEY can make their OWN decisions and group dynamics might alleviate their symptoms and the little games they play (thinking about Eric Berne's Games People Play, Alcoholics Anonymous, which is an ingenious analysis of the proceedings) might put them on a leash, but will never liberate them from the prison of their false beliefs, guilt, and fake attachments.
The Catch-22 resides in the fact that people like to be together, but must make their life-changing decisions alone, because nobody else can do that for them.
If you think I can be of some help in your support group, please, let me know how. As for the theory of the logistics, I can easily contribute, but it might be possible to explore remoter shores, too. Please, contact me by private e-mail before a decision about my participation made. I am keeping the rest of my thoughts for our private communication, should it happen.