Is what you see what is to be?
Are psychic visions true?

I wonder about psychics who claim they have accurate visions all of the time. Do they really have only true visions or is it that we just don't hear about the ones that don't come to pass? I have psychic visions sometimes. More than most other people claim, but less than the psychics-for-hire claim they have. They are not all accurate. I would say only half are accurate. Even among the accurate visions, I often misinterpret what I see or "know". A question I have: if you take action to prevent some calamity you have seen in a vision and that calamity does not come to pass, is it because your vision wasn't true or is it because you prevented the disaster? You truly never know the answer to that.


Many people are afraid of psychics. Why? Is it because there are so many money-whoring frauds in the industry who prey on the gullible? Some Christians claim it is of the devil. If people have this ability it would be a natural phenomenom. How can one say their God created the universe and then claim that the Devil, whom Christians believe is inferior to their God created this? If it is a gift from the Devil, why would he bestow it on people who certainly do not follow his ways? If it is of the Devil, were Ezekial, Daniel, Jesus, and that guy who wrote that misanthropic diatribe known as Revelations doing the Devil's work? Who gets to decide which visions are of their God or the Devil? Certainly not the people who pay the men who make those decisions: the tithes-paying members of congregations.


I learned many years ago that it does not pay to act on a psychic vision or to warn others about what you have seen. Twenty-five years ago, I was involved with a Catholic man who believed all that Bible mumbo-jumbo. He was a paratrooper at Ft. Bragg in one of the military police units. He was scheduled for a practice jump. I had one of my visions. I saw him being killed in that jump. I knew if I told him that, he would not take it well. Out of concern for him, I purchased a talisman of his God as protection. It was the St. Michael's medal, which I was told, is a symbol of the patron saint of warriors and policemen. I certainly could not give him a talisman of my belief, which is a baphomet pentagram. When he jumped, as he landed on the ground, he injured his ankle slightly. Of course, he blamed me for his injury because he believed I had hexed the medal I gave him. (No good deed goes unpunished!)


When I think back on that incident, I wonder if it was my intervention that stopped his death, or was my vision not true? The betrayal to my own belief system, giving a talisman of a god not mine, cost me dearly for years. I wonder sometimes if it was all for nothing. Was the betrayal even neccessary? One has to wonder when dealing with visions of what may or may not be.


There have been many other incidents where I knew someone had died before I was notified. There have been many other incidents where I knew someone was going to die and they did. But, I have had many of the same kinds of visions or knowledge that were not accurate. I often wonder what it all means. I do know one thing: PEOPLE SHOULD NOT GIVE THEIR MONEY OR MAKE DECISIONS BECAUSE OF WHAT SOMEONE CLAIMING TO BE PSYCHIC TELLS THEM!!!!

Another Opinion of Mine:
Don't Give Money To Preachers!

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