I tell you, waking, and hearing first thing this curator and his deep voiced guide, plotting on the elimination of the presence of Divine Feminine. It’s disturbing that this rhetoric is flooding the field of consciousness. The children of the future deserve a “clear” collective mental field.
Want to degrade the “miracle” my repeated efforts provided? You want to say my try, try, try again “attitude” is unworthy, and that my successes are just chance?
You want to strip me of my life and opportunity to live it, while reaping the reward and benefit of my work?
May you receive every foul deed you are plotting against we.
Every ounce of this energy, every stubborn bit of will that I have cultivated, will enwrap, magnetize, and empower the intention, and skillful will of my Kingdom Spouse.
You, waking me with ridiculousness, your opportunity to Eff with the mind of our family’s children, WILL come to a close. You offer our future no value.
May Mother Father, Creators of All that is, support and permit your swift elimination from this realm.
Our family deserves peace.
They’ve been at war with haters unknown, demanding a feud, or “competion” for far too long. We don’t even remember who you are, Jack-o. We just want to forget, fully, your energy and presence existence.
We want to be free to live the love the beauty the Divine has seeded into our Soul. We want you to stop feeding on us., replacing our inner wealth with your foul deeds.
Kaparot (or Kapparot) must end.
Aho. Amen. Wado.
————————————-
**AI Overview**
Kaparot (or Kapparos) is a traditional Jewish atonement ritual, often performed by Orthodox Jews on the eve of Yom Kippur, involving swinging a live rooster (or money) over one’s head while reciting prayers, symbolizing the transfer of sins to the bird, which is then slaughtered and donated to charity, though many modern rabbis encourage using money instead for ethical and practical reasons. The word means “atonements,” and the practice seeks to symbolically cleanse sins before the Day of Atonement.
How it works
- With a Chicken: A person gently swings a live rooster over their head three times while reciting specific prayers, asking for sins to be transferred to the bird.
- With Money: Alternatively, money (often in multiples of 18, representing “life”) is swung over the head with similar prayers, with the money then donated as charity.
- The Ritual’s Purpose: The rooster is then humanely slaughtered (or the money donated), with the belief that God will transfer harsh decrees intended for the person to the bird (or the charity) in the merit of this mitzvah (good deed).
Controversy and alternatives
- Rabbinic Opposition: The practice is controversial, with strong rabbinic opposition due to concerns about animal cruelty and potential superstitious origins.
- Modern Alternatives: Many religious leaders encourage using money instead of chickens as a more effective and humane form of atonement, giving the value to the poor or charity.
Key takeaways
- Timing: Performed just before Yom Kippur.
- Meaning: Symbolic transfer of sins for atonement.
- Alternatives: Money is a common modern replacement for the chicken.







