Cabal Actions on Tanaath’s Interview Indicate Severe Cabal Teenager Phobia

Here is the interview archive page for Corey Taylor’s teen- focused Internet Radio show whose topic for the Dec. 12, 2013 show was leadership, and whose guest was Tanaath of the Silver Legion Light Warrior Defense Force.

 

One thing that became glaringly apparent as the talk show’s staff struggled to keep Tanaath on the air, was that some certain somebodies… (cough, cough… CABAL… cough, cough… ) ARE AFRAID OF TEENAGERS WHO ARE EMPOWERED AND IN CONTROL OF THEMSELVES. We’ve known for a long time that the cabal fear empowered adults, but they REALLY seem to be scared shiteless of wise, empowered, energetic teenagers, if the events of the show are any indication…

 

The self-proclaimed overlords  of the powers that were, who think they are in charge of all of us, certainly don’t want any of us making decisions for ourselves based on checking with our own conscience and good judgement without falling for the many ways they try to influence us to act like total greedy, hateful, hurtful, zombiefied, ass-hatted-idiots to ourselves and each other…well, sort of how the cabal themselves like to act, actually.

 

I’d start 20 minutes into the hour long show because apparently turning on Skype can cause your computer to crash multiple times on different computers… which did happen on the show. Also during the show, Tanaath was cut off TWICE when talking on the phone lines as an alternative to Skype, EXACTLY when she tried to address self-empowerment and locus of control to the teen audience.  Some other cabal antics, apparently due to their phobia of teens with healthy psyches, include pretty major problems for the show with Tweets as well as Facebook posts for both promotion before and questions during the show.

 

After the show, Tanaath went ahead and wrote out fully on the Silver Legion website Update section what she was trying to get across on the show about self-actualization, which can be found at silverlegion.org.

 

Still, it was a great show and I was very inspired that our teens have taken such a great interest in these things that are never touched upon openly in their classrooms. Great job to both Tanaath and Corey!!! So proud of y’all!!! http://vegasallnetradio.com/Shows/Corey-Taylor-Talks.html

 

Also, I’m pasting in at the end of this article from the Silver Legion website what Tanaath was trying to say during the show before the cabal once again engaged in their very tiresome, old, trite, pathetic, and evermore INEFFECTIVE attempts at censorship.

🙂 🙂 🙂 BUT, before you listen to the show… you might enjoy this great selection from Macy Gray who works tirelessly with teenagers, and because she has three of her own,  wrote the following tongue-in-cheek arrangement of a song she heard from My Chemical Romance appropriately titled, “Teenagers” which she changed up a bit to reflect her point of view as a mother. However, when the cabal hear it, they may run for cover to the nearest corner… with a blanky to hide under. 🙂 🙂 🙂

🙂 🙂 🙂 Click the link below to hear Macy Gray’s “Teenagers.”  And here are the lyrics in case you’d like to sing along:   🙂 🙂 🙂

They’re gonna ruin your looks  With all the lies in the book  They’ll make a pill-popper out of you  You’ve got to sleep with a gun  And keep an eye on them, son  You’ve got to watch all the things they do  And when the morning arrives  You’ve got that hope in your eyes  But they got methods of keeping you crazed
There’s the drugs and the rage  The weirdo friends that they make  The sex at an early age :Chorus:   Teenagers scare the living sh** out of me  They could care less as long as someone’ll bleed  So darken your clothes and strike a violent pose  Maybe they’ll leave you alone, but not me  What have I done  Am I the reason’s she’s dumb  Will my overspending make her poor  Did my slutty ways  Spark her permiscuous phase  Am I the reason that she’s a whore  I’ll tell you…  Repeat Chorus 3 more times.  🙂 🙂 🙂

Love from Tejas (Texas,) 🙂 🙂 🙂

Tif 🙂 🙂 🙂

From Tanaath’s Silver Legion Update section at silverlegion.org:

Silver Legion Announcements

Self-Actualization and Regaining your Locus of Control

by Tanaath on 12/12/13
“The Corey Taylor Talks show was very interesting, especially since we had such a monster of a time actually connecting me to the show and staying connected. I wish we had more than an hour to talk, because there’s a limit to how much ground you can cover in an hour, and when technical difficulties eat half an hour of it, it’s even more limited. So I will be coming back on that show, I’ll have to set up a date with them.

It was interesting to notice that my disconnects occurred when discussing a particular topic – that of self-actualization and regaining your locus of control. I had no idea one’s locus of control was such a verboten subject, but apparently it is. So I promised to discuss it a bit in a blog post.

Simply put, your locus of control is how much you feel you are personally in control of your own life. If your locus of control is entirely outside of yourself, the typical consequence is depression, misery, anger, frustration, and a lot of negativity about everything. I know pretty well how it is, because I battle with this myself. A lot of us do. If you feel like there’s nothing at all in your life that you have control over, it sucks. Conversely, the more you feel like you are in control of your own life, the happier you are, and the more you are able to put your effort to effectively achieving what it is you are working for.

Regaining your locus of control is one part a perceptual game and one part taking command of the parts of life you can actually control.

First off, the perceptual thing. Anyone who has driven a car and who has also been a passenger will understand this concept – you usually feel safer when it’s you in control of the vehicle. That’s a perception thing. You may not actually be safer (especially if you drive like my sister), but you feel in control. And that means you are more confident, and better able to handle the unexpected without fear.

When it comes to the self, how you perceive yourself is a really big thing. Unlike my sister’s driving skills, it will have a large and noticeable impact on the rest of your life. Your mental toolbox will be full of tools, the car of your mind will be fueled up, well maintained, and ready to race a Ferrari. You won’t be caught flat-footed feeling helpless.

The mind trick in this is in understanding and recognizing that some things will always be outside of your control, and choosing instead to only let the things you can actually control impact your mental state.

For instance – last week, my area had an incredible dumping of snow. We nearly broke a record for this time of the year. It was followed by very very cold temperatures, in the -20 to -30C range (-4 to -22F), and seriously icy conditions. The roads were a mess. My morning drive to work (I have given up the bus for the winter, as the snow makes service unreliable and I have no desire to freeze to death) went from 30 minutes to over an hour. Traffic was bad and there was over 2,000 accidents in a 10-day period. Even driving in a straight line could be difficult due to the snow and ice.

I had no control over the weather. I had no control over the number of other drivers on the road. I had no control over whether my route had an accident or whether an accident somewhere else had more people than usual using my particular route. I had no control over what the people around me were doing. It was a recipe for frustration and rage, especially when combined with the fact that I really hate being late for anything.

But there were aspects of this I could control. I could control my own reaction to all of this. And I could take steps to minimize my risk of an accident, and help make it so that even if I lost control of my vehicle, I wouldn’t end up in trouble or hurt anyone else. I left early. I drove real slow. I mean, real slow – idling speed a lot of the time. I left a lot of distance between me and other cars. I watched where the cars in front of me slid around and which way their skids went, so I would be prepared when I hit that spot. I gave myself a lot of distance for stopping, and I kept my feet off the gas on any sludgy or uneven ground. As a result, I got to and from my destinations safely, and I felt less angry about all the delays, because I knew I was doing what I could.

There will always be things in your life that are outside your control. How well you deal with it is a mental game. If you focus on all the things that you can’t control, you will be miserable. Your locus of control is outside yourself. But if you focus on the things you can control, you bring that locus of control back into yourself. Don’t sweat the petty things. And if you have a major problem, start by looking for the things you can fix before thinking too much about the things you can’t fix.

Unfortunately, this whole world has been designed to systematically erode our locus of control and shift it to someone or something other than ourselves. Yes, I fully realize that this world has a lot of outside pressures that we don’t have direct control over – I live here too. I, too, have to find some way to feed myself and clothe myself and shelter myself, etc., and I fully realize that gaining control over my life will always be incomplete. That’s why I’m not aiming for 100%, just ‘as much as I possibly can’. Psychologically speaking, I give the stuff I can control much, much more ‘weight’ than the stuff I can’t.

So, if your locus of control has slipped away from you, how do you get it back? Start by taking a step back from your situation. Pretend it’s happening to someone else, and make an inventory of what can and can’t be changed. You want three boxes:

1. Really, truly, honestly outside your control. This is things like the weather, which you would literally need a super power to change. These are things that are either totally unchangeable, or effectively unchangeable.

2. Things that can be changed but not with your current situation or resources – these might feel like they can’t be changed by you, but they are something that can be changed.

3.Things you can have direct control over. This is all the things you know you can choose or alter.

Analyze the underlying assumptions in anything that you decide can’t be changed, so you can really be sure that it can’t be changed. Then shove it in the ‘can’t do anything about it’ box, and go back to the stuff you can affect… and the stuff that you can affect if other things happen to allow it (box 2).

Your energy and your focus should go into the things you can affect, instead of pooling around all the things you can’t affect. Be aware of the things you can’t change, but don’t cling to them.

Take ownership of everything in box 3. Understand that it’s yours, and that you can do something about it. It’s your responsibility and no one else’s.

Regaining your locus of control is all about moving the things from box 2 into box 3 as much as possible. Take it slow. You don’t have to get it all at once. Take each piece of Box 2 stuff and analyze it piece by piece. Pick it apart as much as you can, always asking the question of ‘what would it take to change this’. Not ‘what should I do to change this’, but ‘what would it take‘. Once you have that listed out, then ask yourself, of each point ‘how can I work to achieve that‘. Focus on what you can do, not what you can’t do. If something is genuinely impossible, move on to the next thing, or the next best solution.

We humans tend to have an all or nothing way of thinking. But understanding that there are gradations and a spectrum involved, usually, is a big benefit. If you can’t achieve outcome #1, what is outcome #2? Can you achieve that? Or #3, or #4, and so on, until you have the very best that you can get under the circumstances. If you can’t get the best solution, try to figure out what the next best is and go for that. Go for the maximum bang for your effort.

In this community we freak out a lot about things outside our control. Interstellar flying rocks, volcanoes and earthquakes, political situations in other countries, natural disasters, manmade disasters, radiation, etc… these are things that most of us can’t directly influence. It doesn’t help us much to focus on them. Instead, focus on what you can do. In my own household, it’s been a focus on sensible preparedness for a natural disaster or other interruption of services. We can’t realistically be prepared for 5 years of interrupted services, but we can be prepared for a month or two, so we are.

In my non-physical life, I’ve been using what I do have access to – the Silver Legion, my own non-physical form and abilities – to effect what changes I can. They haven’t trickled down here into the physical plane in a way that I can perceive, at least not yet. But I keep trying, because the payoff is worth it for myself and for humanity if we can succeed with this.

Geiger Counter – the Fukushima situation is a real great example of Box 1 material. If it’s as bad as people are trying to tell us, there’s not a whole lot we as individual human beings on Terra can do about it. Our fear accomplishes nothing but hobbling us and crippling us mentally and leaving us unable to deal with other situations in our lives that are more acute and pressing. We can’t even reliably find out how bad the situation actually is, because the information sources are all completely unreliable and unverifiable unless you literally own a Geiger counter and live near Fukushima – in which case, you’ll know one way or another, but the quality of information degrades rapidly the further it gets from you. Move on from the fear and start focusing on what you can do. In this case, ISON, Fukushima, and things of that nature are not things you can affect directly. Spare these things your fear and panic – be aware of them to the extent that you can be aware of them, but focus on the things in your life that you can change.

This is why fear-mongering is so very, very damaging. It’s part of the general process of removing our locus of control from ourselves and placing it among externalities. Every iota of energy we spend on fear is energy we can’t spend on something productive that actually benefits us. All the time we spend puzzling over whether or not ISON will smack us in the face is time we don’t put to productive use. The time we spend complaining about how crappy everything is, is time we don’t spend trying to make things a little less crappy.

Take control of as much of your life as you possibly can. Spend your time and energy trying to shove Box 2 stuff into Box 3. Even if it’s only a little bit each day, make a pact with yourself to have no non-productive days and start working on how to improve things from where you stand. And if you have a zero-day, forgive yourself and don’t let the next day become a zero-day.

It’s an ongoing process, and even with this knowledge I still struggle with it. But I don’t give up and I keep trying. There’s a lot I can’t do anything about, but I’m choosing to focus on what I can do things about. Even if my ‘sphere of influence’ is the size of an orange, that’s one more orange in the world that’s helping people than there was before.”

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2 responses to “Cabal Actions on Tanaath’s Interview Indicate Severe Cabal Teenager Phobia

  1. Tanaath’s website is back on for me, and while I didn’t get to listen to the show, I gotta say your mention of the fear of teenagers made me remember of the weird attitudes I’ve seen towards teenagers. For example, I passed by a high school class in my area where the teacher seemed to get really upset when the students questioned the info, but didn’t seem to care when another teacher came to him later on and asked the same damn thing.

    I imagine the psychotics don’t want the teenagers to grow their creativity, imaginations and critical thinking before at the age where that can really grow, and undermine their power.

    When I was in highs cool, the difficult questions that made you question the info, when made to teachers usually got ignored, many only seemed to care that you kept your head in your textbook. Good thing. I’m in fine arts at university with teachers that mostly hate that type of work, as one teacher called it, a “fancy straight jacket” =)

    Have a good week!

    • Ok, Well I just somehow wiped out everything I just typed out in a response about the education system, Farr!!! Crap-o-la!!! I was a public school teacher for 15 years, and that system is set up so that all groups are in opposition to each other BY DESIGN. It is a system based in fear motivation and control where it is VERY difficult to find a school where all groups support each other and where money is not an issue. Hope to see y’all on Thursday, Farr!!! Miss y’all!!! Tif:0)