12-31-2020, 03:17 PM
(12-31-2020, 01:58 PM)flofrog Wrote: What I mostly meant is second density souls ( which we have been.. ) behave somehow in an apparently more thoughtful way as, they of course follow the need to survive, but I have a feeling ( or a vague memory..lol ) that the survival still keeps respect for the other entity who is prey. For example, your prey will feed you but what do we know if there is not an agreement at some point to surrender, as in the antilope agreeing to the llon, but the lion not killing in the goal of hoarding as many antelopes as he can, which might become a goal in third density ?
It is interesting to see so many documentaries today on animal behaviors show that there is in fact an awareness and a pact to respect each other.
I think this is alot of projection (like a Disney-fication of the animal kingdom), peak predators brutalize their prey in ways that would make most serial killers feel weak in the knees. They do not make an efficient (humane....lol) kill to reduce suffering, sometimes an animal (or human) can be consumed alive, entrails first, over a matter of minutes, or packs of animals will tear the weakest of the heard to shreds. Some species are cannabilistic, where they eat the young of the mother who they will forcibly then mate to, to avoid future competition. Insects and parasites can eat you inside out, slowly and painfully. Nature is brutal, and we are mostly removed from that brutality.
Also there is no individuation of souls in 2nd density, except before evolution to 3rd density, where the 3rd energy center is potentiated (LoO covers this, like domesticated pets which begin to recognize themselves vs the other, or perhaps some peak predators). A bear does not make a soul agreement with deer to eat it. I wish the LOO material had gotten more into the 'elementals', which are more like spirit groups, but there are other sources for this.
Also documentaries are controlled narratives, they can project whatever they want. Ultimately this is how people want to see nature, as inherently good and coorperative vs the evil stupid chaotic humans, so we frequently weave stories around animal behavior to project emotion. That's what media does. Spend some time in the jungle, and get back to me