Psychic Beliefs: Being Rich or Poor

Sandra ColleRain | psychic beliefs | Sunday, November 9th, 2008

 

Let me tell you the story of two women and how they influenced my beliefs about money.  Hopefully, this story will show you why you might want to look at YOUR own beliefs.   

 

First there was Mom, whom we will discuss later, and then there was Aunt Nellie!  

 

I put her name in big letters on purpose because she had a big “negative influence” on me.

 

Aunt Nellie was my mother’s aunt, my great aunt and she was quite a character.  At one time I think she was rich.  Her family had owned several rent houses in Galveston, but by the time I came along the wealth was gone. 

 

But Aunt Nellie didn’t care, she still thought like she was a rich person. 

 

I guess it started when I was five, the beginning of my trips to town with Aunt Nellie.  She drug me from department stores, to fashion shows, to drug stores, to hotels, to banks, to everywhere else on the island and it was always the same.

 

Aunt Nellie would take me up to some person she knew and she would say, “Say hello to the nice lady, She Is Rich.”  And then I had to go somewhere else and shake hands with some old man and she would tell me, “Say hello to the nice man, He Is Rich.”  I was embarrassed, I tried to hide my face.  It didn’t work.  I had to shake hands and smile and let them look at me and… 

 

It was horrible.

 

And even when we moved off the island and left Aunt Nellie behind, still every weekend we had to drive in for our obligatory visit. 

 

I remember riding down the beach every Saturday and seeing the blue water and the people and the bathing suits and hearing the laughter and seeing the happy faces.  Everywhere there were people having fun and I was trapped in a car driving toward Aunt Nellie.  I never got to stop and have fun on the beach. 

 

It was the same year after year, until I went off to college.

 

So the point of this story about Aunt Nellie is that I learned to dislike people with money.

 

Notice that now a belief has been programmed into me.  And with each encounter with rich people, this programming was forming a “negative psychic pattern” (a psychic belief structure) that was growing bigger and bigger. 

 

But Aunt Nellie was only half of the equation. 

 

The second half of the equation was Mom.  She was the opposite of Aunt Nellie.  Mom had grown up with an alcoholic father, with 9 brothers and sisters, and the only money they had was what her brother made throwing newspapers. 

 

So Mom was right there teaching me all her beliefs about money.

 

“Sandra, you will never have any money,” she told me over and over again. 

 

She said, “You will never be able to pay all your bills, so this is what you do.  You buy cokes at the beginning of the week and you turn the bottles in and get some money back at the end of the week when you are totally broke. 

 

“Thanks, Mom.  That was great financial advice.”

 

I wonder if Donald Trump gave his kids such good advice. 

 

But Mom wasn’t through yet, she went a step further, she got out a calendar and showed me why I would never have any money. She pointed at the calendar and said, “Since you will never be able to pay your bills, you pay this one and let this one slide until next month and then you pay this one and let this one slide until the next month.”

 

For Christmas she gave me a calendar.

 

By this time, I knew what calendars were for.  They were for teaching “POVERTY!”

 

I had another great belief to put into my already huge “I hate rich people” money pattern.  Now I could add all my new beliefs about “I will always be poor.” 

 

So my psychic money pattern was getting really big, huge, gargantuan!  Aunt Nellie was constantly making me feed the belief with, “I hate rich people,” and Mom was feeding my financial pattern with, “I will always be poor.” 

 

By the time I hit college I was, “Doomed!  Doomed!  Doomed!”

 

By the time I was married and had 3 little boys, I had my own “poverty calendar”, I sold back coke bottles just like Mom told me, and I had accepted the fact that I would always be poor.

 

Then my life changed.  I took psychic classes and I learned how to change beliefs. 

 

I remember one sunny day as I laid out on a chair in my back yard soaking in the warm feeling of the sun.  My mother sat sunning on the patio.  I didn’t tell her what I was about to do. 

 

I was going to use my psychic techniques as I had been taught to break that big, huge, humongous money pattern that Aunt Nellie and Mom had taught me during all those years. 

 

As soon as I did the psychic money pattern technique, Mom instantly walked over to me and said, “You know, Sandra, you will always be poor!” 

 

She must have sensed that I was trying to remove all the programming she had done on me.  She had programmed her beliefs into me, and now I was attempting to get rid of that psychic belief pattern. 

 

If you think that all your beliefs are your, then think again. 

 

The moral of this story is that everyone has been programmed by parents and relatives and where they grew up and what they have heard on television and what they learned in school and everywhere else. 

 

But you know what, you don’t have to be a victim.  You don’t have to accept what has been forced on your.  You don’t have to accept things that you don’t want in your life. 

 

Your psychic abilities can set you free.  You can break the patterns.  You can replace them with what YOU want in YOUR life.  You don’t have to remain a victim. 

 

Written by Sandra ColleRain Copyright © 2008

www.MasterOfPsychicEnergy.com/blog

3 Comments

  • Psychic Beliefs: Being Rich or Poor…

    So my psychic money pattern was getting really big, huge, gargantuan! Aunt Nellie was constantly making me feed the belief with, “I hate rich people,” and Mom was feeding my financial pattern with, “I will always be poor.” ……

    Trackback by Conspirama — November 9, 2008 @ 1:31 am
  • This was truly humorous, however I suppose it wasn’t to you as it was happening. But we all are a product of how our parents felt about money. My father was a saver and preached about the virtues of saving, investing and wasteful spending. Needless to say my mom was the total opposite. However as I get older I truly wished that I had followed my fathers advice. He was truly a wise man.

    Comment by Mae Cunningham — November 18, 2008 @ 12:13 am
  • I have a friend who seems to place alot of importance on having money, he brings it up quite often when he talks about himslef or others,or potential girlfriends… I personally dont see that. I want to have what I need, but I like to buy things for friends and stuff, I dont put alot of importance on it, cant I “help” him see things differently?

    Comment by Michael — February 18, 2010 @ 4:13 pm

Leave a comment

RSS feed for comments on this post. TrackBack URI