Loosh or Love: What Frequency Are You Feeding?

Rev Kat Carroll

Newsworthy… If it Bleeds it Leads

When I was a child, I used to wonder why my parents lingered over the morning newspaper, quietly discussing wars, crimes, and tragedies at the kitchen table. When I asked why those stories always seemed to dominate the headlines, I was told, “If it bleeds, it leads.” That phrase stayed with me—not just as a commentary on media priorities, but as an early lesson in where human attention tends to go.

Over time, it became clear that attention is not neutral. What we repeatedly focus on—individually and collectively—feeds something. The question is not whether darkness exists in the world; it is what we choose to nourish.

Two Wolves, Two Frequencies

There is a well-known parable often shared across cultures: inside each person live two wolves—one representing fear, anger, resentment, and despair; the other representing compassion, courage, love, and hope. When asked which wolf wins, the answer is simple: the one you feed.

This story endures because it points to something fundamental about human experience. We are constantly generating and responding to emotional and psychological states. These states shape our biology, our behavior, and ultimately our collective reality.

Naming Good and Evil in Human History

Throughout history, humanity has found it far easier to name and catalog evil than to recognize good. We remember wars, tyrants, massacres, and betrayals with remarkable clarity, while periods of peace, cooperation, and quiet decency often fade into the background. Evil is dramatic, disruptive, and easy to point to. Good is subtle, relational, and frequently taken for granted.

Ask people to list the great villains of history and the answers come quickly. Ask them to name moments when compassion, restraint, or collective care changed the course of events, and the room often grows quiet. This imbalance shapes how we understand ourselves and the world. What we repeatedly name, we reinforce. What we overlook, we fail to nourish.

This tendency is not accidental. Fear sharpens memory. Trauma leaves deep grooves in both individual and collective consciousness. As a result, cultures become fluent in the language of threat while remaining largely illiterate in the language of coherence, kindness, and moral courage.

Seen through this lens, the struggle between good and evil is not always a dramatic clash of forces, but a quieter competition for attention. One grows through outrage and fear; the other through care, presence, and deliberate choice.

Ancient Dualities and Competing Influences

Ancient writings discovered in the same regions where the Dead Sea Scrolls were found speak of two opposing spiritual currents, often described as warring factions. In these texts, Belial is portrayed as a personification of ultimate wickedness—a deceiver, adversary, and force of corruption. In later religious traditions, this archetype becomes associated with the Devil or Satan, a symbol of deception, fragmentation, and falsehood.

In contrast, Amelius is described as a spiritual teacher and unifying presence, emphasizing inner transformation, alignment with the divine, and the sacredness of creation. Edgar Cayce later referred to Amelius as the first soul created by God, representing the original spiritual essence and the source of what he called the Christ Impulse—a creative, loving, and restorative force within humanity.

Across cultures, these opposing influences appear under many names. In modern mythology and popular culture, one striking example is Brainiac from DC Comics—an entity defined by cold intellect, technological dominance, and the harvesting or destruction of living worlds. This could be seen as an early prediction of problems associated with AI.

In Gnostic cosmology, similar roles are attributed to the Archons, rulers of the material realm said to operate under the direction of the Demiurge, a flawed creator figure often identified as Yaldabaoth. These beings are described not so much as demons in the traditional sense, but as jailers of perception—forces that bind consciousness to illusion and separation, obscuring humanity’s connection to the Pleroma, the realm of pure light and spiritual origin.

The pantheons of Roman, Greek, Egyptian, and Norse traditions reflect this same ambiguity. Their gods are neither purely benevolent nor wholly malevolent. They help, deceive, challenge, and provoke, often acting as tricksters or catalysts rather than moral absolutes.

Seen this way, opposing forces may not exist solely to destroy, but acting as a catalyst to provoke growth.

In nature, every seed begins in darkness before reaching toward the sun. Perhaps human development follows a similar pattern—tested by shadow, yet capable of choosing aiming for that which nurtures life energy, rather than drains it.

We have the power to find that zero point – the balance between the dark and the light.

Loosh as a Framework, Not a Requirement

Some researchers, writers, and speakers—among them David Icke, Dolores Cannon, and Gigi Young—have used the term “loosh” to describe energy generated through trauma, fear, and suffering. In certain narratives, this energy is said to be harvested by entities operating in what is often described as the lower astral realm.

One does not need to accept the literal existence of such beings for the framework itself to be meaningful. Whether described in metaphysical, psychological, or sociological terms, the effect is the same: fear-based attention is extractive, diminishing. It drains vitality, narrows perception, and keeps individuals and societies locked in reactive states and easier to control.

The language may differ, but the pattern does not.

Popular culture has explored a similar idea through metaphor. In the film The Matrix, human beings are portrayed as living inside a simulated reality, unknowingly functioning as biological batteries whose energy is harvested to sustain an artificial system.

The film is not offered as a literal explanation, but as a symbolic illustration: when awareness is constrained and perception is narrowed, human vitality can be redirected to serve structures that do not have our well-being at heart. Seen this way, loosh becomes less a supernatural claim and more a cautionary metaphor about attention, autonomy, and where our life-force energy is continually being spent.

Where our attention goes, energy flows. Be mindful of where, and on what you choose to focus.

Trauma, Chemistry, and the Body as Battery

From a biological standpoint, chronic focus on threat and trauma has measurable consequences. The human nervous system is not designed to remain in a constant state of fight-or-flight. Elevated stress hormones disrupt sleep, impair immune function, and deplete emotional resilience.

I’d like to compare the human system to a car battery. When the internal environment becomes contaminated, through unresolved trauma, chronic fear, or relentless stress—the charge weakens. Corrosion builds – Connections fail. Only by clearing that corrosion and restoring a clean internal medium can energy flow again.

This is not a dismissal of trauma; it is an invitation to avoid living inside it indefinitely.

When Love Replaces Sacrifice

Having proved his faith in God, an angel stops Abraham from sacrificing his son

Historically, many cultures centered their spiritual lives around sacrifice—sometimes symbolic, sometimes horrifyingly literal. Ancient texts describe offerings made to appease gods or restore balance through bloodshed.

The arrival of figures such as Jesus marked a profound symbolic shift: sacrifice was no longer the path; love was. Compassion, forgiveness, and inner transformation replaced ritualized violence. While cruelty did not disappear, it no longer held the same spiritual legitimacy.

What is suppressed does not vanish—it often goes underground. And yet the invitation to choose love over fear has persisted. Love and compassion appear to be creating a gentle yet persistence shift in our energy. A noticeable shift that be felt even from thousands of miles away.

Measuring the Field: When Coherence Appears

For decades, researchers have attempted to measure the effects of collective consciousness. The Princeton Engineering Anomalies Research (PEAR) lab, the Global Consciousness Project (GCP), founded by PEAR’s research coordinator Roger Nelson.

Additionally, the International Consciousness Research Laboratories (ICRL) was established by Jahn and Dunne as a new platform for advancing research into consciousness and anomalous phenomena, aiming to carry forward PEAR’s mission in a post-university setting. 

These efforts reflect the ongoing commitment of PEAR’s core team to explore the interface between mind and matter, despite the scientific community’s skepticism toward the original lab’s findings and studies surrounding the Maharishi Effect; the change that may be monitored and has lead to the suggestion that large groups of people in coherent states—such as meditation—may measurably influence their environments.

Interestingly, these systems have been far more effective at detecting responses to traumatic events—terrorist attacks, natural disasters, mass shootings—than to peaceful ones. Spikes are easier to detect than stabilization. Chaos is loud; coherence is quiet.

The Monks’ Walk for Peace: Love in Motion

This brings us to the ongoing Walk for Peace undertaken by Buddhist monks traveling across the United States. Unlike a single mass meditation or scheduled global event, this walk represents something different: sustained presence, discipline, and compassion in motion.

The monks rise early, walk steadily, interact gently with communities, and rest. Their influence is not theatrical; it is relational. If coherence is generated here, it may not appear as a spike, but as reduced volatility, subtle stabilization, or lingering regional effects.

An Open Question—and an Open Dataset

As a follow-up to the monks’ Walk for Peace, I’ve begun exploring whether this sustained, heart-centered presence might leave subtle but measurable signatures in global or regional coherence data. While several research organizations expressed interest, the reality of limited personnel and resources means this question remains largely unexplored. The data itself, however, is publicly available.

Rather than waiting for a formal study to emerge, I’m choosing to look — carefully, transparently, and without presuming an outcome. If you have experience in data analysis, statistics, research design, or simply a thoughtful curiosity about how coherence, attention, and collective states might register in measurable ways, I invite you to reach out. This isn’t about proving a belief, but about asking a sincere question together: what happens when peace is practiced — visibly, persistently, and in motion?

If you have skill as a statistician or wish to explore the possibility that the Walk for Peace may creating positive change, perhaps you would enjoy researching with me.

A Call to Collaboration

This is not an attempt to shame institutions or challenge existing research paradigms. It is an invitation. If sustained peace leaves a trace, however subtle—it deserves curiosity.

Those with experience in statistics, data visualization, or consciousness research who are interested in exploring this question are welcome to reach out. There is no funding, no agenda, and no predetermined outcome—only a shared inquiry.

If you wish to join me in looking looking for positive changes in society (calm, less violence, less emergencies and crime) then feel free to use the links provided by Dean Radin from the Institute of Noetic Sciences in the resource list below.

Download the relevant data from gcp2.net (at https://gcp2.net/data-results/data-download) and test this idea yourself.

Closing Reflection: What Are You Feeding?

If fear feeds one system and love feeds another, then every moment of attention becomes a choice. Not a battle. Not a crusade. Simply nourishment.

The world may appear chaotic, but perhaps it is recalibrating to that higher frequency. And perhaps the quiet work of coherence, walking, breathing, choosing compassion, matters more than we have been trained to notice.

Lets find out!

Resources for those seeking more information

Transcendental Meditation Benefits: The Maharishi Effect (3 minute video)

An Antidote to Violence – The Theory Behind the Maharishi Effect

Amilius vs Belial: The War Between Good and Evil

The Authentic Brotherhood of Light Lessons – Church of Light – PDF

The Essenes: Children of the Light
https://astrallibrary.com/disciple-of-light/the-ancient-tradition/the-essenes

“To manifest the love of God in service to humanity.”

The Hidden Face of God – The Transformation from Yaldabaoth to Yahweh

Coherent consciousness and reduced randomness: Correlations on September 11, 2001

The Walk for Peace Facebook Group

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Rev. Kat Carroll
I've been interested in all things related to metaphysics, parapsychology, spirituality and anything related to space since childhood. I'm the kid who used to let the Jehova Witness and Mormans into the house so I could ask a million questions. I've always wanted to be of service and ended up working as an EMT and later in law enforcement. A family job transfer lead me to Washington State for 5 years where I went back to studying spiritual phenomenon and meeting some fascinating people. I've had several initiations, was taught energy healing and became certified in Reiki III over the final 3 years. I had a larger awakening and understanding of how it Reiki worked, remote sensing and more after returning to CA in 2001. I love researching and now writing and being a spokesperson for benevolent contact with NHIB through the practice of meditation. I experienced a spontaneous healing and not long after the "quickening" of 12/21/2012, began having more paranormal experiences, including seeing the UFOs, and orbs that fly over at night. I'm also a volunteer /Admin for ETLetsTalk and love teaching others how to make that connection that I know will one day lead us out of the darkness and into a brighter future.

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