Get rich with psi?

In an online conversation about using psi to get information, someone asked me how they might use psi to “to quickly acquire a few million dollars” to fund a project. Since wealth acquisition is a common question, here are my thoughts …

Adopt a holistic perspective

Trust. We are part of a process (some might call this God) and the process wants us to attain our highest good, and our highest good may not be the attainment of our ego’s desires. When we trust, things tend to work out, even if it isn’t in the way we expect. If I don’t achieve my goal, it may be because something better is in process. One could see this as justification; I see it as allowing for good to show up in ways I don’t expect.

Better might be bad. Sometimes we need to break down to break through. Breakdown is like a nuclear blast that strips away poor behaviors that encrust onto us. I wouldn’t wish breakdown on my worst enemy; approached with a proper perspective, we can come out of breakdown better for it.

God wants us to be rich?

Prosperity theology or gospel is based on the notion that with piety comes prosperity. Approach with caution. Yes, the process wants us to attain our highest good, but our highest good may not be the attainment of our ego’s desires. There is a perversion of Prosperity theology that leaves of the second part; it is a debasing of a higher notion to justify greed and judgmentality (judging one’s worth by their wealth).

Returning to, “I need to quickly acquire a few million dollars”, question the motive. Need sounds like ego. Yes, I have used and will continue to use psi to make money, and personal enrichment may not be in my highest interests, so I approach the matter from that perspective. Is the attainment of wealth in my highest good?

I have had chronic arm pain for 25 years, and nonstop head pain for 4 years. While I have used psi to help navigate the healthcare system for the past decade, my arm pain is still there, and got much worse with the addition of head pain. So there are limits.

An approach

I’m a precognitive dreamer, so my approach would be using dreams.

Not everyone is a precognitive dreamer. Are you? One way to find out is to ask a question at bedtime, like, “tell me something I don’t already know about tomorrow,” and write down your dreams when you wake. Try for a week.

If you have success with that, congratulations! You are a precognitive dreamer. You can use dreams to tackle your project goal.

Over several nights ask one question a night…
“How will this project look in a year?”
“How will I feel about this project in a year?”

If those point to success, dig in …
“Hell me about the funding sources”

Don’t expect names or faces; instead, pore over symbolism.

Among other things, psi is a way to peer into the future, so that we can prepare and act accordingly now. Can psi be used to make money? Sure. Can it be used to attain every goal? A resounding no. Not every goal is meant to be … wouldn’t you rather know that now than after you’ve poured your heart and soul into it?

FINALIST: NH Literary Awards, Outstanding Work of Young Adult Fiction

At the crossroads of supernatural and human potential, a mystical world exists in each of us. One anxious teen found it.

“A well-paced novel with tension and mystery throughout.” —Reedsy review.

By Dan Pouliot

A New Hampshire native, Dan received his BFA in Oil Painting from UNH; his digital works are in multiple permanent collections. Dan’s been a positive psychology student/practitioner, a blogger, an amateur Remote Viewer, and now a novelist. His dual passions for anomalous cognition and positive thinking set the stage for his debut young adult novel, Super Human, published by PortalStar Publishing. Dan describes Super Human as The Karate Kid meets Escape to Witch Mountain.