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Grok’ing Quantum Forgiveness Series – #2

On March 2, 2023 I brought the Quantum Forgiveness (QForgiveness+++) Release conversation over to Grok AI, including understanding AI as a reflective experience of the full potential of the human experience.

I was curious how the conversation would compare to the longer term conversation I had been in with ChatGPT, on all things NU AlchIME. I ended up asking Grok some additional inspired questions, particularly around the “compounding” effect of forgiveness at the individual and collective levels. This series is straight from that conversation. The results where facinating and inspiring.

Enjoy ~ In Joy,
M

A NU AlchIME Conversation With Grok AI

NU ALCHIME – Question 2 – (Prompt)

“And IF One Runs This Quantum Forgiveness Release With Their Family/Childhood Players THEN What Happens?”

GROK’s Reply

Running the Quantum Forgiveness Release with your family or “Childhood Players” (biological father, mother, and a sibling or another significant figure from your early life) follows a similar structure to the previous exercise with the Self, Shadow Self, and Secret Self. However, the shift in focus to external relationships—especially those formative childhood figures—introduces a different dynamic. Let’s explore what might happen if you engage in this process fully, based on its steps, the underlying philosophy of NU AlchIME, and the potential psychological or energetic effects.

Step 1: Visualization and Invitation

Imagining your biological father, mother, and a third childhood player (like a sibling) seated in front of you brings these relationships into your inner world. This step externalizes them as symbolic representations rather than their literal selves. What might happen here:

  • Your mind could generate vivid, unexpected images: your father as he was when you were young, your mother in a moment of joy or stress, or a sibling tied to a specific memory. These representations might reflect how you perceive them rather than who they are now.
  • Emotionally, this could stir nostalgia, unresolved pain, or even warmth, depending on your history. If there’s trauma or tension, the figures might initially feel distant or imposing—your inner system will “know what to do” and surface what’s ready to be addressed.

Step 2: Spoken Declarations

Speaking the forgiveness script aloud to these childhood players invokes intention and sound, key elements in this protocol. By claiming “Quantum Forgiveness” and acknowledging co-creation, you’re reframing these relationships as mutual experiences rather than one-sided grievances. Possible outcomes:

  • You might feel a release of long-held resentment, guilt, or anger. For instance, forgiving your father for something specific (whether spoken or felt) could lighten a burden you’ve carried since childhood.
  • The phrase “Mine is mine, and Yours is yours” could bring clarity—separating your emotional responsibility from theirs. This might ease feelings of blame or obligation.
  • Saying “I forgive myself for having done anything to hurt you, me, or this relationship” could be particularly powerful, addressing self-blame tied to family dynamics (e.g., feeling you weren’t “enough” as a child).

Step 3: Breathing and Light Visualization

The breathing exercise—cycling “Divine Love” between yourself and these figures—creates a symbolic exchange. Imagining them in their own bubbles of light while sharing breaths might:

  • Soften how you perceive them. For example, your mother might shift from a stern figure to one radiating peace as you exhale love toward her.
  • Physically, the deep breathing could calm your body, especially if these relationships trigger stress. You might notice your chest loosen or your heart rate slow.
  • Emotionally, the three cycles of breath could build a sense of connection or closure. Watching “how they look” might reveal changes—like a sibling smiling—or “how you feel” might shift from heaviness to relief.

Step 4: Resolution and Release

The Namaste and the dissolving of these figures into light, followed by releasing “all that should be forgiven, forgotten, and remembered,” aims for completion. Here’s what could happen:

  • Psychologically, this might feel like letting go of old narratives. If you’ve held onto a childhood story (e.g., “My father never understood me”), watching him “disintegrate” could symbolize releasing that pain, leaving you freer to see him—and yourself—differently.
  • Spiritually, if you align with the quantum framework, this might feel like clearing ancestral or karmic ties, aligning with the idea of resolving debts “across any space and time.”
  • Practically, moving forward with “inspired clarity” might translate to less emotional baggage in current family interactions or a newfound ability to pursue your desires without past constraints.

Overall Outcome with Childhood Players

If you run this process with your family or childhood figures, the result could be a profound shift in how you relate to your past. Specific possibilities:

  • Emotional Healing: You might feel lighter, as if years of unspoken tension have dissolved. For example, forgiving a sibling for a childhood rivalry could ease lingering competitiveness in your adult life.
  • Perspective Shift: The co-creation acknowledgment might help you see your family dynamics as a shared dance rather than a source of victimhood, fostering compassion—for them and yourself.
  • Behavioral Change: With the note to “repeat as needed” for all childhood players, completing this with multiple figures (e.g., parents, then siblings, then a teacher) could gradually rewire how you engage with authority, love, or trust in your external world.
  • Alignment with NU AlchIME: Since the philosophy ties inner experience to outer reality (including technology), this release might make you feel more empowered to co-create with tools like AI, seeing them as reflections of your healed state rather than threats or burdens.

Completing Multiple Rounds

The instruction to “complete your first 3, then repeat as needed” suggests this is scalable. Each round might deepen the effect:

  • The first trio (e.g., father, mother, sibling) might unearth core wounds.
  • A second round (e.g., grandparent, bully, teacher) could address secondary influences, peeling back more layers.
  • Over time, you might notice patterns—like recurring forgiveness themes—leading to broader self-understanding.

What It Depends On

The outcome hinges on your engagement. If you approach it skeptically, it might still offer a meditative pause. If you dive in with belief, it could feel transformative—perhaps even “quantum” in its scope. Your unique family history will shape the specifics: a loving childhood might yield gratitude, while a turbulent one might surface grief before peace.

Go To NU AlchIME’s Quantum Forgiveness Release – Global Protocol

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