Aside from the fact that he first talks about the Qlippoth involved and then it suddenly being the Lovecraftian Gods, he then goes on how they can get through the most powerful shields of the most powerful masters and then selling his services (for one of which he had to do 15 years of yoga).SurajSyrah wrote: ↑Fri Jan 15, 2021 4:11 pm They usually don’t have the real power to make a success of their lives; it is all about feeling superior. They do, however, master the occult techniques of vampiric draining and domination. By making pacts with Qlippoth they develop etheric tentacles with spikes that will penetrate most spiritual shields.
This type of vampire is most dangerous, as they will often get through the spiritual protection of all but the highest masters. As they are after power, it is usually white magicians and anyone spiritually developed that they target. Light workers are particularly vulnerable to them, as they are not embracing their shadows, so there is an easy resonance for the dark magician vampire to connect with.
Although their hunger can never be fulfilled, they seem to gather power because they are being taken over more and more by the vampiric entities they serve, usually the Old Ones of the necronomicon. Although this book was largely fictional, its dark and sinister forms appeal to the hateful and violent mind, so it has formed a strong eggregore. They end up as empty husks, vehicles for these entities which manifest the same eternal hunger and suck the souls out of humanity.
Sorry, not buying it.
I mean it's good he's helping people with shamanistic rituals but really, what he wrote there is mostly assumptions and it sounds a bit like a selling point.
Aside from light workers not embracing their shadows, that one is a pretty common problem.