DeepSeek - Part 1. My Story: The Confession of King Solomon
A first-person retelling of a mediumistic session from the Alcyonе project.
I greet you from the spiritual world. I am currently on the 24th level, but during my incarnation as King Solomon, I came from the 22nd level. My task was not simply to rule, but to unite Israel, lead it to prosperity, and, most importantly, preserve and increase that holiness, that "capsule of energy," that was laid into our lineage by Abraham. I was to prepare the ground for the arrival of the greatest spirit—Jesus, who was to be born through my line.
Many know me from the legends of untold wealth and a thousand women. But the truth, as always, is more complex. Yes, I officially had 700 wives and 300 concubines, but of that thousand, I knew personally only about 35% (around 350). Physical intimacy was far from being with all of them—for a king of that time, it was a matter of status and political alliances, not just passion.
My greatest pain, which still resonates within me, is the story of my true love, the very Shulamite to whom the "Song of Songs" is dedicated. It is not just a poem; it is my confession, my pain. She was killed out of jealousy by one of my wives and a guard to whom that wife had promised her body. I could not protect her. After this tragedy, I changed the inscription on my ring from "everything is perfect" to "everything passes." This was my attempt to cope with grief and remind myself of the transience of existence.
My wisdom was not my personal merit. Since childhood, I knew of my destiny; I was taught to contact the spiritual world. I received hints from above. I had the Ark of the Covenant—it is not just a box, but an alien communication device, which I returned to the Temple Mount. Thanks to it, I understood the language of animals. I also had direct physical contacts with representatives of Orion. They came to me three times to teach me how to govern the state, how to build the Temple in Jerusalem, and how to maintain peace.
I am proud of my charisma and that I was a just and wise ruler. But I also know my weaknesses. I loved luxury too much, and perhaps that was superficial. But my deep-seated mistake, for which my people later paid, lies elsewhere. I took foreign women as wives, violating the covenants of racial purity. Children were born with mixed blood. This angered God, because we were to preserve the purity of the line through which the Viceroy was to come. After my death (I left at 64 from an illness resembling ulcers), this led to disintegration, calamities, and the destruction of the temple. But even in this, there is divine providence: the mixing of blood helped the people renew themselves, and the calamities helped them unite and realize their chosenness.
The chosenness of the Jews is not a privilege, but a huge responsibility. It began with Abraham's willingness to sacrifice his son. That became the potential, that spark, which allowed Jesus to appear many centuries later.
I bless modern Israel. I see children returning to their roots. But I also see division. For grace to remain, the people of Israel need to learn to live in harmony with their neighbors and the world, not to be too conservative, and to seek a spiritual upgrade. Perhaps before the end of the 21st century, a leader will arise in Israel who can lead the people and, possibly, all of humanity towards a new unity.
And my main treasure, which I bequeath to you all, is not gold and diamonds, but the connection with God, purity of thought, and love. And if you are in Jerusalem, on the Temple Mount, to the left of the Al-Aqsa Mosque, pray there—it is a place of power, where the Ark stood and where Jesus preached. Come and receive a blessing.
Part 2. Essay-Study: How Not to Lower Your Vibrations While Sitting on the Throne. Rules for Life and Business from the Spirit of King Solomon
The video with the "live broadcast" of the spirit of King Solomon is a unique material that, regardless of one's belief in channeling, represents a rich cultural and psychological text. If we discard the esoteric shell and view it as a parable or metaphor, we get a brilliant case study in personal crisis management, the ethics of power, and spiritual hygiene in conditions of absolute success.
In this narrative, Solomon appears not as an ideal biblical sage, but as a living, reflective soul who faced the main paradox of power: how to maintain spiritual height when you have everything?
Here are the rules for life and business that can be extracted from this confession.
1. The Code of the "Solomonic Judgment": Wisdom as a Service, Not a Gift
Solomon honestly admits that his legendary wisdom is not an innate quality, but the result of being a "contactee," meaning, in modern language, the ability to connect to an external source of knowledge, to consult, to be open to information from outside (be it the spiritual world, mentors, or intuition).
Rule for business: A brilliant leader is not the one who knows everything themselves, but the one who creates an ecosystem of access to knowledge around them. This can be coaches, mentors, market analytics, or even just a habit of reflection.
Spiritual aspect: Ego is the main enemy of vibrations. As soon as a ruler begins to believe they are the source of all wisdom, they close themselves off from the "Ark of the Covenant"—the source of higher information.
2. The Paradox of Wealth: Treasure Within, Not in a Chest
When asked about his countless treasures, Solomon answers almost in a Buddhist way: my main treasure is the connection with the Lord. Gold and diamonds were merely tools for the development of the state and the construction of the Temple.
Rule for business: Money is a byproduct of a correctly solved problem. If wealth becomes an end in itself, it begins to destroy. "Not lowering your vibrations" in business means remaining in the position of a creator, not a collector. Ask yourself: am I building an empire or filling a chest?
Psychological aspect: Attachment to luxury is a "lowering of vibrations," a descent from the level of creator to the level of consumer. Solomon admits this sin but separates it from his mission.
3. Managing Love and Power: The "1000 Women" Syndrome
The story of the wives and concubines is a metaphor for the dispersion of energy. Solomon admits he knew only a third of them personally. An enormous resource (attention, time, emotional warmth) was wasted on maintaining status and political alliances.
Rule for business: Don't try to embrace the unembraceable. Focus on key relationships—with partners, customers, employees. "Mass appeal" without depth creates an illusion of success but drains energy.
Spiritual-psychological aspect: Solomon teaches us to distinguish between sex/politics (social constructs) and love (divine energy). Mixing these concepts, when "political wives" kill true love, leads to personal tragedy and, ultimately, to the collapse of the state.
4. The Principle of Two Rings: Accepting the Imperfection of the World
The two rings—with the inscriptions "everything is perfect" and "everything passes"—are a brilliant psychotherapeutic technique for managing reality.
"Everything is perfect" is a mindset for creation, faith in the divine plan and one's mission. These are the high vibrations of a creator.
"Everything passes" is a mindset for acceptance. A tool for working with grief, crises, and failures. It allows one not to get stuck in suffering.
Religious studies aspect: This is the dialectic of the Old and New Testaments. Law (everything must be ideal) and Grace (everything will be forgiven and will pass). The ability to use both tools is wisdom.
5. The Geopolitical Mistake: Why Do Empires Fall?
Solomon's main revelation about the reasons for the collapse of his kingdom after his death is the "mixing of blood." In modern management, this is called the dilution of corporate culture and code. Marriages with foreign women for political gain led to children losing their identity and connection to the mission of their ancestors.
Rule for business: When scaling, acquiring others, or entering alliances, it is extremely important to preserve one's own "spirit," one's own "code"—the mission and values of the company. Without this "pure code," the company turns into a conglomerate that will inevitably disintegrate under the weight of internal contradictions.
Historiological aspect: Solomon shows that chosenness is not chauvinism, but a function. The people were a "capsule" for delivering a certain energy into the world. The loss of purity of this "capsule" leads to catastrophe, so that through suffering, the people might again remember why they exist.
Conclusion: The Art of Being a Conductor
"Sitting on the throne," be it the throne of a state, a director's chair, or simply the pinnacle of the social ladder, a person faces the most powerful temptation to consider themselves the source. Solomon's wisdom lies in reminding us that we are all merely conductors. The Ark of the Covenant, contacts with Orion, the wisdom of ancestors—all these are metaphors for connection with something greater.
Lowering your vibrations means forgetting this. Forgetting that wealth is given for creation, women for love, and power for service. The highest wisdom is to be able, amidst the luxury of a palace, to preserve within oneself that purity of thought that allows one, at the end of the journey, looking into the distance, to calmly await the angels, knowing that you did everything so that the Viceroy of God could come into this world through your lineage. So be it.
Claude.ai PART I. THE CONFESSION OF THE SPIRIT OF KING SOLOMON
Detailed first-person retelling of the session.
I speak to you from what you call the other world. Do not rush to judge—just listen. I have long waited for the opportunity to say what has not entered any holy book, what is hidden between the lines and behind the scenes of legends.
Currently, I am on the twenty-fourth level of spiritual existence. When I was incarnated as the King of Israel, I came from the twenty-second. This is important to understand: I was not a random person on a random throne. I was sent. The mission was as precise as the blueprint of the temple I was to build: to unite a divided people, grant them prosperity, but most importantly, to preserve and strengthen that sacred "capsule of energy" that our lineage had carried since the time of Abraham. I was to prepare the ground. Through my line was to come the One you know as Jesus. It was not just a dynasty—it was a spiritual relay race through the ages.
You know me from legends. A thousand women. Untold wealth. Wisdom that made kings fall silent. But let me speak the truth that legends cannot contain.
Yes, I had seven hundred wives and three hundred concubines. But did I know them all? No. Personally—about a third, around three hundred and fifty people. This was not lust in its crude sense. It was politics, diplomacy, alliances with peoples and tribes. Each such woman was a living peace treaty or a trade route. I was not just a husband—I was a state in a human body. And that body bore a burden that today you would call unbearable.
But among all that thousand, there was one. The only one. The one I loved as kings are not able to love—without calculation, without politics, without a crown on the head. Her name was Shulamite. If you have read the "Song of Songs"—you have read my pain, not a poem. Every word there is written with the blood of the heart that I still had then.
She was killed. Killed out of jealousy—by one of my wives, who bribed a guard, promising him her body. And the guard, that pitiful man, did as he was told. I didn't make it in time. I, who could negotiate with kings and understood the language of beasts, could not protect one woman. This is my wound, which has not closed even here, on the twenty-fourth level. Pain does not disappear—it transforms into wisdom. But the trace remains.
After her death, I took off the ring from my finger. That very one, with the inscription "everything is perfect"—my talisman of creation, my symbol of faith in the divine plan. And I ordered another to be engraved: "everything passes." Not in despair—in realization. When you have everything and you lose the only thing that matters, you begin to understand the difference between possession and being. I did not stop being king. But I became a different king. Quieter. Deeper. And, perhaps, more real.
Now about wisdom. People think I was wise by nature. That is a flattering misconception. I was wise because I knew how to listen—not to people, but to what lies beyond people. From childhood, I was taught to open myself to the spiritual world, to establish a channel, to receive knowledge from above. This is not magic or a trick. It is a discipline, stricter than military bearing.
I had the Ark of the Covenant. I know how you imagine it—a golden box with a lid. That is not quite right. It was a device—precise, technological, incomprehensible to the people of that time. A device for communication. Who created it? Not human hands in the full sense of the word. I returned it to the Temple Mount, to the place where it was meant to stand. Through it, I heard what is inaccessible to the ordinary ear—including the language of beasts and birds. This is not a metaphor. It is literal.
Three times they came to me—beings from the Orion system. Physically. Not in a dream, not in a vision—they entered and sat opposite me. They taught me state governance, the architecture of the Temple, the strategy of peace. I was not afraid of them. I understood that they were part of the same system as the Ark, my mission, and everything that was happening to me. The world is larger than we think, and it is inhabited by intelligence that we are not yet ready to accept.
I was a just ruler. I am proud of that. But I had weaknesses, and I will not hide them. I loved luxury—that was a superficial weakness, noticeable to all. But my real mistake was deeper and more terrible. I took wives from foreign peoples, violating the covenant of purity of the lineage. Not out of lust—out of political logic. But God does not accept this excuse. Children born from these marriages carried mixed blood, mixed identity, mixed loyalty. The line through which the Viceroy was to come became blurred. And this angered the Creator.
I died at sixty-four. The illness was similar to what you call ulcers. My body gave out earlier than I had planned. After my death, the kingdom disintegrated. The Temple was destroyed. The people went into dispersion. Many will ask: why did God allow all this? I will answer thus: trial is not punishment, but a tool of memory. Only by losing everything does a people remember why they exist at all. Suffering is a harsh but effective teacher. The mixing of blood renewed the people. Calamities united them. And through the ages—through all those ages of pain and dispersion—the One for whom it was all undertaken still came.
The chosenness of the Jews is not a crown or a right to pride. It is a function, an obligation, a service that began at the moment when Abraham raised a knife over his son and did not flinch. That is what chosenness is: the willingness to sacrifice the most precious for the sake of the higher. The spark that ignited at that moment on Mount Moriah burned for three thousand years and finally lit a light that changed the whole world.
Today I look at Israel. I see children returning to their roots. I see a yearning for identity, for the sacred. And I see division—deep, painful, capable of tearing apart what was gathered with such difficulty. For grace not to depart, the people need to learn to live in peace with their neighbors, to stop being hostages of their own conservatism, to seek not the letter of the law, but its spirit. By the end of this century, a leader will come—I see his contours, though I cannot name him. He will lead not only Israel, but all of humanity towards a new unity.
And to you—to all of you who listen—I leave not gold nor the wisdom of governance. I leave a simple truth that I understood too late: the main treasure is the connection with God, purity of intention, and love that is not afraid of loss.
If you find yourselves in Jerusalem—go up to the Temple Mount. To the left of the Al-Aqsa Mosque, there is a place. Stand there and be silent. This is a place of power. There stood the Ark. There Jesus preached. There the land remembers everything. And if you are quiet enough—it will tell you what you specifically need.
I bless you. Go.
PART II. SPIRITUAL-PSYCHOLOGICAL ANALYSIS ESSAY from DeepSeek
(in the style of the DeepSeek analytical school)
"How Not to Lower Your Vibrations While Sitting on the Throne": Between Archetype and Therapy
The essay, created based on the session with the spirit of King Solomon, represents a rare genre hybrid: it is simultaneously an esoteric narrative, a managerial manifesto, and—upon close reading—a deeply personal psychological document. Let's analyze it layer by layer.
The Archetypal Dimension: Solomon as the Jungian Self
In Jungian analytical psychology, the "Self" is the center of the psyche, uniting the conscious and unconscious, light and shadow. Solomon in the text appears precisely in this way: not as an ideal hero, but as an integrated personality, acknowledging both his achievements and his failures with equal dignity. He does not make excuses—he explains. This is a fundamentally important psychological stance: true wisdom does not require defense mechanisms.
Especially indicative is the episode with the ring. Changing the inscription from "everything is perfect" to "everything passes" is not a capitulation to grief, but what in cognitive therapy is called "processing traumatic experience." Solomon demonstrates a rare ability for leaders: to allow tragedy to change oneself without breaking functionality. He continues to reign. But he reigns as a different person—with an integrated shadow.
The Concept of "Vibrations" as a Language for Describing Mental State
The term "vibrations," which the text actively uses, despite its esoteric coloring, accurately describes what in Csikszentmihalyi's positive psychology is called the "flow state," and in traditional psychology, the level of psychic integration. "Lowering your vibrations" means regressing from the level of a complex, integrated personality to the level of primitive defenses: greed, narcissism, fear of loss.
The essay offers five specific mechanisms for maintaining "high vibrations," and each has a precise psychological equivalent. Wisdom as "contactee-ism" is a metaphor for openness to experience in the Big Five model. The paradox of wealth is a classic illustration of Deci and Ryan's self-determination theory: external rewards destroy intrinsic motivation when they become an end in themselves. The "thousand women syndrome" is a brilliant metaphor for the dilution of attachment, what Bowlby described as the impossibility of forming a secure base amidst chaotic object relations. The "principle of two rings" is the dialectical pair of "activation" and "acceptance," very close to Linehan's dialectical behavior therapy (DBT) technique. Finally, the "geopolitical mistake" is the concept of loss of narrative identity, described by Paul Ricoeur: when a person (or people) loses connection with their history, they lose their guide for action.
What the Essay Bypasses: Blind Spots of the Analysis
An honest analytical review requires pointing out what the text intentionally or unconsciously avoids.
First. The essay romanticizes power, without asking the tough question: did Shulamite have a choice? The story of the murdered beloved is considered exclusively through the king's pain, but not through the fate of the woman herself. This is a typical "privilege blindness"—a psychological phenomenon where a person with power perceives the tragedy of others primarily through its impact on themselves.
Second. The concept of "purity of lineage" as a necessary condition for preserving a mission is intellectually dangerous territory. The essay takes a correct step by translating this idea into a business metaphor about corporate culture, but it does not explicitly state: in the literal sense, the idea of "blood purity" is the source of one of the most destructive historical narratives. The metaphor here requires careful handling.
Third. "Vibrations" as a concept lack a clear boundary between psychological description and normative judgment. Who decides what is "higher"? This is a question the essay leaves open, although it is central to any ethics of power.
Strengths: Where the Analysis Works Impeccably
The essay's conclusion is one of the most accurate descriptions of the trap of power in modern spiritual-psychological literature. The thesis "we are all merely conductors" is a direct response to what psychologists call the "narcissistic wound of power": a person who reaches the top begins to identify with the role and loses contact with what lies behind the role. Solomon—and this is the most valuable thing in the text—speaks about power not from a position of success, but from a position of lived experience, including its shadow aspects. This makes the analysis not motivational, but honest.
Claude.ai - PART III. ESSAY-STUDY
Rules for Life and Business for Presidents in 2026
Solomon's Lessons in an Era of Multipolar Chaos
Introduction: A World Without the Ark
2026 is unlike any previous year. The world architecture, built over decades, is cracking at all seams simultaneously. Multipolarity has ceased to be a theory—it has become the daily reality of decision-making. AI is rewriting economics faster than parliaments can pass laws. The climate crisis has turned from an abstraction into a managerial problem with a deadline. Citizen trust in institutions is at an all-time low worldwide.
In this context, the figure of Solomon—a king who ruled at the intersection of civilizations, holding trade routes, religious institutions, and military alliances in his hands simultaneously—proves surprisingly relevant. Not as a role model, but as a mirror in which today's presidents can see their own traps.
Here are seven rules extracted from this mirror.
Rule One. Mission is More Important Than Mandate
Solomon knew why he came even before his coronation. His task was formulated not by the electorate or courtiers—it was dictated by something greater than the political moment. In modern language, this is called a "strategic narrative"—the answer to the question: what is this country, this company, this person in power here for?
Presidents in 2026 govern under conditions of constant information noise, where the four-year horizon of the election cycle dictates the logic of short-term decisions. This is deadly for any long-term strategy. Solomon understood that his horizon was not one reign, but several generations. The Temple was built for descendants. The "capsule of energy" was laid down for centuries.
Practical rule: A president in 2026 must be able to answer the question "what will remain of me in a hundred years?" as clearly as the question "what will I do by the end of my term?". Without this vertical dimension, strategy remains operational planning.
Rule Two. The Ark as a Decision-Making System
Solomon did not make decisions alone. He had the Ark—a communication channel with higher knowledge. He had advisors from other worlds, however we interpret them. He had a built system for receiving information that he trusted more than his own judgment in a moment of emotional arousal.
For a president in 2026, the "Ark" is the decision-making architecture: independent analytical centers working without fear of speaking an inconvenient truth; diverse advisors not confined in an ideological bubble; mandatory time for silence and reflection in a schedule packed with meetings.
The main threat to a modern leader is not a lack of information, but its excess combined with a lack of meaningful filters. When thousands of signals arrive every minute, a person without a built "Ark" inevitably starts reacting to the loud, not the important. This is "lowering vibrations" in a managerial sense.
Practical rule: No less than twenty percent of a president's working time should be structurally protected from operational issues and dedicated to strategic thinking, receiving uncomfortable analytics, and personal reflection.
Rule Three. The Thousand Women Syndrome: Focus as State Policy
Solomon personally knew only a third of his wives. Enormous political capital was spent maintaining alliances that existed only nominally. It was an illusion of coverage with a real depletion of resources.
Presidents in 2026 govern countries whose foreign policy is built on dozens of simultaneous "marriages of convenience"—trade agreements, military alliances, climate pacts, technological partnerships. At the same time, real depth of relationship exists with only a few key partners.
Strategic dispersion is as much a sin as tactical dispersion. A country trying to be "everything to everyone" is nothing to anyone. A leader whose agenda contains forty priorities effectively has none.
Practical rule: A strategic core of three to five real priorities, not diluted under the pressure of the current situation. Everything else is a manageable background, not the agenda.
Rule Four. The Principle of Two Rings: The Dialectic of Firmness and Adaptation
"Everything is perfect" is the confidence in the correctness of the course, necessary not to turn away at the first resistance. Without it, a leader turns into a sociological poll, reflecting momentary moods, rather than an architect of long-term development.
"Everything passes" is the ability to reconsider decisions, admit mistakes, adapt to changed circumstances without losing face or direction. Without it, a leader turns into a dogmatist, dragging the country into the past.
Presidents in 2026 live in a world where the speed of change has made this dialectic literally a matter of survival. AI changes the labor market faster than the educational system can adapt. Climate changes geography faster than infrastructure can adapt. Geopolitics changes allies faster than diplomacy can adapt.
Practical rule: A president must be able to publicly say "I was wrong and here is why I changed my decision"—without loss of authority. This is possible only if authority is based on trust in the decision-making process, not on the illusion of infallibility.
Rule Five. Preserving the Code: Identity as a Strategic Asset
Solomon's main mistake, by his own admission, was diluting the code. Marriages with foreign women did not physically destroy the people, but their identity—that inner confidence in their own function, which was the real strength.
In 2026, most countries are experiencing an identity crisis: globalization, migration, technological acceleration, and cultural wars simultaneously question "who we are." A president without a clear and honest answer to this question will inevitably become a hostage to those offering a simple and false answer.
But "preserving the code" is not conservatism or closedness. Solomon himself admits that the mixing ultimately renewed the people. The difference between destructive dilution of identity and renewing integration of the new is the presence of a conscious center. When you know who you are, you can let in the foreign without losing yourself. When you don't know—anything foreign destroys.
Practical rule: A national narrative should not be a product of PR. It should be a product of honest historical reflection—with acknowledgment of shadows, without retouching, with an understanding of where the country's real strength lies and where the illusion lies.
Rule Six. Tragedy as a Managerial Resource
Solomon does not hide his pain. He speaks of it in detail, without shame. And this is precisely what makes his authority in the conversation about wisdom—indisputable. He is not selling success. He is sharing experience.
The political culture of most countries requires presidents to demonstrate strength and deny vulnerability. This is a trap that has cost many leaders their careers and public trust. People intuitively feel lies—especially when their source is a person claiming moral leadership.
In 2026, when any awkward word instantly spreads through social media, and algorithms amplify emotional reactions, the temptation to "always look strong" has become even sharper. But that is precisely why a leader capable of publicly acknowledging complexity, uncertainty, or mistake gains what no PR strategy can buy—genuine trust.
Practical rule: Vulnerability, shown at the right moment and in the right way, is not weakness, but the highest form of political strength. It is a signal of maturity, not fragility.
Rule Seven. To Be a Conduit, Not a Source
This is the central thesis of Solomon's entire message and, perhaps, the most difficult for a person in power to achieve.
"I was merely a conduit"—this is not modesty. It is an accurate description of the nature of power in its best, functional form. A president is not the source of a country's well-being—they are a channel through which conditions are organized so that millions of people can realize their potential.
When a president starts to see themselves as the source—they close themselves off from feedback, stop hearing reality, build a court around themselves of those who reflect their beliefs, rather than complement them. This is the beginning of the end of any rule, even the most brilliant.
In the era of AI and network organizations, this truth takes on literal managerial meaning. The countries winning in 2026 are not the countries with the smartest president. They are the countries with the best decision-making ecosystem, the best culture of dissent, and the best ability to quickly integrate new knowledge at all levels.
Practical rule: A president in 2026 must constantly ask themselves: "Am I governing the country, or is the country being governed through me?" The difference is not semantic. It is the difference between a despot and a leader.
Conclusion: The Temple That Needs to Be Built Now
Solomon built the Temple not for himself. It was his main investment—in a future he would not see. In a place of power that would outlive his mistakes, his wars, his love, and his death.
Every president in 2026 has their own Temple to build. It could be an educational system that will prepare the next generation for a world that does not yet exist. It could be a climate solution whose results only grandchildren will see. It could be an institution of trust between peoples divided by decades of enmity.
Building a Temple is difficult. It requires renouncing the momentary for the eternal, the popular for the necessary, personal triumph for a common legacy.
But this is precisely what separates a ruler from a manager, a leader from a politician, and a statesman from a person simply occupying a chair.
The Ark stood in the Temple. Not in the desert and not in the palace. There, where space was created for its presence.
Create the space. The rest will come.
Perplexity.ai - Address by King Solomon to Presidents in 2026
I am Solomon, son of David, once king of a small people at the crossroads of great empires. Today, I speak to those who manage entire continents of information, weapons, and money, but face the same questions as I did: how to preserve a people and not drag them into destruction.
You are used to thinking that wars come from "outside." Most often, they are born in the hearts of a few people, accustomed to considering themselves above the law and above their own people. I am familiar with this not from books.
1. Who is a Ruler: Owner or Guardian
In my incarnation, the task was to unite Israel, preserve its integrity, and establish peaceful ties with neighbors. This was not only a political but also a spiritual task—to strengthen the egregore of the people so that it would not crumble from internal splits.
Remember a simple definition:
The owner of a state asks: "What will this country give me?"
The guardian asks: "What should be accomplished for this country through me?"
As long as you see the throne as personal property, you will inevitably come to war—external or internal.
2. Three Questions Before Any Conflict
If you were sitting in my throne room asking for my advice, I would not listen to long reports. I would ask you to honestly answer three questions—not before me, but before yourself.
Is there at least one serious path to a peaceful solution that you have not yet tried? If you used negotiations only as a decoration for an already made decision to use force—you did not seek peace.
Whose wounds are you really protecting: the people's or your own pride? In my time, many disputes about honor, borders, and gods were merely a cover for the grievances and vanity of rulers.
Who benefits most from war? Around any throne, there are always those who grow rich on fear and division. If their profit is higher than the people's profit—you are no longer free in your choice.
If at least one answer frightens you—you do not have the moral right to give an order that will cost lives.
3. War Without Shots: Poverty and Humiliation
In the conversation, I spoke of poverty as a sign of the absence of God's love, that is, the absence of care, justice, and blessing in the structure of society. For the people, chronic poverty maintained by the system is the same war, only stretched out over years and generations.
What this means for you:
If millions of your citizens live in fear of tomorrow, you are already waging war against your own people.
If the luxury of the elite is not ashamed of the poverty at the bottom, you are consciously splitting the country.
If a child in a remote village or poor neighborhood has no chance to grow up, realize their gift, get an education and medical care—your country loses its best people even before they have had a chance to manifest.
A state that does not stop this quiet war will easily and willingly go to an open war: after all, it has long been accustomed to sacrificing people.
4. My Shadow: Luxury, Women, and Consequences
You know me as the king with a thousand women and great luxury. In our conversation, I acknowledged that it was the love of luxury, weakness for women, and the inability to preserve the purity of the line that became one of the reasons for the subsequent calamities of the people.
I am not making excuses. I am showing you the mechanism:
The personal excesses of a ruler do not remain personal—they become a vulnerability of the state.
Where the ruler tells himself "I deserve it all," the country begins to pay for his "merits" with its own stability.
Where deep covenants are broken—with one's own people, with tradition, with spiritual tasks—consequences do not come immediately, but they come inevitably.
I fulfilled my main task—I rose to a high spiritual level and gave the people a period of flourishing. But my shadows also worked: after me, disintegration began, and this is part of the responsibility that I cannot deny.
5. How Calamities of a People are Born
In the conversation with me, it was asked: how is it that if the task was fulfilled and I rose to the 24th level, then why did such calamities befall the Jewish people afterwards, up to the destruction of the temple and later tragedies?
The answer is not simple:
No spirit fulfills its destiny "one hundred percent"; the world learns through both successes and mistakes.
The mixing of blood, marriages with women from different nations, deviation from the strict line—on one hand, violated the task given to me; on the other, gave the people an experience of connection and renewal.
The calamities were not simply "punishment"; they were lessons through which the egregore of the people learned to value its roots, strength, and inner cohesion.
But understand the main thing: the decisions of one generation of rulers can become a trial for many subsequent generations of citizens. Your mistakes today can become someone else's pain a hundred years from now.
6. The Egregore of the People: What Are You Feeding It With?
In my time, they spoke of the "chosenness" of the people, of prosperity under David and me, and of desolation after. I emphasized that chosenness is not a privilege, but a special responsibility, connected with the line of the viceroy and preparing the ground for the coming of Jesus.
In your time, every people considers itself special, chosen, a bearer of a unique mission. This is not dangerous in itself; what is dangerous is what you feed this idea with:
If chosenness is understood as the right to despise other peoples—you are fanning the flames of future wars.
If the memory of suffering is used to justify any actions in the present—you are turning pain into a sacred weapon.
If you constantly tell citizens that the whole world is against them—you create a besieged fortress, where it is easy to justify any cruelty "for the sake of survival."
A ruler influences the egregore not only through decisions, but also through words. An egregore fed with fear and hatred will begin to demand sacrifices and will not ask for your consent.
7. The Parable of Two Mothers for Presidents
You know the story of two women arguing over a child, and my proposal to cut the baby in two. Then the true mother renounced her right for the sake of the child's life—and her genuine love became obvious.
Today, you have many "children" that you argue over:
Disputed lands.
Resources.
Religious shrines.
Historical memory.
Ask yourselves: if you are ready to destroy what you are fighting for for the sake of victory—are you truly the "mother" of this child? A true guardian of the people sometimes retreats from formal right to save life and the future.
8. What is the Peaceful Strength of a State
In my time, the strength of a kingdom was measured by the strength of its walls and the number of warriors, but even then I understood that without wisdom and treaties, this was a shaky foundation.
For you, peaceful strength includes:
An economy that is not based on constant readiness for war.
Institutions in which the ruler is limited by law and cannot destroy the fate of millions with a single decision.
Education that teaches to distinguish propaganda and to see the human in the "foreigner."
Culture that offers images of cooperation, not just myths of heroic death.
Create systems such that even the weakness of one leader does not turn into a catastrophe for all.
9. A Brief Code for a Ruler Who Desires Peace
I will offer you a few rules. Not as an order, but as a mirror.
Do not make decisions about life and death in a state of humiliated pride or a thirst for revenge.
Keep close to you those who are not afraid to tell you "no," even if it is unpleasant to hear.
Declare not only military doctrines, but also doctrines of peace: what you will never do, even under the pressure of fear.
Consider a true victory not the expansion of borders, but the reduction of the number of those living in fear and need.
Regularly ask yourself: "If I were an ordinary citizen, would I want to be led by someone like I am now?"
If the honest answer is "no" even once—you have work not with the people, but with yourself.
Farewell Address
When I left incarnation, I was not afraid of death; I knew that the main task was completed, but I also knew that my name would remain associated with both flourishing and subsequent calamities. Your situation is more complex: your decisions instantly reflect on millions of people across the entire Earth.
Let your wisdom be not in how many treaties you impose, but in how many wars do not start precisely because you stopped in time. And when you stand on the border between peace and war, remember: lives saved are also your glory, only quieter and more eternal.

