The Human Being and the Vice of Smoking

The Human Being and the Vice of Smoking

In her book “Threads of Fate Determine Human Life,” Rosalie Von Sass reveals striking insights about smoking that go far beyond its known physical effects, offering a profound perspective into how this habit impacts our connection with the Light and our spiritual development.

Through her unique gift of ethereal sight, Von Sass describes how smoking affects not just the physical body, but creates dramatic alterations in the ethereal body – the cloak of lighter matter we also bear. She describes seeing the mouth of a smoker’s astral body deformed into a black, tar-coated opening that extends like a chimney down to the stomach. This spiritual deformation emits a pungent smell that actually repels forces of the Light and their helpers, effectively cutting off the smoker from vital spiritual assistance they might desperately need for their development and karma.

Even more revealing is her description of how smoking creates a spiritual vulnerability that the Darkness exploit. When someone smokes, they unknowingly attract both shadowy creatures and Earth-bound souls who shared the same vice. These beings cluster around the smoker, influencing their judgment and driving their craving through the cerebellum and solar plexus. What smokers perceive as relaxation is actually the temporary relief of satisfying these attached entities’ desires.

Von Sass shares particularly profound insights about women’s relationship with smoking. She explains that women were meant to be mediators of the Light’s vibrations, and when a woman smokes, she disrupts this sacred role. A smoking mother, despite her best care for her family’s material needs, cannot transmit the vital luminous power needed for her family’s well-being, leading to various physical and emotional difficulties for her children and husband.

The historical perspective she offers is equally striking: the first recorded instance of women smoking was found in the seven cities that perished, including Sodom and Gomorrah, where priestesses smoked specially prepared cigars as a privileged vice some five to six thousand years ago.

The account concludes with insights into smoking’s impact on invisible atmospheric particles that nourish our nervous system. While modern medicine may not yet recognize these effects, Von Sass explains that the destruction of these particles makes our respiratory system vulnerable to illness.

This remarkable text illuminates how our physical habits have far-reaching consequences in the spiritual realm, affecting not only our own spiritual development but our ability to fulfill our intended role in Creation. It serves as a powerful reminder that what appears as a simple habit in our material world can create profound disturbances in our connection to the Light and our ability to receive Divine guidance.

share this story!