Feel
To feel is to search, ascertain, observe, examine, study, explore, experience, undergo, sense, touch, perceive and have some degree of empathy with one or more categories of mind. It is to be conscious of or emotional affected by the sensations characterizing a material presence, situation, circumstance et. al. in contact with sentient consciousness.
To feel is to experience state, potential, change and flow of self and others; it is knowing, emotions, flow and reality all combined in a multi-sensory experience.
Feeling is intuitive knowing!
Feelings are the creation of emotion and sensation as a result of perceptions, thoughts and postulates and primary considerations. They are a response reaction patterns resulting from the input or projection of thoughts, attitudes, emotions, sensations, pains et. al. into one’s perception of experience.
Emotions are classified as any strong feeling, such as joy, anger or sadness; an instinctive or intuitive feelings as distinguished from logic or reasoning; the term is from the Latin emovere, from e ~ out + movere ~ move and are indicative of specific forms of flow… each with a precise intent and message.
The Tonal Vibratory Scale of Emotions is a scale of approximately 3600 words in the English language which describe various states of being known as emotions. Over 2000 of these are negative, despite many being one part of a dichotomous relationship.
Emotions are actually a combination of a number of different scales, including considerations, degrees of appreciation, knowing, responsibility, control, presence, alertness, interest in, energy, flow, tolerance of form & feel, acceptance of, satisfaction with, response, happiness, and so on.
Below you will find a more complete overview of the General; Personal Emotions; Impersonal Emotions; Religion & Morality; Mind: knowing, postulates, primary considerations and attitudes; Emotions: being, feeling and flowing; which I have assembled to give a broader view of how I determined the scale of emotional tones.
General: Words in the English language describing Affections; Feelings; Excitation; Excitability and In-excitability; Sensibilities and Insensibilities. They fall into the categories of…
Personal Emotions: Wonder - Lack of Wonder; Nobility - Commonality; Beauty - Ugliness; Joy - Suffering; Amusement; Rejoicing - Lamentation; Pleasurable-ness - Painfulness; Interest - Disinterest; Wit - Tedium; Cheerfulness - Sadness; Like - Preferences - Dislike; Contentment - Discontent; Hope; Satiety; Etiquette; Good Taste - Bad Taste; Beautification - Ornamentation; Ostentation - Formality; Affectation; Desire - Indifference; Courage - Cowardice; Rashness - Caution; Boasting - Insolence; Ridiculousness; Repute - Disrepute; Ridicule; Aggravation; Blemish; Fear; Relief; Regret; Dullness; Fastidiousness (easily disgusted, hard to please); Pride - Humility; Title - Anonymity; Vanity - Modesty; Seriousness - Dejection; Humiliation; Servility
Interpersonal Emotions: Philanthropy; Love - Amiability; Affinity & Affection; Friendship - Enmity; Congratulations; Gratitude - Ingratitude; Endearment - Hatred; Marriage - Union - Oneness; Celibacy; Courtesy - Discourtesy; Benefactor - Evildoer; Flattery - Detraction; Accusation - Vindictiveness; Unsociability - Seclusion; Resentment - Anger; Contempt; Sullenness; Benevolence - Malevolence; Malediction (curses); Threat; Pity ? Pitilessness; Forgiveness - Revenge; Jealousy;
Religion and Morality: Divinity; Good - Evil; Virtue - Wickedness; Probity (uprightness, honesty) - Impropriety; Right - Wrong; Innocence - Guilt; Penitence - Atonement; Duty; Undutiful; Due - Unreservedness; Sanction - Approval - Disapproval; Fairness; Respect - Disrespect; Liability, Non-liability; Vindication; Sensual-ism; Selfishness; Asceticism; Fasting; Sobriety; Temperance - Intemperance; Drunkenness & Drug taking; Purity - Impurity; Jurisdiction; Legality - Illegality; Reward - Punishment; Acquittal - Condemnation; Piety - Impiety; Worship - Idolatry;
Mind: knowing, primaries, considerations and attitudes
a) the nature, virtues, character, spirit, essential part(s), qualities and characteristics of living entities, things, situations, circumstances and events, religious feeling: Unction, aesthetics, beauty, poise, balance, harmony, virtues, sincerity, fastidious, piety,
b) State, health, mentality, beliefs, primaries, sensory input, thoughts and considerations, frame of mind, think, attitudes, instincts, intuition: Blessed, exalted, vital, alive, inspired, trustworthy, flowing, healthy, trusting, spontaneous, attractive, appealing, tender, sensual, relaxed, respectful, helpful, sharing, thankful, selfish, hard, ill
c) Willingness, tolerance, disposition, outlook, predisposition, inclination, bent, tendency, predilection, prejudice: playful (gamesome), secure, willing, keen, zealous, warm hearted, cordial, inviting, fun, tolerant, hopeful, patient, endurance, persistent, impetuous, impatient, intolerant
d) Realizations, understandings, knowledge and their respective sincerity, veracity: clarity, penetration, brilliant, geniuses, knowing, knowledgeable, understanding, wise, discerning, discriminating, judgemental, sensitive,
Emotions: being, feeling, flowing
e) Vibes, tone, feeling, mood, energy, vibration, passion, temper, humour, sentiment, sensation, impression: vibrant, glowing, ecstasy, awed, rapt, vivacious, joyful, euphoric, graceful, charming, happy, serenity, tranquil, peaceful, philosophical, sober, calm, cool, detached, interesting, serious, keen, earnest, passive, placid, lack of expectation, bored, monotony, tedium, pathos.
f) Affinities, friendliness, empathy, appreciation, true feeling, involvement, mutual feeling, sympathy, spontaneity, willingness to share space and consciousness: loving, harmonious, admiring, loveable, romantic, passionate, appreciative, thrilled, excited, jubilant, enthusiasm, cheerful, delighted, pleased, contented, conservative, comfortable,
g) Interest, affections, influences, responsiveness, responses, reactions, impulses: absorbed, fascinated, curious, interested, impressed, demonstrative, influenced, moved, touched, sensitive, involved, aroused, pleased, grateful, relieved, gratified, satiated, gratifying, motivated, amused, agreeable, hopeful, interesting, distracted, unrest, disquiet, discontented, dissatisfied, displeased, moody, impatient, troubled, bothered, aggravated, agitated, ruffled, annoyed, irritable, disapproving, ridiculing, cajoling, brave, tough, inflexible, inconsiderate, mocking, boastful, insolent, disobedient, rebellious, offended, intimidated, resentment, disgusted, offensive, simmering, volatile, ugly, repelled, antagonistic, menace, mad, angry, raving, vehemence, violent, rage, savage, greedy, covetous, envious, susceptible, resignation, acquiescence, meek, sentimental, nostalgic, indifferent, aloof, dismay, dazzled, careful, watchful, cautious, apprehensive, nervous, skittish, fretting, alarmed, fearful, timid, cowardly, shocked, gripped, mortified, horror, wincing, aching, sore, tender, distressed, hurt, ill, afflicted, pain, awful, ravaged, sighing, disappointed, unhappy, sad, depressed, vexed, troubled, worried, despairing, despondent, melancholy, miserable, abandonment, sympathy, condoling, propitiate, approval, pandering, pity , dejected, woeful, grief, heartbroken, suffering, animus, agony, wallowing, lamenting, embarrassed, ridiculous, shame, sorry, regret, remorseful, humiliated, regretful, disconsolate, unsympathetic, stoic, hardened, cynical, neglect, placid, wooden, dull, numb, cold, frigid, repressed, dumb, tired, wearisome, lethargic, withered, worn, apathetic, doomed, accursed, hysterical, fanatical, delirium, sacrifice, false, hiding.
Primary Definitions
Emotions: 1: an instinctive feeling as opposed to reason; 2: a tonal vibratory response to others, situations or conditions which produce sensations and states of mind; 3: a manifestation and condition of beingness, a connector between thought, intention and effort; from French emouvoir ~ excite; after mouvoir ~ move
Tone: the characteristics of a vibe; tones differ from vibes as qualities differ from frequency; 2: the most easily identified forms and key tones are: polarity, positive, neutral or negative; variations of colour, brightness, light and darkness; clarity and opaqueness; temperature: hot, warm, cool, cold, icy; solidity & density: hard, soft; stiffness, flexibility and relaxation; weight: heavy, light; texture: sharp, jagged (teeth), smooth; perceptions: openness, closed; accepting, rejecting; playful or seriousness; happiness, sadness; intensity & volume; but may include any other sort of quality sense or impression upon consciousness about state, feel, flow or form such as location, size, position, flavour and response.
The word derives from the Latin tonus, from the Greek tonos ~ tension, tone, from teinein ~ to stretch. The term means strength or quality and is used in multiple subject fields from body musculature, musical tones and pitch of voice and instruments to the brightness and deepness of colour, and shows a deep appreciative understanding of the nature and cause of changes in energetic wave patterns.
Vibrations or ‘Vibes‘ are a resonant or discordant vibrational patterns embedded in communications and expressing emotive beingness. In other words one considers that “I am… happy, sad, ill, well, angry, fearful… as a ’state of being‘.
Wavelength is the vibration, stirring or undulation the surface of a medium causing peaks and troughs; if the vibration is steady like an unwavering intention or an intention without reservation or doubt, the summits and troughs of each energy wave are of equal height or magnitude i.e. the distance from one peak or node to another is the wavelength and how often these occur per a given unit of time is the frequency of the vibration.
Waves of similar magnitude, intensity, frequency, tone and length, resonate with and are accepted by the receipt point of an intention, flow or communication thus establishing rapport; waves of different magnitude, intensity, frequency, tone and wavelength either overwhelm, pass through or are resisted and repulsed by the receipt point of an intention, flow or communication.
An excellent understanding of this will explain why personal doubts and secondary considerations have varying degrees of effectiveness (failure to manifest) and also why an intention without doubt or reservations may still not cause the desired effect which is ultimately dependant upon the receipt point of the flow of communication.
Once the tonal vibratory scale of emotions is thoroughly recognized and mastered as a deliberate creative process one’s personal tone, abilities and effectiveness all rise markedly.
Emotions are basically postulated flows!
Postulate create (start), cause to persist, and stop/end all realities.
Flows communicate, as communications flow. Flow is the very heart of life; flows and the exchange of energy and ideas across space (beingness) and time (flow rate of change) create existence.
The directed energy of flows move in specific relative directions: self to another others; another or others to self; another or others to another or others; and self to self.
Flow is the natural relaxed state of optimal existence when one is willing to experience life just as it is for flow is energetic motion in space (in one of a number characteristic forms of tonal vibrations) of an emotional energy manifestation of beingness (or ‘becoming‘) combined with the native inherent desire to create.
When experience is undesired or unpleasant and therefore resisted, especially as in the very common modern desire to ‘be‘ or ‘become‘ someone of importance and meaning (rich or famous?) the energy characteristics of the individual’s home universe becomes contracted and personal presence and attention is then trapped by the resultant mass caused by games conditions, i.e. opposing goals, purposes and intentions, as well as ‘other‘ intentions, cross-purposes, false purposes and problems.
When this happens a ridge of emotional energy, a manifestation of resistance is formed. A ridge is one of several mental formations stemming from unbalanced emotions and intents. It is a hardened presser beam pushed against an experience or the mental impressions of a past incident.
Another form of mental energy is the dispersal. Dispersals are explosions or implosions of attention from/to a common point. They are also an emotional energy manifestation of indecision and take the form of a beam of wandering intention and wavering control of attentive presence that may expand or contract, reach or withdraw
Here are 108 definitions for some of the key terms of items on the Vibratory Scale of Emotions. You will note that they appear as flows, dispersals and ridges which cascade or descend through airy and light through more solid layers. They also have harmonic reflections of themselves expressed as an ‘new‘ emotion of higher or lower character
They also have a relative relationship one to another and can be easily raised and/or influenced markedly by those tones immediately above and below them. This provides a very effective tool to shift the emotional state of anyone you meet simply by understanding where they are at on the scale and approximating a tone above their to raise the overall feeling and states. This can be done repeatedly tone after tone above the current level ypu are trying to shift upward.
- Serenity (of Beingness): a quality or state (-ness) of being calm, peaceful, tranquil and untroubled; from the Latin serenus, this term also has an archaic meaning as a noun ~ a clear sky, calm sea
- Postulates: suggest, assume, decide or believe the existence, fact or truth of something as the basis of reasoning , discussion or belief; from Latin postulat-, postulare ~ ask
- Awe: awe is a feeling of reverent respect often mixed with wonder or fear; (verb) inspire; from the Old English ege ~ terror, dread, awe.
- Wonder: feeling of surprise and admiration; an intense curiosity and desire ‘to know’ from Germanic wundor
- Games: are any state of beingness wherein exists awareness, consciousness, minds, playing fields, goals, opponents, problems, havingness, achievement and freedom all to some degree. Basically a contest or competitive activities involving attention, identities, effect on opponents and goals, play and the problems of play, self-determinism, other-determinism, win/lose potentials, communication and continuation (for all games are in progress as a game that has not begun and an unfinished game are not really games. Games are the primary factor establishing conditions and ethics as the fundamental archetypal models of life and consciousness. Games basically run a ‘have for self - can’t have on another’ intention and postulate. By a game condition is meant that one’s power of choice has been subjugated against his or her will, requiring fixed attention on the game; from the Old English gamen ~ amusement, fun; from (Germanic origin) gamenian ~ play, amuse oneself
- Euphoric: a feeling of intense happiness and elation; from Greek euphoros ~ borne well from eu ~ well + pherein ~ to bear
- Joy: feeling of great pleasure, satisfaction, happiness; based on Latin gaudium, from gaudere ~ rejoice
- Action: unreserved flow; the process of doing something to achieve an end, aim or goal; the way in which things work or move; from Latin agere ~ to do, act
- Exhilaration: very happy or animated; from Latin exhilarat- exhilarare ~ make cheerful from ex ~ + hilaris ~ cheerful
- Aesthetics: concerned with beauty or the appreciation of beauty; of pleasing appearance; the study of ideal form and beauty, it is the Philosophy of Art which is the very quality of flow and communication; from Greek aisthetikos, from aistheta ~ perceptible things, from aisthesthai ~ perceive
- Excited: eager enthusiasm, increased energy or activity in a physical or biological system; from the Latin excitare (frequentative of) exciere ~ call out
- Delighted: please greatly, a cause or source of great pleasure; from Latin delectare, delicere ~ to charm
- Enthusiasm: intense enjoyment, interest and/or approval; fervor, especially religious, supposedly resulting from divine inspiration; from Greek enthousiasmos from enthous ~ possessed by god (theos ~ god)
- Caring: the provision of that which is necessary for health, welfare, maintenace and protection of someone or something; serious attention and consideration given or applied to an action or plan; feel interest in and concern for; look after the needs of; feel affection for; from Germanic carian
- Understanding: awareness of flow, form and feel, understanding is comprehensive comprehension. Relative degrees of affinity, reality and communication; potential knowingness; knowing in action; the power of abstract thought; intellect; sympathetic awareness, tolerance, forgiving; informal or unspoken agreement good judgement; understanding is a universal solvent which washes away everything; from Old English understandan (stand under)
- Admiring: a pleasing contemplation; wonder, regard with respect, warm approval; showing such feeling; admiration is the essence and substance of a communication line; from the Latin ad mirari ~ wonder at.
- Appreciative: recognize the value or significance of; be grateful for; from Latin appretiare ~ set at a price, appraise, from ad ~ to + pretium ~price
- Cheerfulness: noticeably happy and optimistic; praise, joy, encouragement, supply comfort to; expressing appreciation or congratulations; origins are Middle English in the sense of ‘face’, hence expression, mood. From the Old French chiere ~ face, from Late latin cara, from Greek kara ~ head
- Strong Interest: excited curiosity; absorbed attention; not impartial; attention plus consideration to give or attract attention plus the desire to talk about it; a harmonic of wonder, interest is directed or attracted attention coloured with a tone of either ‘curious’, ‘desired’, ‘enforced’, ‘inhibited’, ‘no’ or ‘refused’ flows, forms or feelings; the interest cycle runs from awe through wonder, possibility, attention, desire, help, control, communication, promise, happiness, security, comfort, pleasure, entertainment, appreciation, beauty, admiration, love, knowledge, skills, havingness = interest; from Latin inter esse ~ be, to matter, make a difference
- Appealing: recognition of attractive and interesting qualities; heartfelt; from Latin appellare ~ to address
- Curious: 1: a harmonic of wonder; a form of “not know - desire to know”; surprising, odd, unfamiliar, strange or rare; from Latin curious careful, cura ~ care. ‘Curious about?’ is one of the primary clearing buttons (subjects, fields or areas, words, phrases, actions and items which cause emotional reactions or responses in an individual) used when releasing past upsets, traumatic experiences and contra-survival acts from the mind. It is followed when necessary, by Desired, Enforced, Inhibited, No, Refused, Suppressed, Invalidated. Other buttons include Suggested, Careful of, Nearly found out; Didn’t reveal; Denied; Resisted; Mistake been made; Ignored; Invalidated; Protested; Anxious about; Decided; Stated; Asserted; Decisions be made; Agreed with; Withdrawn from; Reached; Helped; Altered, Careful of; Failed to (didn’t) reveal; Withdrawn from; Half truths; Lies & Untruth; Attempts to Impress or Damage; Revealed.
- Agreeable: the crux and balance point between relatively positive and negative emotions (all above are largely positive while all tones below agreeable have some negative connotations); to be harmonious in opinion or feeling, agreement is the basis of reality established by a duplication of ideas and thought-forms as contained in the consciousness of one communicated to another. Often perceived as consistency or congruency, agreement is an alignment of thought (form) communication (flow) and feel. Agreement is mutual knowing; two or more people making the same postulate stick; a specialized form of consideration held in common ~ an archetype; an expression of collective consciousness, it is the ability to co-act, copy, duplicate, reproduce; mimic or be mimicked by; from the Latin ad ~ to + gratus ~ pleasing.
- Conservatism: a ‘don’t rock the boat or change anything’ attitude; averse to change or innovation; careful; holding traditional values; given to social rules and regulations, more democratic than liberal in views (favouring ownership and free enterprise); from the Latin conservare ~ to preserve, from con ~ together + servare ~ to keep
- Mild Interest: curious but not overly so; attention only partially absorbed with ideas more likely to bounce off one’s own inner beliefs than being impartial. Note it is in being interested rather than interesting that is the key-note to well-being.
- Hopeful: often the result of recognizing a source a help, hope is a combination of expectation and desire; a level of consciousness just above help, hope hold dear the postulate and primary consideration “something can still be done about it”; hope as far as personal control (self as source) is concerned has largely been abandoned, yet some remaining (potential) available avenues, that may help one move toward desires and goals remain a possibility; hope is a wishy-washy uncertainty that is all that is left when failed purposes are in sight or around the corner; needing others, conditions et.al. with a reliance largely on luck and fortune; the wish that with enough hope you will pass through the possible and achieve a certainty; a desire that at some time in the future you will cease to have what you no longer want but have been having difficulty getting rid of and acquire something desirable; a validation of good factors and indicators in present time; a feeling of trust; from the Old English ~ hopa
- Helpful: make easier; improve; be of benefit to; support; hold firm; allow especially movement in specific directions; help is a level of consciousness willing to confront, contribute to, be responsible for and create the keys to personal change, help is the make-break point between sanity and neurosis. The ability to help and be helped is tied to a willingness to assist and the reasons and intentions behind doing so. Optimally without personal motives and agendas; from the Old English verb helpan and noun ~ help
- Contented: accept as adequate; peaceful, happy, satisfied; from Latin contentus ~ satisfied (see dictionary for the word contain, con ~ together + tenere ~ hold)
- Disinterested: lacking energy and interest; impartial, subdued; from dis ~ expressing negation + interest
- Ambivalence: on the fence having mixed feelings, beliefs or opinions; of two minds; from early 20th Century Germanic Ambivalenz, on the pattern of equivalent; ambi ~ multi + valentia ~ power, competence
- Boredom: state of feeling weary and impatient; feeling bored, dull, unoccupied and uninterested; the term is C18 of unknown origin
- Monotony: a unnatural tedious lack of variety; sameness; from the Greek monotonos, monos ~ single, one + tonus ~ tension, tone
- Impatience: restlessly eager and showing a lack of tolerance, especially of waiting. An ‘I want it now!’ postulate and intention without consideration of universal laws. An incapacity to tolerate delay, trouble, or suffering without becoming angry or upset. From im ~ assimilated before + patient-, pati ~ suffer
- Impetuousness: moving rashly, rapidly and forcefully without due assessment and consideration of factors, required effort, end result et.al.; from Latin impetere ~ to attack
- Dissatisfied ~ Discontent: agitated and uneasy; submerged in one’s own universe and unable to see that their existence is their creation as it is based on held-beliefs. (dis ~ denoting negation, absence of, removal, separation or expulsion; Latin des- ~ sometimes) see contented
- Upsets are a diminished state of consciousness caused by a lessening or break in one or more of the factors of feel (affinity), flow (communication), form (reality, agreements) and understanding (precise and accurate comprehension of) another, others or life. If permitted to continue (persist) for too long this can cause a person to become sad and mournful and feel they are struggling and the effect of life without knowing why. The reason is that upsets are compound structures containing breaks (often preceded by earlier similar breaks) in form (agreement) flows (communication) and feelings (affinities) which one is Curious About (’item’ i.e. affinity, reality, communication or understanding), Desires ARCU, has experienced Enforced ARCU; Inhibited ARCU; No ARCU or Refused ARCU.
- Bothered: troubled; irritated; of Anglo-Iranian origin, probably from bodhare ~ noise, bodhraim ~ deafen, annoy
- Imposed upon: feel as if taken for granted and made responsible for something one accepts no responsibility for; from Latin imponere ~ inflict, deceive, but influenced by impositus ~ inflicted, and Old French poser ~ to place
- Alarmed: frightened or anxious, disturbed awareness of danger; a sense of warning; from Old French allarme, from all’ arme!
- Worried ~ Agitated: stirred up; a persistent reflection off of inner mock-ups the attention bounces from one negative possibility to another; from Latin agitare ~ agitate, drive
- Disappointed: deflated sadness, displeasure because one’s hopes andf expectations have not manifested; from Old French desappointer
- Disapproving: express an unfavorable opinion
- Cautious ~ Careful: cautious, full of care to avoid mishap or harm; from Old English carful; to be overly careful is to act in a reckless manner seeking to avoid potential problems, mistakes or danger; from Latin cavere ~ take heed
- Rebellion: resistance to people(s), authority, control, convention, beliefs; defiance of authority; from Latin rebellis based on bellum ~ war
- Hard to please: unwilling to be pacified or appeased; unawareness and unacceptability of the graces of life; from Latin placere ~ to please, as in placate
- Antagonism: active hostility or opposition, usually caused by advances of others toward oneself; to make an enemy of; from Greek antagonizesthai, from ant ~ against + agonizesthai ~ stuggle
- Aggravated: make a problem, illness, situation or circumstance worse; feeling put upon, it is an attempt to assign responsibility as blame outside oneself; from Latin aggravare ~ make heavy
- Hostility: opposed to; seriousness regarding games conditions and win-lose scenarios; from Latin hostilis, from hostis ~ stranger, enemy
- Pain: a warning of threat to survival produced by consciousness of sudden and strong counter-efforts; suffering or distress of body or mind (from injury or disease); 3: an electro-chemical response, experienced as a combination of any number of qualities of sensations, sharp, dull, hot, cold, shooting, electrical or hurting to which there is an autonomic nervous system reaction of withdrawing (experiments at Harvard University reproduced feelings of pain by applying a small electrical current to a grid of heated and cooled tubes; world-wide research is on-going into it’s nature and solutions to acute and chronic pain); from the Latin poena ~ penalty; compare with suffering.
- Anger: a feeling of annoyance, displeasure, hostility, provocation and deservedness, anger is ridge of hate attempting to hold everything still; origin Middle English from Old Norse angr ~ grief, angra ~ vex
- Embarrassed: cause to feel awkward, self-conscious or ashamed; from Portugese embaracar from baraco ~ halter (originally something ‘held on to’
- Complaining: vocal dissatisfied annoyance; not just something wrong but an urge to tell people about it in a derogatory manner; from Latin compangere ~ bewail, com ~ expressing intensive force + plagnere ~ to lament
- Dejected: sad effect; dispirited; from Latin deicere, de ~ down decare ~ throw
- Depressed: despondency; often a medical condition resulting from a combination of factors including nutrition, exercise, habits, beliefs, etcetera; from Latin depressare ~ press down
- Resentment: bitter indignation; from Latin re, expressing intensity and force + sentire ~ feel
- Rage: violent uncontrolled anger associated with conflicts; a vehement desire or passion; origins C16 Latin rabies, rabere ~ rave
- No Sympathy: unfeeling, uncaring, separate; showing little or no empathy; see sympathy
- Unexpressed Resentment: a dishonest lack of communication; not saying how one really feels; see resentment
- Covert Hostility: a smiling face and a knife hidden behind the back. A belief that the only way to succeed is to eliminate or remove others as barriers to one’s own success and happiness. see hostility
- Hatred: dissonance; a reversed affinity where attention fixation on a strong aversion to experiencing someone or something; origin Old English hatian and also, rǣden ~ condition
- Anxiety: constant irresolute mental computations on a certain point or points indicating a problem; from Latin anxietas , anxius, from angere ~ to choke
- Fear: one of the main crux points of awareness along with interest, fear is a fight against oneself. An unpleasant emotion caused by threat of danger, pain or harm (real or imagined), fear contains twinges of anxiety about the future. Mixed feelings of dread and occasionally reverence, fear is an emphatic expression of denial or refusal; from the Old English fǣr ~ danger, fǣrn ~ frighten; also ‘revere‘ of Germanic origin.
- Jealous: 1: a harmonic of resentment and envy, jealousy is an insecurity that causes compulsively imagined mock-ups of unwanted situations one considers disloyalty or betrayal; 2: an inability to confront an unknown and attempt to own or possess exclusively as an imagined right, jealousy is basically an intolerance of others primaries and will characterized by frantic fervour; from Latin zelosus ~ zeal
- Despondent: a dejected loss of confidence; from Latin de ~ away + spondere ~ to promise
- Despair: a turbulent state of consciousness centred in the emotions of loss and hopelessness. An inability to do anything about it; a complete absence of hope; from Latin de ~ away + sperare ~ to hope
- Retribution: punishment inflicted as vengence for wrong-doing or criminal act; from Latin retribuere ~ assign again
- Terror: extreme fear and intimindation; from Latin terrere ~ frighten
- Violent: very intense, forceful and powerful, especially behaviour involving physical force in an attempt to harm or injure; from Latin violent ~ violent
- Revenge: retaliation for harm, injury or wrong, often on the behal of another or others; from Late Latin revindicare ~ from re ~ expressing of extreme force+ vindicare claim, avenge
- Envy: from Latin invidia ~ regard maliciously from in ~ into + videre to see
- Numb: unfeeling; deprived of the power of sensation; from Middle English nim ~ take
- Condoling ~ Sympathy: feeling pity or deep sorrow for another’s misfortune; generally considered a valuable quality or characteristic it is anything but as it is agreement with a negative state of existence. It’s survival value is that when an individual is hurt they cannot fend for themselves (as well) One must then ‘count on’ others and so a bid is made for care and attention from outside self. We believe that if others were not sympathetic we would be at a disadvantage. Sympathy is basically a co-flow, a co-creation and co-beingness. Its is the idea ‘I am him/her’; a duplication of negative energy; the term sympathy is from Greek sumpatheia, from sumpathes, sum ~ with + pathos ~ feeling; while the word condoling is Latin condolere, con ~ with dolere ~ grieve, suffer
- Propitiation: means to win or regain the favour of; appease. When an individual is below fear and terror on the Tonal Scale of Emotions, this is an attempts to buy off any real or imagined danger with gifts (selectively gives, see making amends below). In effect it is an apathetic effort to hold the source of pain at bay; a conciliation aimed at feeding or sacrificing to an all-consuming destructive force; from Latin propitare ~ make favourable, propitius ~ favourable, gracious, often ~ agreeable as propitious
- Afflicted: distressed with bodily or mental misery or suffering; a ridge resulting from a projected or outside source in misalignment with the purposes of the creation; the from the Latin afflictare from af ~ before and fligere ~ dash
- Grief: intense sorrow, especially as caused by the death of someone close; an instance or cause of intense sorrow; informally ~ trouble, annoyance; ‘come to grief’ ~ have an accident; from Old French grever ~ burden, encumber, from Latin gravis ~ heavy, serious
- Making Amends: compensate for wrong-doing (can’t withhold anything); from Old French amendes ~ penalties, fine, amende ~ reparation, from amender based on Latin emendare, emend ~ correct, revise: e out of + menda ~ a fault
- Criticism: 1: an attention reflecting, redirecting and diverting tactic of the not so innocent; 2: more specifically directed than complaints, criticisms are a symptom of similar overt or hidden contra-survival acts of one’s own in re-stimulation;
- Undeserving: deserving and motivation are intimately linked to image and perceived value(s) in practical as well as terms of character. The intention behind flows being motivated by prior negative flows; having little or no input or out flow; unworthy of favourable treatment or assistance and therefore without little value; from Latin deservire ~ serve well or zealously + the Germanic un ~ absence, cancellation, reversal, negation
- Self-abasement: behaving in a way that belittles or degrades someone (anyone) belittles self; from Latin ad ~ to, at + baissier ~ to lower
- Victim: a state of consciousness causing one to feel helpless and passive because they believe they are an innocent injured party; the person harmed, killed or being tricked; from Latin victima
- Why bother: fixed attention causing irritability and an inability to see the point of taking the trouble to take an interest in or do anything; from Iranian bodhaire ~ noise, bodhraim ~ deafen, annoy
- Intimidated: overawe and frighten in order to make one compliant and do what one wants; from med. Latin intimidare ~ make timid
- Intolerant: unable to accept other or even discuss ideas, beliefs and customs of; from in, expressing a negative + Latin tolerare ~ endure
- Judgemental: an excessively critical point of view resulting from postulating a label with a negative connotation for others and/or their beliefs; expressing a conclusion that is limited in nature and veracity. From Latin judex, judic-, from jus ~ law + dicere ~ to say.
- Hopeless: hope? what’s that? feeling or causing despair, especially when accompanying bad acts or incompetence; from Old English hopa
- Apathy ~ Wooden: lack of interest or enthusiasm; a complete withdrawal from people or individuals; a dissonance near death inducing a docile, obedient state of not being that is often ill or well on the way to serious illness; feeling all-wrong, all is lost; from Greek apathes ~ without feeling
- Useless: having little ability and serving no purpose; from Old French user base on Latin uti + -less
- Dying: on the point of death
- Body Death: stop living; be forgotten; become less strong; become extinct; from Old Norse deyja, of Germanic origin, related to Dead. This word expresses undesirability, a strong dislike of and lack of affinity for which is repulsed by those alive enough but absent in death and dying.
- Failure: lack of success; often unrecognised as an emotion failure is an omission of expected and required actions (flows); it is the action or state of ceasing to function; collapse, a cessation of power (an impossibility for a spiritual being except by postulate); an inability to handle a started course of action; a demonstration that a cycle of action is incomplete after one believes it to be complete; a realization that one has not made it to the expected end result; from Latin fallere ~ deceive
- Pity: feel intense sorrow or compassion for suffering; cause for regret or disappointment; from Old French pite compassion from Latin pietas ~ piety ~ dutiful (beliefs accepted with unthinking conventional reverence)
- Shame: humiliation and distress caused by the consciousness of guilt for wrongful or foolish behaviour, often along with dishonour; the effects one creates are unworthy, undeserved, often causing the person to feel like they are be ing someone else. The effect of negative flows, shame is being other bodies; Old English sc(e)amu ~ feel shame
- Accountable: 1: responsible; bound to give account; 2: a flow reflected off a creation causing an effect (label) at it’s source; a harmonic of blame; from the Old French aconter, as conter ~ count, from Latin computare ~ compute
- Blame: the arbitrary assignment of source to another i.e. outside oneself, basically to ‘punish bodies‘, blame is an effort to not be responsible. Cause becomes fault = bad cause. From Latin blasphemare from Greek blasphemein
- Regret: repentant expressing sorrow or disappointment; attention has become introverted on actual overt flows which collapse the time-line making it run backward. An effort to omit, reverse the postulates of or take out of existence ~ a wish that something hadn’t happened, regret is a bad result from a good intention; from Old French regreter ~ bewail the dead, perhaps of Germanic base ‘Greet’ ~ weep, cry from greotan ~ lament
- Failed Purposes: Purposes are the reason why something is done or for which something exists; they are the part of the communication formula that drives goals and intentions. Lack of them leaves a person blunt and ignorant while failed purposes leave one feeling lost and hopeless. Failed purposes are behind lack of energy; from Old French porpos from porposer (propose)
- Controlling Bodies: Control is predictable change and is the effort to cause predictability which underlies efforts to control. Positive postulates, willingness, intention and action (flows) are all required but flows are primary the causal agent. Controlling others starts when one believes that they cannot control certain factors oneself and so must demand help.
- Protecting Bodies: Forgetful of who we are, we believe we need to protect to survive
- Owning Bodies: slavery whether real or figurative
- Approval from Bodies: being Forms requires admiring forms necessitates approval; from Old French approbare (approbation) from Latin approbare ~ approve, from ad ~ to, probare ~ try, test
- Needing Bodies: the result of Being a Body
- Worshipping Bodies: celebrity of Form fixation
- Sacrifice: a practise of killing an animal or (occasionally) a person or surrendering a possession as an offering to a deity; the act of giving up something of value for something of perceived greater value; from Latin sacrificium, related to sacrificus, sacrificial, from sacer ~ holy
- Hiding: out of sight, view or knowledge, the word hide derives from the Old English hydan
- Being Objects:
- Agony: extreme physical or mental suffering, especially a feeling of torture; agony is a very low harmonic of boredom; from the Greek agonia, from agon ~ contest
- Being Nothing ~ Abandonment: One postulates the existence of realities and then abandons and forgets creating. When too much charged energy accumulates on failed to… considerations one ceases reaching and having, stops doing and finally ‘is nothing‘; from Latin ad ~ to, at + bandon ~ control
- Can’t Hide: unable to keep out of sight
- Total failure: Not Knowable As Spirit; the bottom of the Know through Mystery Scale
I have mocked-up two short charts, one The Tonal Vibratory Scale of Emotions and one for Lessons of Will and Self-expression to help provide an overview of these examples for you to play with. Hopefully these will help explain and clarify things and form a basis from which you can work out the exact phrasing of the creative postulates as well as emotional states used by most people.
It should be noted that cultural differences exists around these forms and their expressions and most tones are generally not 100% totally ‘pure’ in character but rather are more often a blend of two or more tonal characteristics expressing those aspects of past experiences the attention is reflecting off.
Aware States (being & knowing) as well as energy waves and vibrations (i.e. emotions & flowing) respond one to each other in different ways, allowing tones to just be, pass on through, harmonize with, be receptive or sympathetic to flows, dispersal and ridges of resistances and other mental blocks and barriers.
Comprehension and personal capability and competence with these factors will dramatically increase your understanding and sense of knowing certainty of (self and others) and your effectiveness in communicating.
Certainty of Knowing is relative, as are the exact postulates, primary considerations, attitudes and feelings contained by every experience and a good deal of overlap exists between them as emotions are actually a part of gradient scale of ‘aliveness’, energy and interest with dichotomies at each extreme, so that particular postulates will fit whole bands of tones.
The Character of the Vibratory Tones given are but a part of the total actual tones currently expressed (which can only be determined accurately by observation in present time).
Energy patterns are also affected and influenced by the quality of the tones received and the nature of the flow or flows. Dispersals deflect and disperse and ridges reflects and emphasize the tone that it is delivered (communicated).
Tonal energy patterns also describe the form, state and the nature or path of activity of one’s attention.
Awareness of Flow, Form and Feel, form a triangular relationship that equates to understanding; each aspect capable of describing and possessing multiple characteristics.
Flow is by far the most useful (easiest to change as it is change) of these as it is a harmonic of admiration ~ the essential substance and reason for of all communication lines.
Everything flows ~ Life revolves, evolves, resolves and dissolves.



