Storytime With Amy Special
Is Guilt on the Death and Injury of Family Members Why People Are Unable to Confront Jab Dangers?
The powers that be did a lot of research on what messaging created the best compliance with taking the jabs. I believe guilt messaging was the one that won out, so it meant communicating how you needed this product to protect other vulnerable members of your family. Although employee mandates pushed many people into getting the Covid “vaccine,” family pressure played at least as much, if not a larger role. How many elderly mothers hinted that they wouldn’t be able to see their adult children at Thanksgiving unless they got the vaccine? How many brothers and sisters tried to convince their family members that they and their family all got safe and effective and were feeling great?
Think about the consequences of that if the pressured person died suddenly. Would that family member ever be able to reconcile the guilt if they had pressured others to take it? Some of the reason that the jabbed as a group seem unwilling to see the carnage the Covid vaccines have created is because they can’t live with themselves if they were the cheerleaders for this genetic slurry. It would force them to accept guilt for having caused the death and injury of loved ones.
Guilt upon the death of a close family member is a very contentious issue. I have seen grown siblings who stop talking to to each other over arguments regarding the care of an elderly parent, say. Social media and television programming in general have led to a subconscious consensus about what an acceptable death has to look like: the deceased must be elderly or with a terminal condition in which all conventional medical treatment options have been exhausted. Anything that deviates from that invites social shame and speculation about what surviving family members did or didn’t do that they should have.
As some of my long term readers know, there has been a lot of death in my family. The causes of death were all over the board, with complications from COPD being listed with both my aunt and my father, my grandmother and her sister simply succumbing to old age and multiple comorbidities, and my mother in law suffering a brain hemorrage after a fall. But I had to ask myself in many cases if I felt guilty for something I had said or done that I felt had led on to the death. That made me think about my sister in law, and a long ago storytime with Amy my life is a soap opera special…
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