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- Daily Short Video - Pain Management
Daily Short Video - Pain Management
Daily Short Video - Pain Management
Hey comrades,
First off I just want to share a quick anime project called Galactic Monks that I put together for fun for Halloween. Watch on X.
Even though it’s Halloween, we don’t get days off, so here we go with another daily short video.
Watch daily short video on X.
Let me first start by saying this is not medical advice, and if you decide to try this, please be safe.
We’re still talking about strengthening our weaknesses, and I’m going to bring this up again.
I know it’s an unpopular opinion, but I encourage you to try it out.
I don’t follow too many people, and it’s not because I don’t support others.
It’s just that my Twitter timeline is already difficult to keep up with.
But if any of you decide to try this, let me know, and I’ll automatically follow you—because you deserve to be followed.
Throughout my journey—starting as a victim, then learning to survive, and finally walking the way of the warrior—I’ve tried many methods, some that failed and others that helped.
As I started to slowly take back my life, step by step, one aspect of the Matrix program that always knocked me back down was the pain from torture.
No matter how much discipline I practiced to make positive changes in my life, every time I was tortured to the point of screaming in agony, it felt like all my efforts became useless.
Even after my life circumstances seemed to improve, I spent years feeling clueless about how to cope with the pain from torture, which always stopped my progress dead in its tracks.
Eventually, through my efforts to learn self-defense in Muay Thai kickboxing, I found an answer—an old-fashioned one, but effective.
The solution I’d been searching for was simply to condition my body to handle higher levels of pain.
I know this might not sound as exciting and modern as shielding technology and devices, but after trying so many things with no results, this was the one approach that actually worked for me when it came to managing the pain from torture.
Logically, it makes sense that it can work for anyone, regardless of their natural pain tolerance.
Now, if this sounds brutal and extreme to you, just know there are safe and easy ways to practice this at home.
In kickboxing, for example, there’s a tradition of lightly tapping the shins with a wooden stick.
Also, wherever you choose to increase your pain tolerance, it will increase your overall pain tolerance as well.
After doing some research, I found that, historically, slaves used similar methods to increase their pain tolerance and prepare for the fight for freedom.
A slave who could withstand the pain of whiplashes wasn’t as easily forced into obedience, making them harder to control.
This is a strategy I only recently discovered after 10 years of Matrix torture, and I wish I’d known about it from the start.
I haven’t encountered any other targets actively encouraging this method, but from my perspective, the more pain each of us can withstand individually, the stronger we become as a collective—and the more effective we’ll be in our fight for freedom.
Just remember to be safe!
Stay strong,
G-Monk

