Anonymous ID: 9ccaa5 May 18, 2020, 11:41 p.m. No.9235320   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5339 >>5350 >>5374 >>5376 >>5413 >>5686

Q tells us not to try to awaken those who aren't ready. I fail over and over in following this sage advice. I know the truth is coming anyhow, so I tell myself that's one good reason I shouldn't waste my breath. But I also know that, apparently, whatever is coming will make everyone terrified. And so am I trying to plant a seed to protect them in the future? (Maybe partly.) Am I doing it out of arrogance, because I feel I know something they don't? (Even though I'm usually wrong about everything anyhow.) Or is it because I just don't feel that someone should walk into my home and begin to repeat the lies about Trump (which they believe) while I say nothing in response at all? I don't care anymore if they like me, though I try to be respectful and polite about it. And I will still fight to help them, whether they like me or not, because there is always a part of them I admire. So do you just drift off and think about kittens while they drone on? Do you lie down like a doormat and just take it? If you know you can't do anything to open their minds, then should you just remove yourself from all such social occasions (which for me would be ALL social occasions)? Maybe whatever is coming is so unrelated to everything I think I know that trying to awaken anyone with facts is useless and a waste of breath. So what do you do, anons? Because I'm failing badly at this "not trying to awaken anyone" thing.

Anonymous ID: 9ccaa5 May 19, 2020, 12:15 a.m. No.9235432   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>5441 >>5506

>>9235427

What do you think about the approach where you say nothing at all? As in, you don't try to refute anything they say, you don't argue, you simply shrug and don't engage on it. Wouldn't that be putting into practice Q's best advice not to try to awaken someone who's not ready? Or no?