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| Intention-Manifestation Manifesting intentions, law of attraction, vibrational harmony, synchronicities, luck, share your intentions, practice group manifesting |
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| | #1 (permalink) |
| Member Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 84
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Okay, we've tried most things now- food traps, glue traps, electronic devices. So now I'm thinking why not IM. Only issue is how do I put out the intention to not-have mice. I feel like I've been putting out the intention to not-have mice and ended up manifesting more mice! Consistent with the whole the-universe-doesn't-grasp-negation. So what would be a way to intent not having mice? |
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| | #2 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: New York
Posts: 317
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LOA telling you to get a cat. One of the apartments I lived in had mice, at the same time I was thinking about getting a pet. I got 2 cats, and with in a month or so no more mice and I have to great friends.
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| | #4 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jan 2008 Location: Houston, TX
Posts: 658
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I don't believe the IM works that way - that you can just sit on your duff and will the mice away. That would be nice though, wouldn't it? If you don't agree with my understanding of IM, feel free to discard the rest of this advice. Why don't you call the pest control company? There are pest control companies out there that deal specifically with rodents (mice/rats/snakes, etc) and will eradicate them for you. So maybe your IM attracted me here to give you this advice - that I know works, since I used to have rats in my attic (which are now all gone). And it's up to you to follow through with the solution provided? The universe sometimes provide in different ways. It's up to us to recognize the solution that it brings to us. |
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| | #5 (permalink) |
| Member Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 84
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Hmm...well funnily enough they are gone. Or at least we havent' seen them at all since yesterday! Thank you! Changes made- we put the bin outside. Also as it turns out the people downstairs have a cat and I'll be going around this weekend and asking them if we could 'borrow' it for a day. |
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| | #8 (permalink) | |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jun 2008 Location: Everywhere
Posts: 377
| Quote:
OP, just using willpower isn't going to solve your particular problem. I know your mice are gone now but why should the universe spend all that energy to kill or move (where will they go?) a hundred mice when you could just pick up your phone and phone the pest control people? Also, keep your house thoroughly clean. With bleach. Otherwise they'll come back; You can add all the traps you want but if you're sloppy eaters (or your pets leave scattered food lying around) then it's free invitation for the mice to come clean it up. Last edited by Zwynd; 09-02-2008 at 11:28 AM. Reason: past-tense | |
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| | #10 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Jun 2008 Location: Everywhere
Posts: 377
| *laughs* I have a good reason as to why the cats were avoiding the mice in my mother's house. One summer many years ago her home was overrun by mice. I remember everything in my childhood bedroom -moved- when you'd open the door. I'm not kidding. Mice were literally running up the walls. Every room was just as bad. You could set down a trap in the T.V. room, take a step back and watch a mouse walk right up to it. *snap!* That was the summer I mostly slept outside in high areas (eg, trees.) >.> It really was a bad mouse year for everyone in the city and our house was right on the edge of the wilderness so it was even worse for us. We even had the mouser-type of cats (3' long, big alley kind) who loved chasing/eating mice but after that year they never bothered again and actually showed nervousness when they'd hear a chewing sound. Looking back, I'm not really surprised that our cats became traumatized. /laugh Aside from alley cats and mousing dogs, we also had a pure bred Siamese and Himalayan. Forget mice; the Siamese wouldn't even touch cat food unless you 'presented' it to him. I blame my mother for constantly feeding him human food. And the Himalayan was too "perfect" to do any work other than find a better spot to lay on. One day the Himalayan spotted a mouse under the sink and someone in the family tried pushing him towards the mouse. "Go get it!" That cat literally dug his nails into the floor in protest. /sigh My childhood situation with mice of course is the extreme. But it was a fun tale to recall. Believe me or not, your choice. |
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| | #11 (permalink) |
| Senior Member Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: England
Posts: 360
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hi, i han an ant invesstaion once, and beleiving that al life communicates, I sat down and asked them to leave, and they did, no joke!! I was delighted because the alterantive was to kill them which would not have been my choice, dave |
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| | #12 (permalink) |
| Member Join Date: Jul 2007
Posts: 84
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Funny thing happened with the mice situation. Recently when a friend was staying over we were midnight snacking and forgot some cheese and left it on the floor in my bedroom. Now that is like sending mice a pretty sealed invitation to come to my place for dinner. And you bet they accepted. Now the funny part i this. They seem to completely avoid me. My friend saw one and shooed it away. I never came across but I did throw the cheese out! Feel very much like subjective reality or even like Happy Oasis's mosquito story. I ask them to leave me alone and they do |
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