Feeling drained by digital mimics? Learn how to stop energy vampires from swiping your identity and reclaim your sovereignty during a social media fast.

The algorithms are the lions, and our attention is the sacrifice. We have to move from being data points back to being image-bearers by cultivating the unmarketable self—the parts of you that cannot be branded, sold, or extracted.
So I was feeling a pool to pose and then I told myself no don’t post because I am in a strict 40 days no posting past but then they’re same old people who used to try to pull on my energy pain supposed to be and I just felt they’re poor of me posting but then the guy posted and then she posted and they basically were trying to take my identity like soul swiping he was using the girl who was full of venom and the one with my identity


Soul swiping, or "recognition mimicry," occurs when individuals with a hollow sense of self attempt to replicate the identity, aesthetic, or "light" of someone they perceive as authentic and coherent. This often intensifies when the target takes a break or "fast" from posting because the "vampires" lose their source of external validation and narcissistic supply. To stabilize their own fragmented identities, they may "wear" the other person’s persona or post content that mimics them to provoke a defensive reaction and re-establish an energetic connection.
The Dark Triad—narcissism, Machiavellianism, and psychopathy—represents modern labels for ancient vices like pride and hardness of heart. In the "Digital Colosseum," narcissists use the platform as a mirror for constant validation, while Machiavellians use strategic manipulation and "proxies" to attack others while keeping their own reputation clean. These systems reward the curated self-presentation of these traits, turning human beings into "nodes" or "numbers" rather than unique spiritual individuals.
In this context, psychic attacks are not necessarily supernatural events but are directed thoughts fueled by envy, control, or a constant feeling of lack. Because sensitive individuals or "empaths" act as receiving centers for energetic signals, they can feel the "magnetic pull" or "venom" of others' obsessive thoughts and projections even when they are offline. These attacks are designed to induce feelings of self-doubt, guilt, or an impending sense of doom, tempting the person to break their silence and engage in defensive behavior.
Protection starts with cultivating the "unmarketable self"—the parts of your identity that cannot be branded, sold, or extracted by an algorithm. Practical steps include the "Gray Rock Method," which involves being boring and unresponsive to provocations, and "cord-cutting" to mentally dissolve attachments to toxic people. Additionally, grounding oneself through "analog" activities—like writing with a pen, walking barefoot, or having unshared, unphotographed moments—helps restore the "felt self" over the "curated persona."
The Ahrimanic impulse refers to a cold, calculating drive to turn qualitative human experiences into quantitative data points. It seeks to replace a person’s unique "Name" (their spiritual individuality) with a "Number" (their engagement metrics and data profile). By resisting the urge to be predictable and manageable for the algorithm, a person reclaims their spiritual sovereignty and refuses to be a "node" in a soulless, materialistic web.
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