Explore how emotional trauma and grief create an open door for spiritual looting. Learn about covenantal architecture, permeability, and protecting your boundaries.

When you’re in deep grief or trauma, your brain’s gatekeeping function—the part that usually filters out what’s safe and what’s not—actually starts to suppress. It’s like the 'covenantal architecture' of who you are temporarily gets dismantled because you’re just trying to survive the pain.
So I shared on my IG that I was having complications with my grandma and so of course this girl as soon as I got back from Texas this guy came at me fast cause I had the door open spiritually and then I lost my center then this other girl watched from afar and tried to do it to me after I had closed it then she went to talk to them and gift them something for their good deed what’s her issue her nervous system is outta of wack and so she took the change to hurt me when I shares that






Spiritual looting occurs when an individual is in a state of deep grief or trauma, such as a family crisis, leaving them feeling raw and vulnerable. During these times, the person's spiritual door is open, making them more permeable to aggressive energy shifts and negative influences from others. This phenomenon often happens when a person has lost their center, allowing external forces to take advantage of their weakened state.
Trauma can temporarily dismantle a person's covenantal architecture, which refers to the essential boundaries that define where one individual ends and another begins. When someone is focused on surviving intense pain, the brain's gatekeeping function—the mechanism that filters safe and unsafe interactions—is suppressed. This biological and spiritual shift removes the natural filters that usually protect a person's identity and energy from outside intrusion.
Permeability increases during grief because the emotional and biological systems are overwhelmed by the struggle to survive. This state of being more permeable means that the usual boundaries are lowered, creating an open door for intrusive spirits or negative influences. As discussed by researchers like Joycelynn, this isn't an intentional invitation of negativity, but rather a byproduct of deep emotional trauma that leaves a person in a state of invasion.
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