Morality is a Societal Spell Capping Your Net-Worth
“Billionaires shouldn’t exist.”
“I could never be the kind of rich that hoards money.”
“I built my business by helping people.”
These are moral codes stored in your body, convincing you that you are a good person via the moral codes of society. You have sourced your sense of authority and feeling ‘good enough’ from these moral codes.
Morals are a human strength and a human weakness.
While moral codes are useful for an operable society, the concept has been siphoned as a tool for the elite to limit the masses. Morality is created by religion and society, rather than the nuances of the human experience, and in many cases, it keeps business owners stuck in a working-class mindset.
The human experience is not black and white – morality programs are. Trying to fit into white and black institutions is very limiting for your psyche and money.
For many who have deconstructed religion, while they know that they will not be punished by something outside of them, what they end up doing is becoming their own judge.
This is what the spell a religion does; it puts morality on humans, even if you are non-religious. You learn through societal means that if you are not deemed as ‘good,’ you will be ostracized or some other form of punishment. If you are not careful, your biology and nervous system might cap your expansion based on this program alone.
You become your own critic based on the societal morals that were given to you.
As a business owner, morality may sneak up on you by telling you:
- You are too good to raise your prices, that is ‘too much money to charge’.
- You care about the world too much to overcharge people who desperately need your help/what you give
- You are always available for your clients/team cause of the good member of society that you are.
This is not the flex you think it is. It is actually morality and the patriarchy dressed up in a costume.
We all have a moral code; most of our moral codes come from Christianity, even if you were born outside of Christianity.
In this society, even if you aren’t part of religion, a lot of the moralistic codes you pick up are going to be based on good and evil.
This has been useful for a species to a certain extent – but sometimes we take it too far.
"You are your own Judge, Jury, and Executioner. You will send yourself to heaven or hell accordingly."
What this morality does is, no, you don’t get punished by an external god; but because the elite understand manifestation, they understand that if you believe you’re doing something wrong, you are going to punish yourself.
….you’re not gonna allow yourself to win, to succeed, to evolve as much if you doubt your morality in doing so.
As much as Elon Musk has a lot of questionable personality traits, when he implied that empathy is not a good part of the human condition, what he may be pointing towards is that he doesn’t have a bunch of morality codes keeping him from allowing himself to make MASSIVE money.
What I want to ask you to do is to begin to release some of these moral codes that work against your highest vision (oftentimes the codes show up as guilt and shame in your body)
Each time you feel guilt, shame, the urge to spend/not invest so that you don’t have too much, or something else based around the morals of society that say you should stay small, ask yourself ‘is this limitation that I have given myself based on something that actually matters to me or is it based on the codes that I picked up from the world around me“.
And then I need you to ask yourself, am I now punishing myself/limiting myself/not allowing myself expansion based on moral codes? Do I have an unconscious belief that I don’t have a right to the lifestyle that I crave because of moral codes? Do I expect myself to be perfect/earn my wealth?
(This all points towards limiting morality codes. This is also partly why the rich people get richer, and poor people stay poor, because poor people are moralistic.)
Poor people may tell themselves, “I don’t deserve to get rich,” or they feel bad about all the people they have to harm to get rich, so they don’t allow themselves to do it.
For example, Rihanna, a billionaire, owns a company that has to tap into some negative pipelines to create profits. If she personally carried the guilt of the ways her business connects to such things, she would not allow herself to make money. (P.S. A lot of these things, at certain levels, become out of our control. Duality).
The reality, billionaire or not, is that you and I also own a phone. This, whether we intend to or not, means that we are contributing to negative things (unfair labor, etc., used to create this phone) just by purchasing something that we need to use in this modern age.
The point: There are gray areas. Morality is black and white, which does not account for real life, which is a lot more gray. To judge yourself based on this is not self-love; it is groupthink.
Release the guilt; the truth is that by simply being alive, especially in America, you are indirectly harming someone. You’re going to harm people, and the more you realize that you’re going to be harmful, that is impossible to get out of being harmful, that even the clothes you wear, the food you eat …. somebody was harmed in the process, the more you will allow yourself to receive regardless.
This helps break the hold morality has on you.
Stop trying to pretend like you’re this magical being who can do no wrong. You do do wrong – and wealth is still your birthright.
When you allow yourself to do wrong, you allow yourself to make money and do wrong; you allow yourself to be supported while being imperfect.
In most cases, no matter what you do, you will be doing something ‘bad’ according to society, and that doing something bad doesn’t necessarily mean you’re an overall bad person, but you are alive in a world where everything is dual.
This is the type of deconstructing of society that I do with my clients. I help you identify these deeper codes affecting your frequency so that you can align with and manifest your billion-dollar visions.
Click here to learn more about Boundless, my high-level 1:1 experience. ‘


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