🩸“THE PRISON YOU BUILD BY BELIEVING.”
🩸 RED BLOOD JOURNAL — TRANSMISSION T#120225-COCOON
“THE PRISON YOU BUILD BY BELIEVING.”
There’s a hidden cost to belief that nobody warns you about.
The moment you believe — truly believe — something, you start weaving a cocoon around your mind.
Not a safe one.
A sealing one.
Thread by thread. Idea by idea. Assumption by assumption.
You think you’ve found clarity, but what you’ve actually built is a cell.
Because belief doesn’t just add—it excludes.
It shuts out the angles you didn’t consider, the truths you didn’t want, the realities that would collapse the world you just constructed.
You stop seeing.
You stop questioning.
You stop observing the world as it is.
You only see the world as your belief allows it to be.
And here’s the sinister irony:
You won’t even notice the walls tightening until the day you swap the belief for a new one…
And suddenly the cocoon cracks open — revealing how blind you had been.
Most people mistake this moment for “growth” or “awakening.”
It’s not.
It’s a jailbreak.
The cocoon you create by believing isn’t protection.
It’s insulation.
It muffles truth.
It prevents evolution.
It locks you into whatever idea you crowned as sacred.
The only real freedom is remaining permeable —
open, aware, questioning, alert.
Because the moment you believe without scrutiny,
you stop thinking.
And the moment you stop thinking,
you become someone else’s puppet.
So, what is your religion now that you know the above?
🩸 End Transmission.
⛓️The Prison of Belief
The source text, presented as a philosophical journal transmission, makes a strident case against the danger of uncritical belief, arguing that it constitutes a self-imposed limitation on the mind.
It posits that the moment an individual truly believes something, they begin weaving a “cocoon” or “cell” that seals them off from alternative perspectives, thereby preventing genuine intellectual growth.
This exclusion of contradictory evidence halts the process of observation, meaning that people only see the world as their restrictive belief allows it to be.
The author insists that moments commonly viewed as “awakening” are actually a “jailbreak,” revealing how blind the individual had become while trapped within the structure of their conviction.
Ultimately, the transmission warns that stopping the process of scrutiny and thinking makes one vulnerable to becoming “someone else’s puppet,” advocating instead for a state of constant, permeable questioning.




There are six (6) questions a person must ask starting at age six (6) until their last breath; questioning every manifestation and they are:
How?
Why?
Who?
What?
When?
Where?
Instead, people are taught not to questioned, but to accept whatever is told, regardless of the manifestation they're seeing...