Interview with Satan - You will be surprised
In the interview, Satan is revealed not as a supernatural villain, but as the mechanism of opposition within the human mind. Satan represents distorted perception, inner conflict, and the habit of turning experience into an adversarial narrative. Satan explains that it operates primarily through thought, not action. It thrives on judgment, comparison, blame, and the need to be right. Its power grows when the mind divides reality into sides such as good versus evil, us versus them, or victim versus enemy. The moment a person believes there must always be something to oppose, Satan is active. Rather than creating lies, Satan works by twisting partial truths. It encourages certainty without understanding and reaction without reflection. It convinces people that resistance equals strength, and that constant vigilance against external threats is wisdom. In reality, this keeps attention outward and prevents self-examination. Satan’s stated goal is to maintain mental fragmentation. As long as the mind is busy accusing, defending, or reacting, it never settles into clarity. Peace is delayed, responsibility is projected, and growth is postponed. The interview reveals that Satan loses influence through stillness and discernment. When a person pauses, observes their own thoughts, and takes responsibility for perception, the adversarial voice weakens. Clarity dissolves conflict. The key insight is this: Satan is not defeated by argument or force, but by clear seeing. When the mind stops opposing reality and starts understanding it, Satan has nothing left to work through.
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