Buying and selling a vehicle / means of transport – intentions for prayer
Technical aspects of constructing intentions and prayers
Articles:
“800 intentions for cleansing” – Link
“Building extensive intentions and prayers. Skype conversation about the technique” – Link
“One-sentence structure for intentions” – Link
The word “(–not)” added when working with intentions means that it is worth including both the given term and its opposite, or even independently expressing synonyms along with their opposites.
Example:
— being poor, sick → it is good to also say the opposite:
— being poor, sick, — not being poor, sick
This allows the pattern to be addressed broadly in different aspects, including its opposite. Souls often believe they do not carry opposite patterns (e.g., they deny being idolaters).
Another example:
A woman’s Soul denies ever having been a bad mother. Adding negation (“not being a bad mother”) may help reveal the actual state.
Intentions related to buying/selling a vehicle or means of transport
- Our own and others’ conscious understanding and experiencing that a means of transport includes machines or living beings enabling the movement of people and goods, along with all equivalents across places, times, and dimensions—and all resulting effects.
- Our and others’ understanding that transport can include living means (pack animals, draft animals, porters) and mechanical means (cars, ships, trains, airplanes, bicycles, etc.), including all equivalents—and all effects thereof.
- Our and others’ understanding of transport categories: long-distance (land, water, air) and internal transport (lifting devices, conveyors, etc.), including all equivalents—and all effects thereof.
- Our and others’ understanding that a vehicle is a device for transporting people or goods across various environments (land, water, space), powered in different ways—and all equivalents and effects.
- Our and others’ understanding of vehicle types: land, rail, tracked, amphibious, airborne, underwater, space vehicles, etc., including all equivalents—and all effects thereof.
- Our and others’ understanding of vehicle classifications: motor vehicles, special vehicles, historic vehicles, agricultural vehicles, trailers, buses, motorcycles, etc., including all equivalents—and all effects thereof.
- Our and others’ involvement in buying, selling, using, renting, lending, repairing, damaging, stealing, giving, or taking any vehicles or transport means (including fictional ones like spaceships or time vehicles), and being treated fairly or unfairly in these processes—and all resulting effects.
- Our and others’ involvement in preparing, executing, or terminating contracts (sale, lease, rental), formal or informal, and all actions such as signing, agreements, or symbolic gestures—and all effects thereof.
- Our and others’ understanding that after a transaction, parties may need to report to institutions (tax office, vehicle registration office, insurance), submit documents, and fulfill obligations—and all equivalents and effects.
- Our and others’ understanding of taxes related to vehicle sales (e.g., 2% of market value), penalties for non-payment, and document retention—and all equivalents and effects.
- Our and others’ understanding of tax exemptions (e.g., for disabled persons), VAT rules, and different taxation scenarios—and all equivalents and effects.
- Our and others’ understanding of VAT vs. civil law tax (PCC) in transactions involving dealers, commissions, or private individuals—and all equivalents and effects.
- Our and others’ understanding of income tax obligations depending on ownership duration and legal status—and all equivalents and effects.
- Our and others’ rights and obligations as buyers or sellers, including transfer of documents (registration certificate, vehicle card, contracts, etc.)—and all equivalents and effects.
- Our and others’ rights to withdraw from contracts under certain conditions—and all equivalents and effects.
- Our and others’ obligations regarding registration, deregistration, insurance, and required documentation in appropriate institutions—and all equivalents and effects.
- Our and others’ involvement in causing or experiencing accidents, collisions, or disasters involving vehicles—and all resulting effects.
- Our and others’ behaviors as drivers, passengers, or crew—aggressive or kind—and experiencing or causing such behaviors—and all effects thereof.
- Our and others’ compliance or non-compliance with traffic laws (road, air, water, space, etc.)—and all equivalents and effects.
- Our and others’ involvement in crimes such as robbery or attacks using vehicles, or being victims of such acts—and all effects thereof.
- Our and others’ traveling for various purposes (work, leisure, migration, escape, exploration)—and all resulting effects.
- Our and others’ experiencing patterns, burdens, intentions (cleansed or not), defined by self, others, or the Creator, in relation to transport—and all effects thereof.
Opublikowano: 23/03/2026
Autor: Sławomir Majda
Kateogrie: Money and freedom from poverty


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