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A Prayer Different From All Others

Why do crying, tears, and sobbing appear when affirming or reading prayers?

I often receive such questions:

  • Am I normal if I cry while reading these prayers?
  • Is there some other textual layer in these prayers, some hidden meaning?
  • Is there something in these prayers that encodes or blocks me, causing such uncontrollable crying?
  • Why don’t I normally cry, but here I cannot stop the tears?
  • Is it normal that my daughter cries with every text? Her husband once thought something terrible had happened.

For verification, I suggest calmly reading sentence by sentence from the chosen text where emotions were released, and finding all the words that supposedly have some hidden meaning, or that I—Sławek—deliberately placed there to make someone cry.

Nothing like that exists.
I write these texts mainly for my own needs, and I do not possess knowledge of why anyone experiences such reactions or associations.

Crying is triggered by emotions accumulated in the soul itself, which are brought to the surface by prayer. The body, through tears, shows where the limitation was located. Each human soul has individually accumulated extensive complexes of limitations and guilt, and during reading it turns out that in such a simple way one can free oneself or understand one’s own mistake.

With every tear, tensions leave, and in everyday life things become looser and calmer.
With each repeated prayer, the chakra channel becomes more illuminated; something negative is released from the auric body, from DNA, from the spine—it leaves forever.

Some of my texts include previous incarnations of the soul, and when tears appear here, we have clear evidence that it is not the personality but the soul that has already become aware of a mistake made.

Understanding the consequences or causes of an error does not mean its cancellation, and in many cases souls still want to pursue their own plans.

Alongside tears, uncontrollable sobbing may occur and last a very long time. The next day, repeating the critical sentence should shorten the crying by several minutes. Emotions must extinguish completely—until it is possible to repeat the sentence or phrase without blinking an eye.

Example

Saying goodbye to the soul of a deceased household pet—a dog or a cat—can be long and painful, especially for a small child.

A girl for whom I once wrote a prayer had a sense of lacking parental love. She believed that when the parents loved the dog, there was no love left for her.
The dog died, and the child could not recover.

I asked what exactly was not working between them. With the written prayer, I came to her home. The child already knew how to read, took the sheets of paper, and went to her room. Immediately she began to cry loudly. I know such emotional releases well, so when the mother became anxious, I replied that it would pass shortly.

It did not pass.

After 30 minutes of loud sobbing, we went to her. She was lying on her back next to the table, with her legs pressed to her chest.

After calming her, I asked:
How many pages have you read?
The first sentence.

The first sentence caused 30 minutes of sobbing. It took several weeks of reading for her to fully forgive herself. Dreams about the dog appeared. From them she learned that although the dog Maksio had departed, his soul still lives.

A similar situation occurs in emotional release through regression therapy. After many emotionally charged personal memories, I observed that a quite large group of people in the same room, with similar limitations, spoke about them as if they were talking about shopping at TESCO or a visit to a dance hall. Whatever terrible things they had done, they described them without emotion.

The method’s author could not explain this phenomenon to me—“it’s just how it is.”

Can one talk unemotionally about remembered massacres or seas of spilled blood?
Yes—but this indicates that these persons (souls) do not want to release the pattern completely. Their hearts and minds are not yet open to full liberation.

One must also remain constantly aware that prayer is not muttering meaningless syllables, but asking God for something concrete. When the first divine response to a prayer arrives, on the earthly level it may appear as tears—tears born of understanding.

This post has 7 comments

• s_majda writes:

26/06/2011 at 19:15 (Edit)

From what I remember, I cried during “my soul magnifies the Lord my God.” There is something in that prayer that brings up sorrow—that we have let God down by the way we behaved—the words themselves say so.

Most often I end up crying rather randomly when some event or some text falls into my hands and there is a sudden illumination—I see a completely different message in it.

Recently I dug out an old song “Ain’t No Mountain High Enough” (“there isn’t a high enough mountain, there isn’t a low enough valley, there isn’t a wide enough river that would stop me from being close to you. Do you remember that day when I set you free, I told you that you can always count on me, etc.”). I listened to the lyrics and I felt as if God spoke to me—and then the sobbing started.

From a received letter.

I looked into the lyrics.

After a small correction, that song-like, supposedly divine answer addressed to us looks like this:

There is no mountain high enough
there is no valley low enough
there is no river winding enough,
If you need me—call me.
No matter where you are,
no matter how far,
don’t worry, I am always with you.
Just call me,
I will be there right away,
you don’t have to worry.

Because there is no mountain high enough
there is no valley low enough
there is no river winding enough
that would keep me from reaching you.

Do you remember the day when I set you free?
I told you that you can always count on me.
From that day I made myself a promise
that I will be there when you need me—
somehow, some way…

Because there is no mountain high enough
there is no valley low enough
there is no river winding enough
that would keep me from reaching you.

Oh no…

No wind,
no rain,
no winter chill
can stop me.
No, no,
Because you are the soul to whom I made a promise!

If you are ever in trouble,
I will be there doubly.
Just write to me,
my love is eternal and alive.
We have never been far from each other.

If you ever need a helping hand,
I will be there doubly,
as fast as you can call.

Don’t you know that
there is no mountain high enough
there is no valley low enough
there is no river winding enough
that would keep me from reaching you.

The musical arrangement disappointed me a bit. Nothing beats the Bollywood vibe—there they would turn this into a musical miracle that moves the heart.

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• s_majda writes:

27/06/2011 at 16:09 (Edit)

I cried once—then I realized that I had been given such a precious gift from God: I received a beautiful, pure soul, and I squandered it, I destroyed it… In life I had many situations where I reproached God, blasphemed, shouted, “why are you doing this to me??” And now I realized that it wasn’t God—it was I and my soul who prepared this fate for ourselves…

And before that reflection I felt such a need to bow that for over an hour I was in a bow, and I even felt like I wanted to make a hole in the floor with my head—because the bow seemed not low enough.

It’s not like you “received” a soul. It squandered resources and gifts in previous incarnations and received you—that is, a certain resource of possibilities and limitations to be released. Few want to accept that God can think, yet when we realize that, we can accept His omnipotence, support, care, and that He can bring relief or deliverance—provided the being opens up enough.

Your bow was beautiful; those feelings cannot be swapped out or hidden. A bow before the Creator—I once saw such a one where a terrified soul pressed its wings to its back.

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• s_majda writes:

25/09/2011 at 16:53 (Edit)

Sobbing is another form of crying and it also appears in emotional releases. I advised a female acquaintance to heal the relationship with her former husband. I gave a few simple techniques like a bow, a couple of sentences of prayer. When she started crying, the “stale” emotions quickly turned into sobbing so intense that the heart with the lungs seemed to be tearing outward. Later her soul came to me with the remark: “that was terrible.” I have experienced similar releases, so my reaction is acceptance of the depth of her experience.

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• s_majda writes:

07/10/2011 at 21:24 (Edit)

All around there are always some “enlightened” individuals bustling about, calling for universal love and forgiveness. A person can pull that illusion over themselves like a blanket over the head, so as not to collide directly with harsh reality, and indeed feel relief. But deep inside the soul they cannot understand why they should force themselves to forgive those they hate and love those who are indifferent to them. What benefit does it bring? It’s such an unnatural happiness… forced. As if joy, instead of coming by itself, was to be squeezed out of us like toothpaste from a tube.

—fragment of the book “Transferring Reality.”

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• s_majda writes:

23/10/2011 at 19:41 (Edit)

A bow offered to God truly works miracles. I thank God in a bow for loving me, and I always cry, always… and very much—and at the same time I feel peace and bliss then.

Sławek, sadly I state that either I am becoming schizophrenic or I am possessed. I lean more toward being possessed, because during the prayer “tyrant and despot” I cried a lot, spasms with sentences about demons, devils, Satan… Your prayers made me dig into what state I really am in, without sugarcoating and icing I see what I carry, what I have done; your prayers “stick a stick into an anthill,” they bring everything out into the light wonderfully…

I don’t hear voices or something like that, but vulgar words keep returning to me—vulgar words toward God and people… When I bow to God I have silence and peace… But when I do anything else, I have these vulgar insulting words in my head, inside me almost without interruption… it’s exhausting. The prayer “I exalted God” is wonderful, I listen to it constantly; if I can, in any case daily—it brings relief, soothing.

S.M.: You are not possessed. Those thoughts in your head are stories of former personalities that both God and your soul have remembered. Just as a struck bell must eventually ring itself out, so bad words keep ringing until their energy leaves together with humility and UNDERSTANDING coming through the heart.

I once was amazed at how many people in the past wrote guidelines for satanists—satanic “handbooks” full of specifics. Somehow, the soul of every one of them without exception must understand—and another personality must experience the effects on themselves.

Unless they accept understanding and what is described in the Bible in another context… “From there He will come to judge the living and the dead.” I, Sławek, in my texts and life do not wait for anyone to judge me. I myself ask God for His immediate opinion about the actions of my soul and those of its personalities that died long ago.

Notice that every few days a new prayer appears on a new topic. The effect is a significant brightening of the energy.

Let it be a consolation for you that after some—even spasmodic—sobbing, one day you will no longer feel emotions when repeating a given word in the described context. It will not yet be complete freedom, but a large part of the blocks of the solar plexus will disappear, and a little light will manifest through the heart.

I recommend for emotional releasing a few recordings devoted to the mentioned topic.

Wonderful relief, and I strongly believe that these words will leave forever and that God will free me from them. I learned to talk to God only in a bow; earlier I didn’t do it because I alternated between pride, vanity, hypocrisy, or feeling unworthy to talk to God and ask God for forgiveness or anything. And in a bow the words began to flow out of me by themselves. And what is beautiful—humility and understanding come.

I could not previously express in my own words what I wanted to express and say to God.

Together with sobbing a great burden comes off the soul. Its weight is greater the longer the sobbing was. The acquaintance who complained in the post above that “her sobbing was terrible” released for only a few minutes. And a 30-minute sobbing can still come. For me, “terrible” once was an unexpected release in the middle of the road, experienced behind the wheel. I thought I wouldn’t make it to the shoulder in time.

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• s_majda writes:

08/07/2013 at 16:01 (Edit)

Stasia: yesterday I argued with the Creator
[22:30:48] Stasia: and I cried so much that I couldn’t stop
[22:32:03] Sławomir Majda: And after the argument—whose fault did it turn out to be, and who messed up; the Creator or you and your soul?
[22:32:09] Stasia: I couldn’t forgive Him for my tragic life only because some other incarnation of mine was a well-fed priest
[22:33:04] Stasia: and for that—He tells me to work and not to think about it
[22:33:25] Stasia: and what I will see is a surprise
[22:34:51] Stasia: I still have this disbelief, what if He makes me work for some next incarnation
[22:35:25] Stasia: and what do I get from it that someone else and the same my soul will say “but life is pretty nice”
[22:36:13] Stasia: and I lived half my life in bitterness and the next half I’ll live on my knees

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• s_majda writes:

10/09/2013 at 21:22 (Edit)

Mirka: because if you have your head up and you cry, then it’s “G.. why me…, for what sins,” etc.,
with crying you turn to God;
with head down you handle it yourself, meaning badly—because without God…
because how could you handle it yourself,
it’s an illusion.


Opublikowano: 02/02/2026
Autor: Sławomir Majda
Kateogrie: Prayer techniques


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