Why can't you pick up shiny objects from the ground?

Most people, upon seeing a coin, a banknote, an expensive piece of jewelry, or even a safety pin on the ground, decide to take it for themselves. This act is surprisingly childish not only from the perspective of adult morality and natural disgust, but also because it could harm the finder.

Other people's objects possess a special energy that can damage the body over time. Objects on the street can be not only lost but also discarded.

This happens because people are trying to remove a curse from these items, or the item itself brings misfortune into the home. Gold jewelry is most often found in such items, as it represents greed and avarice—qualities that only amplify negative energy.

Objects such as pins and needles are often charged with negative, evil energy. A pin brought into the home can bring with it a whole host of misfortunes and difficult-to-treat illnesses. If you find a cross on the street, don't pick it up, even if it's made of precious metal and has an attractive appearance (handcrafted, inlaid). Typically, such religious symbols are discarded by those who have sinned greatly, committed evil, and now try to leave all of that, along with the cross, in the past.

In general, precious metals have a remarkable ability to store and transmit various energies. When we put on a new piece of jewelry, the stones and metals within it begin to quickly absorb the energy of our first owner. They become attached to us, adapting to our personality and lifestyle.

Even on another person, after lying in oblivion for many decades, they will store all the information about us.

Moreover, dishonest people use gold and silver jewelry to cast a curse, the evil eye, or a love spell!

So, if you suddenly find a wedding ring lying on the ground, even if it looks new, don't be too quick to celebrate. Most likely, such a find simply means one thing: someone got rid of the ring to protect themselves from family problems, to change their fate, or, worse, it slipped off the finger of a woman who was being abused at the time. This happens, too.

It's the ring we wear on our finger that has the most powerful energetic connection with its owner. And that person's emotions (pain, fear, hatred, anger, etc.) can evoke a whole range of unpleasant sensations in the finder.

Lost things are also unsafe (although to a lesser extent), since some people, upon discovering something missing (a bracelet has come undone and fallen into the grass, money has been lost, etc.), immediately utter a phrase wishing that these items will never again bring good luck to anyone, and that only evil will come from them to the greedy appropriator.

Money at a crossroads is a particularly dangerous find! Since ancient times, witches and sorcerers have practiced this ritual: they would take a handful of small change and “cast a spell” on it, transferring some negative information onto it—illness, infidelity, stillbirth. Then they would dispose of these coins by throwing them at a crossroads (considered a very powerful energetic place, so it is said that one should never cross it diagonally).

Small coins were chosen as a symbol of what was easiest to live without, meaning that a problem or illness would leave a person just as easily. Sometimes larger bills were used: it was believed that someone would inevitably pick up such a bill, tempted by it, and all the misfortunes and misfortunes spelled on it would be transferred to that unfortunate person.

Moreover, according to the same spiritual laws, money lost on the street, even if no one has “said anything” about it, is already charged with negative energy, and the larger the bill, the stronger this energy. After all, it was lost by someone who, of course, needed it, and upon discovering the loss, they will likely be upset, angry, or depressed—and all of this will “hang” on the money you found. Therefore, such a find is of little use. Many people have observed that if you pick up money on the street, you will inevitably lose your own money later, often the same amount (a pickpocket will steal it, a clever shop assistant will cheat you, or an unemployed neighbor will beg you for a loan).

Avoid such brilliant “finds,” don't step on them, and don't look back. Love and treasure your own things, imbue them with the creative energy of your soul, and never lose them!

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