subject: What is the Difference Between Wanting to Use Psi, and Needing to Use Psi? [print this page] What is the Difference Between Wanting to Use Psi, and Needing to Use Psi?
To understand the role of psi, it is best to view psi as an ability, or feature, in which is bound to an individual human being as a function of his or her personality in the broadest sense of that term.
Much effort has be given in regards to speculating on how psi works, which is not the same as the consideration of what psi is for or why human beings possess such an ability. Such questions must be addressed to move forward in an understanding of psi, and this understanding must be applied to move forward in developing a model of psi.
Psi modeling points to characteristics of psi such as psi being need-serving; where psi functions to serve goals such as survival and deep psychological needs. These types of needs are not the focus of conscious attention, but rather involve the linking of psi to the serving of subconscious needs.
Such a need is pertinent to the reception of psi-based information and the possible assimilation of the information along with information gathered via other preconscious processes.
To differentiate between a desire and a requirement, desire in this case is a sense of longing for an outcome. Such a longing is excited by the thought of the outcome, whereby exciting an individual to take action to obtain said outcome (i.e. I want to perform].
Contrastingly, to require an outcome is to identify a necessary obligation, or to indentify a necessity arising from the circumstances of a situation (i.e. I have to perform).
(Adapted from the book series "A Quantum Approach" by Dr. Theresa M. Kelly.)