# Instantiate the Player (Avatar) variable
$reader = “Your Name Here”
# Run a system scan for negative influences
$infectionReport = Get-SystemStatus -Avatar $reader -ScanType “Blocks, Hexes, Curses, Trojans”
Write-Output “🔍 Scanning $reader‘s system for negative influences…”
if ($infectionReport -equals $nothing) {
Write-Output “No issues detected. System running optimally.”
} else {
Write-Output “⚠️ Warning: Detected $infectionReport. Immediate attention required!”
}
Directory
Introduction
Negativity doesn’t just sit there, patiently waiting for you to deal with it. It follows the Law of Change—meaning if you don’t address it, it will evolve. What starts as a minor inconvenience can grow into a pattern, a belief, or even a self-sabotaging way of life.
Think of it like this:
A Block is like a tracking cookie. Annoying? Yes. Malicious? Possibly. But on its own, it’s not a total system failure. It just sits there, collecting data, learning your habits, waiting for the right moment to install something worse.
A Hex is like adware. It actively messes with your experience. Pop-ups, distractions, subtle manipulations—making sure you stay stuck in patterns that aren’t serving you.
A Curse is full-blown malware. It’s no longer just annoying—you’re now dealing with corrupted files, weird glitches, and major roadblocks keeping you from doing what you need to do.
A Trojan? That’s when you’ve unknowingly downloaded something so deep into your system that you start running the bad programming on autopilot. No external force is needed—you’re now sabotaging yourself from the inside.
So let’s break down how this happens, how to stop it, and how to uninstall any Trojans that have already taken root.
How Blocks, Hexes, and Curses Become Trojans
The Block of Scarcity → The Trojan of Financial Self-Sabotage
Tracking Cookie (Block): You pick up a small fear about money—maybe from childhood, maybe from society. It’s just sitting there, gathering data.
Adware (Hex): You start noticing “proof” everywhere that money is scarce—news headlines, social media, conversations. It confirms your fears.
Malware (Curse): You start making fear-based financial decisions—hoarding, undercharging, avoiding opportunities. You think it’s just reality.
Trojan (Self-Sabotage): You now actively reject wealth-building opportunities because you believe money is something “other people” get to have.
How to Uninstall the Trojan: Next time you think “I can’t afford it,” ask: “Is this true, or is this my programming talking?”
The Block of Doubt → The Trojan of Self-Sabotage
Tracking Cookie (Block): You hesitate before taking a risk.
Adware (Hex): You start second-guessing everything. Your brain collects every failure, every criticism, every tiny mistake as proof you shouldn’t try.
Malware (Curse): You get stuck in analysis paralysis. You can’t move forward because “what if it doesn’t work?”
Trojan (Self-Sabotage): You stop trying altogether. You believe success isn’t “for people like you.”
How to Uninstall the Trojan: When you hear self-doubt whisper, ask: “Whose voice is this?” Chances are, it’s not actually yours.
The Block of Fear → The Trojan of Avoidance
Tracking Cookie (Block): Fear of failure, rejection, or pain creeps in.
Adware (Hex): You start avoiding anything uncertain, convincing yourself you’re “not ready.”
Malware (Curse): Time passes, and your comfort zone shrinks. Every “no” reinforces the belief that you can’t handle change.
Trojan (Avoidance Programming): You’ve now trained yourself to avoid anything remotely challenging, even when you know it’s what you need to do.
How to Uninstall the Trojan: Take action before your brain has a chance to overthink. Fear thrives in hesitation.
The Block of Isolation → The Trojan of Loneliness
Tracking Cookie (Block): A small moment of rejection makes you withdraw a little.
Adware (Hex): You start believing people don’t really care about you.
Malware (Curse): You pull back from relationships, rejecting support before it can reject you.
Trojan (Self-Isolation): Even when people reach out, you push them away because you’ve convinced yourself you’re better off alone.
How to Uninstall the Trojan: Say yes. One conversation, one connection, one “let’s grab coffee” can break the cycle.
The Block of Discord → The Trojan of Chronic Conflict
Tracking Cookie (Block): A small misunderstanding happens.
Adware (Hex): You start noticing conflict everywhere—on social media, in conversations, in your relationships.
Malware (Curse): You get defensive, assume bad intent, and respond to everything with frustration instead of understanding.
Trojan (Drama Loop): Your life becomes a series of unnecessary fights and conflicts because you’re running on a defensive program.
How to Uninstall the Trojan: Before reacting, ask yourself: “Do I want to be right, or do I want to be at peace?”
How to Prevent a Block from Becoming a Trojan
Recognize the early signs. Just because a thought pops into your head doesn’t mean it belongs there.
Stop feeding the adware. Your brain is always collecting data—make sure you’re not reinforcing the wrong patterns.
Uninstall through action. The best way to disrupt bad programming? Do the opposite of what it tells you to do.
Update your system. Your beliefs are software. If they’re outdated, upgrade them.
Final Takeaway: Reboot Before the Trojan Runs Your Life
A Block doesn’t seem like a big deal at first. But if you let it sit too long, if you feed it with the wrong data, and if you let it go unchecked?
It becomes a Trojan that runs your entire life from the background.
The good news? You can rewrite your code.
So, real talk: What Trojans have been running in your system without you realizing it?
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