Dear Reader,
You’ve already thought about it.
More than once. More than you needed to. You’ve gone over every angle, every possibility, every outcome you can imagine. And still, nothing changes.
You come back to the same thought. The same question. The same loop. It feels like you’re working through it. But you’re not getting anywhere.
That’s the part that’s frustrating.
The Cleopatra Ritual That Made Emperors Abandon Rome
Cleopatra's private temple scrolls. Hidden chamber. Never translated until now.
Detailed a daily ritual she performed. Frequency-based. It took seven minutes.
Made her "irresistible to those who mattered."
Caesar met hundreds of women. Became obsessed with Cleopatra.
Marc Antony could have had anyone in Rome. Risked everything for Cleopatra.
Both described the same sensation. "Pulled toward her." "Could not leave." "Thought about her constantly."
The ritual activates a specific frequency. 432 Hz. The "obsession frequency."
When you vibrate there, people become fixated. They pursue. They return. They cannot stop thinking about you.
One woman tried the ritual. Ex-boyfriend who had been ignoring her for months showed up at her apartment. Said he "had to see her."
One man tried it. Woman who had rejected him twice asked him out. Said she "kept thinking about him all week."
This Is Rumination, Not Resolution
Your brain is repeating the same thought pattern without introducing anything new.
No new information. No new perspective. Just the same loop running again. It feels active, but it’s not productive.
The purpose of the loop isn’t to solve the problem. It’s to delay the moment where a decision has to be made. That’s why it keeps going.
Decisions Come With Consequences
Once you decide, you lose the option to keep considering alternatives. You commit to one direction and accept what comes with it. Your brain tries to avoid that.
So it stays in the loop. Thinking instead of deciding. Revisiting instead of resolving.
It creates the feeling of movement without requiring action. That’s why the thought keeps coming back. Not because it’s unclear, but because it hasn’t been acted on.
Stop Feeding the Loop
When the thought comes back, don’t engage with it the same way.
Instead, interrupt it. Ask yourself: what decision is this thought trying to avoid?
Then bring it down to something specific. You don’t need a perfect answer. You need a direction.
Once you identify the decision, take a small action that reflects it. That’s what breaks the cycle.
Final Thought
Thinking about it won’t move it forward. Deciding will.
“Nothing is so fatiguing as the eternal hanging on of an uncompleted task.”
Mindfully Yours,
Magnetic Mindset


