In most people’s understanding, a “pandemic” is usually associated with viruses, bacteria, or medical reports. However, in the history of spiritual research in 20th-century America, Edgar Cayce—known as the “Sleeping Prophet”—left a very different kind of warning: a plague occurring on the level of human consciousness.
According to thousands of readings Cayce conducted under deep hypnosis, he not only diagnosed physical illnesses but also identified imbalances in the soul and consciousness. These records, later organized as the “Akashic Records,” repeatedly mention an invisible yet long-lasting phenomenon: a “consciousness-based infection” nourished by fear, anger, and negative emotions.
Unexplained fatigue is not a physical problem?
Cayce’s readings indicate that the first signs of this infection are often subtle. Many people experience long-term, inexplicable fatigue, find sleep unrefreshing, yet medical tests show everything is normal. This exhaustion does not come from physical labor but from a sense of “energy being drained,” as if life force is slowly being siphoned away.
In Cayce’s description, this is not occasional but a long-term state of energy loss. When a person falls into negativity, helplessness, or loses hope for the future, this condition gradually deepens.

The loop of uncontrollable thoughts
The second sign manifests psychologically. Cayce noted that when negative thoughts recur and cannot be stopped—even when recognized as unreasonable—this is not merely a mood slump but an “amplified” internal loop. These thoughts often revolve around past hurts, self-denial, or fear of the future, like a constantly replaying recording. Cayce believed this phenomenon does not arise from nowhere but is amplified by forces at the consciousness level acting on pre-existing emotional wounds.
When inner turbulence becomes external enemies
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The most severe stage is “projection.” Records show that when a person begins projecting their inner anxiety, fear, and pain onto the outside world—believing the world is full of enemies and falling into constant anger or a victim mentality—this not only harms themselves but can affect others. Cayce suggested that in this state, a person unconsciously becomes a carrier of fear and oppositional emotions, drawing more people into the same frequency and creating a collective vicious cycle.

The invisible battlefield: consciousness and frequency
The root of all this comes from Cayce’s understanding of the “structure of reality.” He repeatedly noted that the world is not only material but also a spectrum of consciousness with different frequencies. Human thoughts and emotions are not private; they are signals continuously sent outward.
From this perspective, fear, anger, and hatred are not just psychological states—they attract energy fields of similar frequency. Cayce described these low-frequency, negative-emotion-dependent existences as a collective “spiritual parasitism.”
The only remedy: vibrational sovereignty
Is there a way to resist this? Cayce’s answer is surprisingly simple: not by opposing it, but by transforming it.
He pointed out that this consciousness-level infection cannot be defended with fear or eliminated with opposition. The true remedy is to make oneself an “unsuitable host.” Just as parasites cannot survive in a healthy environment, when a person’s inner frequency stabilizes in gratitude, compassion, and clarity, these low-frequency influences naturally fade. Cayce outlined three practical principles:
- Stop unconsciously draining your own energy and reclaim activities that bring joy and creativity.
- Deliberately cultivate emotions opposite to fear: gratitude, forgiveness, and empathy.
- Remember that you are not a fragile victim but a being capable of choice and awareness.

A warning that has yet to end
From a modern perspective, these teachings may sit somewhere between psychology, spiritual philosophy, and symbolic language. Yet there is no denying that Cayce’s records hold powerful resonance for today’s society of anxiety, division, and information overload.
This is not a declaration of fear, but a reminder of “inner sovereignty.” Perhaps true protection does not lie in what we try to fight but in what kind of person we choose to become.