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After the pole shift there will be many injuries, many traumatized people, overwhelming the emergency services. Most often, people not prepared to give first aid will be stepping in, as getting to a doctor will not be possible. There are going to be a lot of mistakes made, by good hearted people trying their best, a steep learning curve. This will lay a burden of guilt on those folks, something they do not need as a distraction as they are most likely the only people pitching in to help and the need will be great. Any advice?
The sense of guilt comes from many sources, among them a sense of loss or
      grieving, a sense of horror that a casual mistake or accident can have
      such consequences, a sense of foreboding on the fragility of life and
      safety and security, an expectation of retaliation from some source, and
      empathy for the victim so the horror is being re-experienced by the guilt
      stricken one. In professions or trades that only affect things, such as
      dress making or floral arrangements or keeping accounts or making
      furniture, guilt seldom raises its head in the workaday world, but in
      professions dealing with acute human problems, such as emergency services
      or firemen or search and rescue teams or trauma medics, loss of life or
      the maiming of a life are ever present possibilities. Those who enter such
      professions are delving into life’s quagmires, not in most cases for the
      money which can be gotten by easier means in other professions or trades,
      but by the desire to be of service where service is most needed. 
      
      During the coming times, when communications will be down, roadways
      impassable, and trauma suddenly thrust upon communities beyond their
      capacity to handle, many inexperienced hands will attempt to deal with
      broken limbs, septic wounds, ruptured eyeballs, rescue of those being
      washed away or under collapsed buildings, and mental confusion threatening
      to become full blown psychosis. Mistakes will be made. A steep learning
      curve will exist, where the dead child, gone because a sudden drop in body
      temperature was not noticed and corrected in a timely fashion, will allow
      the caretakers to add another item to be checked in future. Live and
      learn, and taking time for guilt only means more dead children neglected
      because their caretakers are now distracted. This is in fact a lesson of
      life, among the many lessons that incarnations teach. We, the Zetas, in
      high tech 4th Density where high IQs and intense sharing of experience and
      skills allows us to avoid most of the traps that await mankind in their
      schoolhouse, have accidents we regret and grieve over. 
      
      We would recommend, during the coming times when such accidents and
      regrets may be a daily affair among those who are attempting to care for
      others in distress, the following routine.