From Tooth Fairy to the Grand Kayfabe
The Childhood Conditioning.
From the very beginning, we are trained for the Kayfabe. The song “Make Believe” traces this programming back to our earliest years. Tooth Fairy leaving dollars under pillows, Santa sliding down chimneys with gifts, and the Easter Bunny hiding eggs — these innocent stories weren’t just harmless fun.
They were the first stage of the Shadow Kayfabe: teaching us to believe in comforting fictions, to accept rewards for good behavior and consequences for bad, all while Mom and Dad smiled and said, “Just believe, child.” These early tales wire the inner child to crave narrative, heroes, villains, and happy endings. They create emotional investment in make-believe worlds. The song brilliantly shows how this never truly ends — we simply trade smaller fantasies for larger ones as we grow.

The Transition to Adult Kayfabe
As the lyrics move from childhood wonders to the “different kind of show,” we see the seamless upgrade. The squared circle of professional wrestling becomes the perfect metaphor. Friday nights watching Hulk Hogan and Ric Flair, storylines of betrayal and redemption, heroes and heels — we learned the language of Kayfabe: the unwritten rule that everyone stays in character, even when the audience suspects it’s scripted.
The song then pulls the curtain further back. We never outgrew it. We just swapped the wrestling ring for the political arena. Ronald Reagan, the Hollywood actor turned President. Trump in the WWE Hall of Fame. Biden’s gaffes and scripted moments. Left-wing heels versus right-wing faces. Central casting fills every role from mayors to presidents. The audience still cheers, boos, and picks sides, even as the song admits we know it’s fake — because “the feeling feels so real.”
The Shadow Controllers
Beneath the surface nostalgia and cultural references lies the deeper truth of the Shadow Kayfabe. Lucifer and his fallen ones understood human psychology from the beginning. By conditioning us through childhood stories, they ensured we would crave the next level of theater as adults. The same inner child waiting for the Tooth Fairy now waits for the next election, the next hero, the next big surprise.
The Nephilim hybrids and their elite partners simply scaled the operation. Politics, media, culture wars — all become the grand stage where we remain emotionally captured, divided, and distracted. From Santa to the ballot box, the mechanism is identical: give them a story worth believing in, and they will defend the illusion.

Time to Wake Up
The song ends with a haunting call: “Maybe it’s time to wake up. Stop believing the Kayfabe lies.” The child still lives inside us, but now asks deeper questions. The whole world truly is a stage — and we’ve been both audience and unwitting performers.”Make Believe” is more than a track.
It’s the gateway song that reveals how the entire Shadow Kayfabe was built on our innate desire for story, wonder, and belonging. Once you see it in childhood, you cannot unsee it in the adult world.Listen again.
The fairy tales never stopped.
They just got bigger — and far more dangerous.
- About Shadow Kayfabe
- Central Casting Net
- For Entertainment Purposes Only
- History Rhymes: The Technate Timeline – Part 1
- Kayfabe Nation
- Parsons Gate
- Political Theater
- Prism EFF
- Seven Mountains: Religious Central Casting
- Shadow Kayfabe Blog
- The Aether aka Ether
- The Great Deception: Seven Mountains, UFOs, Enoch, and the Tares
- Uncomprehendable
- Vegas Portals: Aquifers, Switch, Palantir, and Modern Babel


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