Archive for August, 2007

[continued from previous post]

R: [pause] Yes, I think that’s helpful in thinking about that question. One of Frank’s questioners actually then wanted to know is this going to be a hard winter. [they chuckle]

F: Did they mean climatalogically?

R: I think so.

F: Or emotionally?

R: I think they meant what’s the climate. And other people of course are looking at the caterpillars to see how fuzzy their coats are, to get this information.

F: Well, Let’s leave it at this. Remember how every time you ask us what’s going to happen we say “yes”? [they laugh]

R: Yes.

F: Yes it’s going to be a hard winter; no it’s not going to be a hard winter, yes it’ll be an average winter, no it won’t be an average winter. Depends on where you go! Now. We’ll qualify that. You’ll notice we didn’t say that about the increased level of earth activity. And the reason we didn’t is, because it’s well past the point where it could not be. That is, the level of manifestation and the form and the variety of manifestation, and the time period over which it occurs, is all still subject to flux, but that it has to happen. At some point that energy must be balanced. That’s the best way we can put that. And the simplest, most effective way to balance it is the last one you as “people” will try. And that of course is, change of heart.

R: [pause] Hmm. Yes. Well –

F: The religious would say, repentance. Metanoia.

R: And you suggested that this had been in some way held off, delayed, for a bit but that the delay is not going to continue. (more…)

Rita Warren: Well, good evening to the gentlemen upstairs.

F: Good evening yourselves.

R: Frank seems to be worried that some time he or I or someone else will ask a question and there will be no answer. Would you comment on that?

F: Well that’s the symptom, but the actual worry is more like there will be no answer because we don’t exist. [laughs] Because he’s making this up as we go along. And so, as we told him once, it’s remarkable that on the one hand he thinks we know everything and on the other hand he’s not sure we’re here. So when you ask a question and nothing comes up, what he’s failing to realize is that what’s happening is, he’s clutching. He’s so worried for us not performing that he’s having our performance anxiety for us, so to speak. And the access is closed and we couldn’t go through with a sledge hammer. Which, by the way, is most people’s problem with talking to their equivalent of us. They’re so concerned about it that they clutch and the tube is sealed off, you know?

Just play and pretend, and don’t worry about what comes, and just make it up as you go along, and when you realize after a while that it’s real, by then it will be too late to have performance anxiety. But that’s his real problem, and that’s our response to it. And our response to him is, “if you’re so worried about it, why don’t you just let us fall flat on our face, and then you’ll know?” (more…)

This article, Church and State should help Europe grow, is from The Times (London) of Saturday, July 21, 2007. Interesting thoughts from a Christian clergyman in Britain. Does he give us more credit than we deserve?

church and state (1)

(more…)

(As Governor Arnold would say.)

I have been out of the country for a couple of weeks, and so haven’t been able to prepare any new posts. My thanks to my friend Melynn Allen for seeing that the pieces I had prepared posted when they were supposed to. (You can see Melynn’s posts on her own blog, breathingeasy.wordpress.com.)

As soon as I get through a backlog of things needing doing, I will resume posting the TGU sessios that Rita Warren and I did in the years 2001 and 2002. There is a lot of profound material in there that changed our attitude toward life, and therefore changed our lives.

unique

For the spoon-benders in the crowd, it is particularly poignant, I should think!