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04-16-2008, 02:01 PM | #21 |
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04-16-2008, 10:57 PM | #22 |
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04-17-2008, 05:13 AM | #23 |
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hey melissa, it's hard to do with the tiny seeds, because they tend to get lost in your mouth. |
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05-02-2008, 10:42 PM | #24 |
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how interesting! thank you for sharing
robyn, your post mentioning cedar trees being healing - my father suffered with chronic rheumatoid arthritis for 10 years, very very bad - in november a fortnight after he moved into a cedar house his condition appears to have 'disappeared'. so i found your comment particularly interesting. the house has such incredibly positive energy, it really is amazing. |
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06-02-2008, 06:57 PM | #25 |
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butterfields,
i have researched log homes for a good many years and there are a lot of studies that have been done on how being surrounded by wood has an effect on you. people who live in log homes have been saying for years that there was something magical about them that they just could not explain. one of the comments most frequently heard was. "it wasn't long after we moved in that we began to notice that we felt better. it wasn't just that we were relaxed from the move. it was as if there was some special energy that we now had. it is a wonderful feeling and we now have an inner peace that we never had before" |
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06-16-2008, 06:10 PM | #26 |
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been reading the book and came across this section on flying saucers.
just wondering what your guys opinions is on this. anastasia basically describes flying saucers working in the reverse of chemical explosions like our rockets and planes work. the walls of the space craft are cultivated/grown, and this material "attracts" "microorganisms" to the inside of the walls surface between the double wall layer that turn gaseous substances into solids. the walls are poreous and allows air to enter through the surface. this apparently creates a vacuum at the front of the vehicle that pulls it along. the air congeals before contact with the saucer and as it passes through the microorganisms they are transformed into tiny spheres, they enlarge to half a centimetre in diameter. they lose their firmness and slide down between the walls into the lower part of the saucer, where they decompose into a gaseous substance. you can apparently eat them if you can get to them before they decompose. she also mentions that she the people who operate these saucers landed near here and she helped them repair their vehicle. this is either true or false. what do you think? |
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06-17-2008, 02:09 PM | #27 |
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06-25-2008, 05:08 PM | #28 |
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09-08-2008, 11:07 PM | #29 |
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i really enjoyed this thread from a couple of months ago when many in the dc discussions were planting their summer gardens and discussing anastasia of the ringing cedars in russia. lately, since it is almost harvest time there, i've been thinking of you and wondering how your gardens are doing.
hey melissa, the summer palace make a little garden in your pocket. plant your cuffs with radishes and rocket. let a passion fruit crawl up your thigh. grow some oregano in your fly. make a steamy compost of your fears. trickle irrigate your life with tears. let your troubled mind become a trellis. turn your heart into a summer palace. love and light...and happy gardening, nancy |
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09-09-2008, 06:02 AM | #30 |
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09-17-2008, 02:05 AM | #31 |
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through russia, cayce said "comes the hope of the world. not in respect to what is sometimes termed communism or bolshevism -- no! but freedom -- freedom! that each man will live for his fellow man. the principle has been born there. it will take years for it to be crystallized; yet out of russia comes again the hope of the world."
and who do we find in russia...but anastasia... "she lives in the wilderness—for the most part without warm clothes, food cultivation or man-made shelter—and survives on fruit, nuts, berries and mushrooms, brought to her by "wild" animals with which she lives in peaceful harmony. she displays the most developed psychic and mental powers including remote viewing and healing, mind reading and seemingly perfect memory. when challenged to solve some of society's most complex problems, after only a few minutes lying on her back on the ground, with eyes closed and just her fingertips twitching, she has provided answers in such incredible detail, that witnesses have been left flabbergasted." http://www.ringingcedars.com/ also, check this out http://www.consciousmedianetwork.com...sharashkin.htm |
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09-20-2008, 03:54 AM | #32 |
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yes... i too love the ringing cedar tree series.
in book 4 on page 207 of the series in the editor's afterword, they quote the edgar cayce reading that many have alredy quoted here. from reading 3976-10 feb 1932, "on russia's religious development will come the hope of the world." i ran accross this quote in the book a few days after i was listening to science of peace and the research about the pyramids so it kinda all tries real hard to get you to pay attention and take notice. (there are pyramids on the cover of book 8 or 9, though in what exact context i do not know yet as i have not read those book yet) anastasia is a gift to the world and i thank god for her presence. her purity of heart and clarity of wisdom are true inspirations to me. peace and love darlyne |
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09-20-2008, 05:23 AM | #33 |
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astraya and stargirl, thanks for the point and reference. the video is ear opening. i have a old cayce book on different facts, and it talks about the value of food, food grown under ground vs above ground and the importance of soil for both. what has the most minerals in them..... from the soil content. just feels so true as you travel and explore this....
through russia, cayce said "comes the hope of the world. not in respect to what is sometimes termed communism or bolshevism -- no! but freedom -- freedom! that each man will live for his fellow man. the principle has been born there. it will take years for it to be crystallized; yet out of russia comes again the hope of the world." |
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10-08-2008, 02:20 PM | #34 |
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my garden is doing wonderfully thank you. it is my daily routine when i 'm done work to commune with my garden and have a little chat. i have so many tomatoes now i think i will be busy making salsa and sauce etc all this week.
i just love going out to the garden and picking something fresh to eat that meal. now i need to figure out how to save seeds because as i read here in a gardening newsletter. when you save seeds, you realize with each harvest how magnanimous nature is in gifting us with the opportunity of multiplying her goodness. a single amaranth plant can yield over a quarter of a million seeds. one tomato plant could easily become several million plants in two years. it's amazing when you think of it. love, megan |
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10-08-2008, 07:00 PM | #35 |
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wow, that is awesome. one thing i love to make with tomatoes, is spagetti sauce. it is soooo simple. you just put the tomatoe through a cheese grater, (throw the leftover skin in the compost) and lightly heat it with oilve oil buteer, garlic, and some purple onioins. you only need to cook it on medium for about 15 minutes, and it is sooooooo yummy and healthy tasting for a pasta sauce!
i have started eating some of my peas etc that i planted. just like in book 8, i ended up throwing up, because my "healing" peas where cleaning out bad stuff and curing me. it reallly is neat! |
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10-08-2008, 11:44 PM | #36 |
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hey melissa,
i haven't read book 8 yet, but it's funny you should say that. when i ate my peas a la anastasia i found myself becoming nauseous a couple of times. not overly, and i didn't throw up but that was my thought that it was doing some kind of cleansing. that hasn't happened at all with the tomatoes or beans though, just the peas. megan |
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10-09-2008, 03:15 AM | #37 |
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hi meganarline,
"anyone got any tomato recipes" give this a try, it is wonderful cut your tomatos in large pieces, kinda like cut them in half and then half that (large pieces, because they shrink in the cooking process in olive oil, sauteed on low the tomatos, a onion cut up (just the spirals r fine), and diced fresh garlic. (you could add other stuff, but this alone is great) optional; when done, add your favorite cheese as a topper and serve (may want to microwave on top).... it is wonderful and rich, you will prob. use 2-3 tomatos, depending on how many you are feeding) |
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11-06-2008, 10:43 AM | #38 |
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i had made a post not long ago about me reading a particular book written by carla reuckart, of which i explained the negative feelings that i had received from initially reading it.
i just purchased this book about anastasia out of curiosity, and it has just arrived today. when i picked this book up, i got blast of positive energy, almost as if i could feel it coming right out of the book before i even began to read it! i believe now, these feelings, are coming from the self/higher-self to guide my path in life. i really can't wait to get home and start reading! really exciting stuff! |
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11-06-2008, 07:18 PM | #39 |
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that is neat, because i am the same way, and i wouldn't even read the thread about the negative book, because just looking at the title wasn't feeling good, and the threads that feel good to me i read, lol. i definatly feel more than a positive vibe from this site, and from the books. it is a positive energy so strong it is life transforming.
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12-06-2008, 12:43 PM | #40 |
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wanted to share the availability of bobby matherne's reviews of the "ringing cedars" series. see www.doyletics.com/arj/anasta01.htm
this is a short excerpt: "how she lives makes thoreau's tiny room at walden pond seem like a yuppie pad in comparison. she drinks the pure, living water from a small taiga lake, and squirrels bring her nuts to eat in their jaws when she is hungry. vladimir stared at her as if she were an animal and she set him straight immediately, using the traditional word in russian for a human being of any gender which is translated here as man. [page 31] "and do you consider your living conditions to be more civilized? yes, of course, you do. but i am not a beast, vladimir. i am man!" vladimir slept in the forest that night in a small dugout cave on feathery cedar and grass which smelled wonderful. when she woke him in the morning, he felt a furry pelt she must have given him to keep warm during the chilly night. [page 38] then she clapped her hands, and the 'pelt' . . . i was horror-struck at the realization that this was no pelt. out of the cave a huge bear began to gingerly crawl. receiving a pat of approval from anastasia, the bear licked her hand and began lumbering off into the forest." |
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