A 1,700 year old image of Christ was discovered inside an underground tomb in Turkey. The fresco depicts Jesus as the “Good Shepherd,” shown young and beardless before the cross became the dominant symbol of Christianity.
The Noble Lineage of Jesus Christ
https://t.co/npYYq0R2jv
@HHSGov I recently received a letter in the mail informing me the cost of an upcoming appointment. I was shocked to see the large discount I was receiving because I pay for it myself.
If you have nothing else going for you, you blame identities (race, gender, tribe, name, age, social class, etc.) In reality, you can attract anything you like, through personality and energy.
Beautify your Life
Do you want your furniture and interior to mimic higher realms, heaven, the ethereal, celestial, etc.?
Buyers of quality items usually go with earthy materials such as wood (walnut, oak, teak), natural stone, leather, brass, stainless steel, iron, velvet, etc. These are great materials, that give grounding and comfort.
But adding upper-world vibes to your home calls for other materials. If you have a piece of furniture to replace, these are some search terms to use:
Opalescent
Nacre
Pearlescent
Labradorite
Iridsescent
Selenite
Quartz
Aventurescent
Specialty Glass
Prismatic Glass
Specialty Wood
White Onyx
Ivory
Bouclé
Sheepskin
Backlit-Stone
Alabaster
Crystalline
Adularescent
Pink Salt
Water fountains
These are a good start. Don't overdo it, otherwise you go from divine to kitschy. I recommend lightening up the space just enough to be less earth-bound. One or two pieces could be enough to do the trick.
Samples:
Image 1: Backlit Translucent Onyx Table
Image 2: Opalescent Cornucopia
Image 3: Organic Sheepskin Blanket
Image 4: Prismatic Lighting
Have fun beautifying your life!
Recapitulation Meditation
A few days after death, people go through a process called Recapitulation. Their entire life passes before their eyes, for review and integration. This is a default function of the cosmos, a cleaning process before moving on to your realm of destination.
People in severe accidents or danger situations say “I saw my whole life flash before my eyes” – that’s a preview of the review. The process has been reported by people who have had NDEs (Near-Death-Experiences), by those who have traveled out-of-body and it’s also addressed in all the Religions.
Good news: If you already start the recapitulation process during your lifetime, you have less reviewing to do in the afterlife. After leaving the body you then have more energy and awareness and can ascend higher or even avoid being recycled back to earth.
I’ve already shared with you several forms of recap Meditation. The most recent one was my article on “while falling asleep, bless every person you’ve ever met”. This releases the entanglement with them and counts as a pre-cleansing before the big afterlife cleanse.
Recap Meditation is where at the end of each day, you sit down for a few minutes and go backwards through the day to its beginning. Breathing slowly and consciously, view the events of the day in a calm, unbothered or neutral way. Start with what you were doing, feeling or experiencing last, then before that and before that, all the way to the morning.
A short-version of this is to do a general view of evening, afternoon and morning. If you feel a “charge” on any phase of the day, positive or negative, spend a little longer there, to let it dissipate. The Recap typically takes about two to five minutes but I’ve also done an entire day in thirty seconds.
This is the small version of what you go through in the afterlife when you recapitulate everything that’s ever happened to you. It’s all recorded. At an even higher level of consciousness, you recap everything that's ever happened in the Universe.
To mimic the afterlife process more closely, some people add apologies for things they’re sorry about and forgiveness or notes on making amends. I don’t do this because calm observation is enough to support course-corrections, but feel free to add such notes after your recap session.
The way I see it, you have a soul, which is your permanent essence and temporary etheric body where life events are stored as electrical charges. By integrating the memories, the soul can fly upwards without all the emotional baggage and without having to re-do certain lessons or atone for errors.
Recap adds to your energy or vitality in this life and the afterlife.
How often “should” you do it? That’s not for me to say. Some people do it for life, every day! I don't. I practice general recaps because it's easier. I do a yearly recap, going through the main events of the year, negative, neutral and positive. Sometimes I recap what happened during the day in conversation. Sometimes I recap what I dreamed at night. Sometimes I recap big events. The general idea is to reflect on what is happening in your life instead of just blindly moving from one thing to another. Not to analyze, critique or obsessively monitor – just to remain aware and recapture energy that might be stuck in various incidents.
The Fake History of "Native Americans"
Did you know that the History of "Native Americans" or "Indians" is fabricated? A deliberate hoax that most people still believe?
A secret society of Fake Indians
There's an entry on Wikipedia about a Masonic Organization called "The Improved Order of Redmen", a group of half a million white men who dressed and painted themselves like "red indians". The article says:
The Improved Order of Red Men is a fraternal organization established in North America in 1834. It claims direct descent from the colonial era Sons of Liberty. Their rituals and regalia are modeled after those assumed by men of the era to be used by Native Americans. Despite the name, the order was formed solely by, and for, white men (image 1)
If you think these are only an obscure group of role-playing cross-dressers, you'd be wrong. They used their "indian" disguise to force political change.
On December 16, 1773, a group of male colonists who were members of the Sons of Liberty met in Boston to protest the Tea Act. When their protest went unheeded, they disguised themselves as Mohawks, proceeded to Boston harbor, and dumped overboard 342 chests of tea in what became known as the Boston Tea Party.
...during the build up to the West Virginia coal wars, "the Improved Order of Red Men [was] ... the most comfortable lodge for Socialist miners and other radical workers...
...After the Civil war in West Virginia, the Improved Order of Red Men became a fraternal organization of some notoriety for vigilante activity.
White Europeans posing as "natives" was so common that the famous "Indians" of the time were really actors. Let's look at the most famous ones.
Grey Owl
Wikipedia:
Archibald Stansfeld Belaney (September 18, 1888 – April 13, 1938), commonly known as Grey Owl, was a popular Canadian writer, public speaker and conservationist. Born an Englishman, he immigrated to Canada and, in the latter years of his life, passed as half-Indigenous, falsely claiming he was the son of...an Apache woman. With books, articles and public appearances promoting wilderness conservation, he achieved fame in the 1930s. Shortly after his death in 1938, his real identity as the Englishman Archie Belaney was exposed. He has been called one of the first persons to engage in Indigenous identity fraud in Canada.
Grey Owl (image 2) was a famous native American who never was. He featured prominently in a popular book titled Indians of Today which was intended to portray the "progress of the Indian race". He was said to be the son of a well-known Apache scout for a man named William Cody, who would later become a fake Cowboy called Buffalo Bill.
Iron Eyes Cody
Iron Eyes Cody kept his Italian heritage secret and claimed to be a Cherokee. He was hired by Hollywood and TV to appear in hundreds of films and shows as an "authentic" representation of his people. He appeared in ads warning of pollution and climate disasters, for which he became known as "The Crying Indian". (image 3)
Finally, in 1996, investigators revealed that this man was never an "Indian":
...In 1996, however, The Times-Picayune in New Orleans reported that he was a second-generation Italian-American from Louisiana and that his Native American identity was self-created. The report was based on an interview with Cody's half-sister and on various documents, including a baptismal record.
Hundreds of millions saw the movies, very few saw the investigative piece.
Chief Red Fox
Grokipedia:
Chief Red Fox (c. 1884–1976), born William Humes to European-American parents in Baltimore, Maryland, was an American performer and literary figure who impersonated an Oglala Lakota Sioux chief, fabricating a Native American identity that included claims of birth on the Pine Ridge Reservation to a mother named White Swan, purported sister of Crazy Horse.
His 1971 memoirs, recounting personal involvement in the Battle of Little Bighorn and Wounded Knee Massacre, were exposed as largely plagiarized from earlier works and challenged by scholars and Oglala Sioux for factual inaccuracies, constituting a notable literary hoax amid publisher McGraw-Hill's separate scandals.
Despite the deceptions—unverified by reservation records or Crazy Horse biographies—Red Fox toured with Buffalo Bill's Wild West show, appeared in silent films and vaudeville, and leveraged his persona for television interviews and advocacy on Sioux rights, exploiting public fascination with the vanishing "wild" West. He died in Corpus Christi, Texas, at a claimed age of 105, though records indicate he was approximately 92.
Image 3 shows a picture of this fraud.
White Elk
Wikipedia:
...Prior to his arrest, he went to Europe where he acted in a film titled La caravane vers l’Ouest under the pseudonym Chief White Elk. In 1924, he went to Italy and presented himself as a delegation member of the League of Nations. His traditional dress made him famous in Italy, and earned him honour from the fascist rulers of Italy. Later in 1926, he was convicted by a court in Turin for his involvement in fraud. According to apocryphal claims he tried to justify his actions with the argument that "I'm an actor, I just did what people expected me to do"...
Image 4 shows this con man.
This is a much longer story, made-short to cater to modern attention-deficiencies. There is much more to learn on the machinations of Hollywood and secret societies in fabricating the "Indian" narrative.
So what's the real History of the natives? I've already told you on my website and in books. Many other researchers such as @TartariaLives have also told you.
If they had selected real native Americans to represent their people in books and movies, they'd have told you a very different History.
What you consider History was told by imposters and usurpers on big screen celluloid.
Wanna bet that the stories of "famous cowboys" like Buffalo Bill will reveal exactly the same?
@klovsch@alt_w_v_g It's weird how your stuff becomes visible only if you list everyday. When I was on vacation in March I sold way more than usual too.
@MCmastersCrypto@alt_w_v_g Angie's list is the worst! They are always calling me acting like a customer when they just want me to sign up for their crap service.