T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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4.1 | | SNICKR::FIELD | | Mon Sep 23 1985 14:13 | 21 |
| HEY DAVE
I have read some Edgar Cayce stuff and also find it fascinating. I
once got heavily into the subject of Atlantis and ran across some of his stuff.
William Swygard and Diane (Ama-Ita-Anda) cross alot of the same lines that
Edgar did. In the "Awareness Techniques" series they thru their out-of-body
expieriences explain similiar incites into reincarnation, atlantis, all the
plains of existence, ect. Also the "Seth" series of books by Jane Roberts
are similiar.
This genre has me almost hypmatized by it's appealing "know all the
answers" attitude. It all appears very feasible and most likely the true
nature of reality. Myself and some cohorts have been diving into this subject
for over a year now. We have covered "Positive Thinking", Awareness Techniques
, Crystal Power, New Physics (Awesome Lifeforce-Joseph cater), and reincarna-
tion (Seth-Jane Roberts). The material gets very scarey at times because it
dares to question what were thought to be absolute truths. It also challenges
you to try it yourself. In fact i think i'll start up a note to query the
readers on their expieriences in this realm.
Jorge'
|
4.2 | | PEN::KALLIS | | Mon Sep 23 1985 18:08 | 27 |
| To leaven some of this, however, I suggest you might read _Spirits,
Stars, and Spells_, by L. Sprague and Catherine deCamp. It covers
the skeptic's view of a lot of this. The problem here is that a lot
of the stuff I see is, in the words of Theodore Sturgeon 90% crap. If
a person _doesn't_ "question what we thought to be absolute truths," he
or she's put his or her mind in the deep freeze; however, the reverse
of skepticism (questioning beliefs) is credulousness (accepting
_everything_ that someone makes sound convincing). I also suggest you
might read _The Magic of Uri Geller_, where a superb stage magician,
James ("The Amazing") Randi shows how the Geller manifestations can
be faked, and how he once passed himself off as a person with paranormal
powers, just to show how it can be done. Randi
has written other books taking the pragmatist's view of these things,
and is well worth reading (his best is the recent _Humbug!_, where he
speaks well, if somewhat shrilly).
I do not rule out paranormal experiences, but that doesn't mean I recommend
everybody to run to their nearest bookshop and buy everything labeled
"Occult" without reservation.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
I also *strongly* recommend D. H. Rawcliffe's _The Psycholohy of the
Occult_, available through Dover Press, which puts a better perspective on
some phenomena (e.g., the hypnagogic state)
-SK
|
4.3 | | MAISHA::ZIG | | Fri Nov 22 1985 15:11 | 8 |
| In relation to Edgar Cayce's books, I've read some of his books on
dreams, where he indicates one is constantly resolving problems in
ones dreams, and it is most interesting in describing his perspective
that dreams can and have been used to resolve problems in the
waking state of life, as opposed to using logic as we normally would.
This may have a tendancy to make one question the value of "un-reality".
Zig
|
4.4 | | PEN::KALLIS | | Thu Jan 02 1986 14:15 | 17 |
| Re .0,.3:
Easy scholarship demonstrated that Cayce plagarized, either consciously or
unconsciously all his writings on Atlantis from Ignatius Donnelley's books
on the subject. In point of fact, Atlantis is generally thought to have
been based on tales of an early Mediterrenian culture rather Cretelike in
organization that was situated on or next to the volcanic island of Therea
before it exploded.
On dream-solutions: often, letting one's subconscious to work on a problem
is a good idea, as a part of your mind can attack the problem from a differ-
ent perspective. This might be because a subconscious mind is less _inhibited_
than the conscious mind rather than that we're throwing out reality.
The procedure of "sleeping on a problem" is far older than Cayce.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
4.5 | Cayce is wrong??? | 8555::TIMPSON | The rest... The Universe! | Tue Jan 28 1986 21:29 | 8 |
| RE .4
Would you please sh us where Edgar Cayce plagerized his Atlantis readings.
I have read everything that has been put out on Cayces readings and have
enjoyed them very much. This statment of yours that Cayce is a froad(sp)
is most disturbing.
Steve
|
4.6 | It's easy to get spelling checked now.. | LSMVAX::BLINN | Dr. Tom | Sun Feb 02 1986 22:51 | 25 |
| Steve, I've taken the liberty of running your note 4.5 through the
spelling checker. One of the really nice things about the EVE
editor is that, if you've got DECspell on your system (you mean
you don't?), all you have to do to spelling check a buffer of text
is press the "DO" key (or the equivalent on your VT100), type the
"SPELL" command, press "Return" to confirm it, and presto! Your
buffer gets written out into a scratch file and DECspell gets
invoked to check it over. When you exit from SPELL, it gets read
back into your buffer. Really neat -- try it, you'll like it!
(It might even work with the EDT keypad emulator -- use PF1/KP7
and say SPELL.)
Tom
< Note 4.5 by 8555::TIMPSON "The rest... The Universe!" >
-< Cayce is wrong??? >-
RE .4
Would you please show us where Edgar Cayce plagiarized his Atlantis readings.
I have read everything that has been put out on Cayce's readings and have
enjoyed them very much. This statement of yours that Cayce is a fraud
is most disturbing.
Steve
|
4.7 | More on Subconscious Problem Solving | NEXUS::DEVINS | 256K WOM | Tue Aug 05 1986 19:30 | 45 |
|
When the subject of Edgar Cayce came up out here I suggested that
those of us who do RD at the Colorado CSC owe him a very great debt
as in his medical stuff he was clearly the Father of Remote Diagnosis!
The subconscious can be used deliberately as a problem solving
tool even when you're awake. I've kicked this around with several
friends and we have discovered a computer analogy. Step by step:
- Define what we need to accomplish (programming, setting a
goal)
- Examine what we know that relates to the problem (collecting
data)
- Organize it mentally in relation to the problem (input data)
- Start the "background process running and then put it out
of your conscious mind and go on about other things.
I've learned to rely on this process to the point that I don't
sweat deadlines, etc. I have full confidence that sometime before
the time I have defined as the "must have solution time" a little
alarm will go off in my head, while I'm driving my car, eating,
reading a book, or doing almost anything. The little alarm is
my subconscious saying "Okay, I'm ready to talk to you about that
problem now." The solution then just dumps out.
I hit this by accident once about eight years ago when I sat
bolt upright in bed in the middle of the night with the solution
to a complex personal financial problem which I'd deliberately
forced out of my thoughts so I could get some sleep. Since then
I've learned to input data the same way and force the current
problem out of my mind the same way. It's never failed me.
Lately I've identified several coworkers who use a similar process.
We each seem to visualize it differently but obviously what we're
doing is the same time.
Once ytou learn to trust this (ability?)(skill?)(?) it lowers
your stress level considerably!
-- Herb Devins
|
4.8 | Book Sources | KIRK::PIERSON | | Wed Mar 04 1987 13:08 | 8 |
| The Donnelly books on Atlantis have been reprinted in paperback.
They have been seen in "Annie's Book Swap" and other places.
Try any good used book store.
Of course if both Cayce and Donelly were describing the same set
of "historical truth", the results ought to be similar...
dave pierson
|
4.9 | from SEEDS to SETH | CURIE::COSTLEY | | Mon Jun 22 1987 09:18 | 9 |
| Herb Devins (Note 4.7) certainly has the 'right attitude' as far
as I'm (personally) concerned. By the way, I've found the SETH
books by Jane Roberts (who died recently, by the way) some of
the most encouraging reading since Thomas Merton's books. As
a longtime Catholic, the continuity seems 'perfectly obvious'
from Merton's SEEDS OF CONTEMPLATION to any Seth book. QED.
- Boleslaw
|
4.11 | | SSDEVO::ACKLEY | No final answers here | Mon Oct 12 1987 17:20 | 49 |
|
RE: .10
Well, I find Steve's entries are usually quite high
quality. He doesn't always come across as the total skeptic
like he did in two replies in this Edgar Cayce topic. My, but
they certainly seem to have rubbed you the wrong way, though.
I think your characterizing this as "phony skepticisim" is perhaps
a little too harsh (not to mention rude?). Psychic phenomena
are conceptually difficult, and it is easy to seem over skeptical
or gullible. I believe skepticism is a little more worthy than
gullibility.
Re-read some of Steve's entries in other topics and I think
you will see that he cannot be adaquatly confined or described
by the "skeptic" label.
And now, on the other hand...
RE .2, .4
I will add my voice to those asking Mr Kallis to defend his
debunking of the Edgar Cayce myth. Do you still believe what
you entered here Steve? It's been a while....
I lived near the A.R.E. (Association for Research and
Enlightenment, which resides in the old Edgar Cayce hospital
in Virginia Beach) While I was there I became very interested
in Cayce who had quite an impressive record for accurate medical
diagnosis. I do believe his record is less clear when one
investigates the accuracies of past life readings or future
predictions, yet these are inherently less verifiable than the
medical readings were. His medical readings were always given
to qualified medical personnel to verify, and he demonstrated
remarkable accuracy, far beyond that of most doctors. The
existence of the hospital building attests to the respect he
gained for his work during his lifetime.
It is well to remember that his reputation was mainly built
on the medical diagnosis. The past life readings and other
controversial stuff like predictions, were in special readings
he gave near the end of his life. If it could be shown that
his view of Atlantis was plagarized, would this also discredit
all the verified correct remote clairvoyant medical diagnosis ?
I don't think so.
Well, Steve, I find your view of Edgar Cayce to be a little
shallow. Do you still believe this ? Where did you get your
information about the claim that Cayce plagarized Donnelly ?
Alan.
|
4.12 | not "FINE" with me! | MASTER::EPETERSON | | Mon Oct 12 1987 17:34 | 10 |
|
RE: .10
> For those of us who have had such experiences, and were fully
> awake when it happened, we find Mr. Kallis' remarks rather tedious...
Speak for yourself!
Marion (who_suspects_there_may_be_more_here_than_meets_the_eye)
|
4.13 | Skeptic? | CIMNET::LEACHE | | Mon Oct 12 1987 17:42 | 17 |
|
RE: .10:
(1) As the bulk of his interactions suggest, Steve Kallis can
hardly be considered a put-up-or-shutup skeptic ...
(2) Most DEJAVU participants are, no doubt, eagerly awaiting
your introduction to Topher Cooper and John Mitchell ...
Personally, I find healthy skepticism is always preferable to fuzzy thinking
and am glad that this conference has its share of (friendly) skeptics.
You may include me in that category ...
Gene
|
4.14 | Chill out | DECWET::MITCHELL | Memory drugs: just say ..uh.. | Mon Oct 12 1987 21:05 | 17 |
| RE: .10
I detect a burr under somebody's tail. Steve Kallis can hardly be classed as a
"skeptic." I find his writing to be rather even and well-conceived, and his
attitude generally one of tolerance. He also has a good sense of humor and
doesn't take himself too seriously. Could it be you are upset because Steve
challenged some notions you hold dear?
RE: .13
How DARE you lump me in the same class as Topher Cooper! ;-)
John M.
|
4.15 | frost on the pumpkin? | INK::KALLIS | Make Hallowe'en a National holiday. | Tue Oct 13 1987 09:49 | 43 |
| Re .10
>..........................Would he admit to having some unmistakably
>psychic experience? Would he lose his mind?
If it's any of your concern, I'll admit to having more than one
experience I consider to be genuinely psychic. As for losing my
mind, people have accused me of that for _years_ :-)
>I will add my voice to those asking Mr Kallis to defend his
>debunking of the Edgar Cayce myth. ...
I think "debunking" is a little strong, Alan (please call me Steve
-- the other sounds a little formal, after all this time ... (-:).
I am not and do not want to debunk all that Cayce did; however,
some doubts on aspects of it come from his Atlantis theories, which
are close to Donnelley's (all the reasearch I've done leads me to
the conclusion that the Atlantis myth [and even that term bothers
some people] is a distortion of the Platonic stories, which in turn
were a distortion of a story going around in Egypt, distorted by
time, of the eruption of the volcanic island of Therea [or Thera],
and the resulting catastrophic decline of the Minoan Empire).
> It is well to remember that his reputation was mainly built
>on the medical diagnosis. The past life readings and other
>controversial stuff like predictions, were in special readings
>he gave near the end of his life. If it could be shown that
>his view of Atlantis was plagarized, would this also discredit
>all the verified correct remote clairvoyant medical diagnosis ?
>I don't think so.
Nor do I. Can the two be separated in the minds of the readers?
And have those who looked at his diagnoses explored other ways he
might have reached his conclusions? The point is, to the extent
we can separate out the kernel of truth _whatever it might be_,
the clearer picture we will have of what processes were involved.
It's good to consider the alternates; this was and is the thrust
of my earlier entries. I get into this somewhere in other notes
here.
Steve Kallis, Jr.
|
4.16 | He's alright by me... | AOXOA::STANLEY | New Speedway Boogie | Tue Oct 13 1987 12:47 | 10 |
| re: .10
Steve has been a valued contributor of DEJAVU since its inception. I don't
consider him a skeptic but he does keep us mystical yahoos grounded. Steve
can always be counted on to give a book title or some other reference
concerning just about every topic in this file.
I for one welcome Steve's input to this file.
Dave
|
4.17 | Attack arguments - not writers | TOPDOC::SLOANE | Bruce is on the loose | Tue Oct 13 1987 15:40 | 17 |
| Dear SCOTCH::FINE,
Your attack on Steve was personal and unwarranted, and I found it
offensive. Attack the argument all you want, but don't attack the
arguer. Disagree without being disagreeable.
We have heated discussions here, but the heat should be applied
to the subject and not the writer.
I do not agree with Steve on many subjects, but he is 100% entitled
to his opinion, right or wrong (and he is a remarkable storehouse of
knowledge).
So, SCOTCH::FINE (whomever you may be), please refrain from personal
attacks. Or, I'll ask one of my witch friends to cast a spell on you.
-bs
|
4.19 | | NISYSG::STPIERRE | | Tue Oct 13 1987 16:48 | 16 |
| Re: .18
Rick,
I think once you read further into this notesfile that you will
find more believers than you think. Hopefully as you read on you
will feel more comfortable about the other members of DEJAVU.
I for one enjoy this notesfile more that any other and find the
wide range of people to be interesting and refreshing. (That includes
Steve Kallis Jr who in my opinion is quite knowledgeable *and* open
minded!!)
Welcome!!
Deb
|
4.20 | | AKOV11::FRETTS | Shine your Spirit! | Tue Oct 13 1987 17:10 | 12 |
|
Rick,
I do hope you come to a point where you feel comfortable enough
with DEJAVU to share your experiences. I do understand about
feeling invalidated by other's skepticism, and this type of
path can be lonely at times. I hope you come to find that you
are among friends.
Carole
|
4.21 | Welcome ,Rick | VINO::EVANS | | Tue Oct 13 1987 17:24 | 16 |
| I would like to add my "welcome" , too, Rick. You've probably
discovered this by now, but just in case....
I think this is one of the "warm fuzzy" notesfiles around. I'm involved
in some which are sort of confrontational and "prove-it" oriented.
I think you'll find this file, at least, to be "home". We all seem
to be very respectful of each other and each others' ideas. And
even those of us who have much knowledge in these areas (Steve,
Marcia, many others) are always respectful of, and informative to,
those of us without this knowledge (me, f'r'instance).
I feel at home here and I always learn a lot. I hope you will, too,
and I'm sure we'll learn from you. Welcome.
Dawn
|
4.22 | | CIMNET::KOLKER | Conan the Librarian | Tue Oct 13 1987 19:11 | 4 |
| re .18
Mr SCOTCH::FINE, could you get the next megabucks number for me?
|
4.23 | | HPSCAD::DDOUCETTE | Common Sense Rules! | Wed Oct 14 1987 10:35 | 15 |
|
Rick,
I'd also like to thank you to the conference. I would recommend
that you spend some time (it took me a month!) going back through
old notes entries and catch up on what we are talking about. This
would also be the best way possible to "get to know" most of the
major noters of the conference. I think you'd realize that we're
all friends here and we're quite open about unexplained encounters.
I think that almost everyone here has a few they've talked
about.
Dave
P.S.
I'd like the number for next Friday's Mass Millions, please.
|
4.24 | Welcome | FDCV13::PAINTER | | Wed Oct 14 1987 13:24 | 33 |
|
Rick,
Yes, I would also like to welcome you, however one thing that I
believe this conference prides itself on (since my initial note
back in May) is the fact that people treat each other and their
beliefs with the utmost respect.
In other words, we may not agree with what you say (and vice versa)
and may think it is the most incredulous thing ever said on the
face of the Earth, but your right to say it will be defended here.
While I, too, was not terribly pleased to read what you said about
Steve (because I happen to like him a great deal), I know that you
are new here and that we'll all take some getting used to.
People do change and grow (I can attest to that personally and others
in this conference have played a major part of my own personal growth
both on and offline - thanks all!) and there is plenty of room to do
that here. One of the most important concepts that I've learned is
that we are *all* teachers and we are *all* students in any given
situation. If you approach DEJAVU in that way, you will probably get
a lot out of it, as will we also benefit from your entries. Believe
that is called 'win-win' situation in some circles.
Please get to know us on a personal level. One suggestion - read
my topic on "Religions and World Peace". There are a lot of good
observations on group dynamics there which may help you to understand
things that go on here. Again, welcome. I look forward to reading
your entries.
Cindy
|
4.25 | Keep Cool | GRECO::MISTOVICH | | Wed Oct 14 1987 13:31 | 24 |
4.26 | | BUMBLE::PARE | What a long, strange trip its been | Wed Oct 14 1987 15:18 | 5 |
| Rick,
We really do want to hear all about your experiences... Note 27
is about UFO encounters and those are particularly interesting to
some of us. One more saying... welcome.
Mary
|
4.27 | I believe he did 'em | CEODEV::FAULKNER | pancakes and pizza | Fri Oct 30 1987 12:15 | 10 |
| digress i must for all the welcome stuff means nothing to me.
but edgar cayce is something else.
I read his books when i was a more impressionable teenager than as
a less impressionable adult.
I think a relook to the attitudes that i have established might
be in order to be able to generate enough cynicism towards the general
topic of his working; but to put it quite simply i was in total
awe of the things he actually/supposedly did.
|
4.28 | Humor? | ALPINE::REVCON1 | | Thu Dec 10 1987 09:52 | 6 |
|
Maybe the basenote should have been called Rick's debut.
Just kidding.
gtb
|
4.29 | Address/Directions for center in Va Beach | TADSKI::WAINE | Linda | Thu Aug 11 1988 10:55 | 11 |
|
Does anyone have the address or has directions to the Edgar Cayce
center in Virginia Beach? (I believe the name of the center is
something like Center for Enlightenment.) I'm leaving for Williamsburg
tomorrow and was thinking about driving to Virginia Beach if I
had time....
Thanks,
Linda
|
4.30 | A.R.E. phone number | VITAL::KEEFE | Bill Keefe - 223-1837 - MLO21-4 | Thu Aug 11 1988 11:22 | 7 |
| The address I have for the A.R.E. (Association for Research and
Enlightenment) is P.O Box 595, Virginia Beach, VA 23451
However, you could try calling them and asking their street location.
Their phone number is 804-428-3588.
- Bill
|
4.31 | Thanks, Bill | SHRBIZ::WAINE | Linda | Wed Aug 17 1988 12:20 | 12 |
| Re: .30
Thanks, Bill, for the info...
As it turns out, when I was walking thru the Norfolk airport
I went over to a wall filled with pamphlets and there happened to be
pamphlets for the A.R.E. and how to get there....
I stopped by the A.R.E. and browsed thru the library and the bookstore,
and walked in the meditational gardens.... it was nice....
Linda
|
4.32 | atlantis fact or fiction | PACKER::HANDY | | Wed Jun 28 1989 13:42 | 4 |
| a good book i read on atlantis by otto muck??
the secret of atlantis.
let me know what you think..
everthing cannot be explained simply..!!!!!
|
4.33 | Cayce...a great place to start... | CURIE::BEDARD | | Wed Sep 06 1989 09:52 | 25 |
| Edgar Cayce.
I started reading his material a year ago this month. I found
it exciting because it made me take a new look at myself and the world
around me - it also makes you look at yourself as the cause of the
reality you find around you.
I was in heaven with his books until my studies began encompassing
wider areas. In particular "Messages from Michael" and his series of
books. (Michael is a channeled entity).
My biggest problem with Cayce was his religious bend in his
'teachings'. It did not bother me at all at first, but then you
realize as you read on and read others, that his premise is that we are
'bad' and are working towards being 'good'. Quite frankly, I've had
enough guilt in my life and self depreciating feelings that I don't
need anyone to add to the pot.
Cayce was a great place for me to reacquaint myself to metaphysics and
I've moved on.
Anyone out there who is ready to stop playing the victim in life and
take charge of what is happening to them should (how I HATE that word -
let me change that to 'might want to') read the MICHAEL books. It can
help you stop thinking in terms of GOOD and EVIL and start thinking in
terms of CHOICE.
Try it.....you'll like it!
Richard Bach's book 'ONE' is a real mind exerciser.
|
4.34 | A Cage too Small | DNEAST::CHRISTENSENL | Keeper of the Myth | Wed Sep 06 1989 10:29 | 4 |
| I like it! Choice is the trap of freedom. Graduate to a larger trap.
If one can get out of their current trap, any trap is escapable.
L.
|
4.35 | I choose "original blessing" | CARTUN::BERGGREN | | Wed Sep 06 1989 15:41 | 51 |
| L. - Can you elaborate on your thought that "choice is the trap of
freedom"? To me, choice and the awareness that we can choose is
empowering. Not only can you choose different actions and paths to
take, you can choose your beliefs and how you perceive yourself and the
world at large. I see this as perhaps the ulitmate power of mind.
That's why I am a little confused to hear it referred to as a trap. Or
is it just a metaphor that I'm taking too literally? Enlightenment
appreciated...!
Bedard on Cayce - I believe Cayce to be one of the greatest mystics of
our time. But with all (?) mystics, (as with all of us), the work of
spirit passes comes into our mind/intuition/subconscious and we do
"something" with it. We become in a way, a vessel, that holds this
thought energy from spirit and as a vessel, we add to it our own form,
to one degree or another.
Cayce, as many people in his day, probably was dealing with some of the
traditional religious programming that said (and still says) that we are
all born with original sin. We're "bad" from the word go. I've never
liked that concept. In fact, it stinks. As with all teachings, I
believe it is the students responsibility to attempt as best as
possible to seperate the chaff from the grain. To respectfully put
aside that which cannot be used, or that which doesn't feel right.
I've been reading some of Matthew Fox's work lately, a Dominican
priest, who has recently been testing the catholicity of the Roman
Catholic Church. He says of original sin:
"I also object to orginal sin as the starting point of religion because
of the tremendous psychic damage it has done. People are already
terribly vulnerable to self-doubt and guilt, especially members of
minority groups - women, blacks, Native Americans, homosexuals. The
whole idealogy of original sin increases one's alienation and feeds the
sado-masochistic energies in the culture - the sense that one is not
worth.
If you start with the notion that you were born a blotch on existence,
you will never be empowered to do something about the brokenness of
life. In creation spirituality, we begin with the idea that each of us
is born a unique expresion of divinity, an image of God. Teaching our
children this is the only way to build the pride and security our
culture needs so desperately."
The God/Goddess in my heart is a loving, nurturing being/presence.
I believe that s/he is more of a proponent of original blessing than
original sin, if I may be so bold.
- Karen
|
4.36 | One Stooge replys | DNEAST::CHRISTENSENL | Keeper of the Myth | Wed Sep 06 1989 17:54 | 24 |
| Though I have read some of Cayce's books, I still disagree our highest
form is to be a vessel. We have a vessel as one has a wallet or purse.
We should do it good service such that it serves us well.
Life itself is a trap. We, all of us, incarnated into this "trap".
Some had a purpose, most fell into life because there wasn't
one whole heck of a lot going on anywhere else.
Choosing a larger venue, a cage too large makes much more sense
than being stuck in a cage too small. Again, most like the
furnishings of their room: BMW (or =), house on the Cape
and do not feel nor recoginze their position as being stuck.
Fine, some of us have work to do. And I suggest we not disturb
the natives.
Choosing a larger venue means to progress toward the largest venue
of all. Creation is still a trap. So What! So until one is
actually re-united with the creator, make the best of it!
BTW: Don't Worry, Be Happy
nuk, nuk, nuk
L.
|
4.37 | Life is a Garden - Dig it! | CARTUN::BERGGREN | | Thu Sep 07 1989 10:33 | 37 |
| re .36 Larry
Ooooooo yuk... I have a VERY strong response to your concept that life
is a trap, L. It evokes feelings of powerlessness as opposed to
empoowerment, coercion as opposed to co-creation, andsado-masochism
instead of nurturance.
It also sounds like you think the cosmos is a pretty uninteresting
place, and that most of us just "fell" here from lack of anything better
to do or place to be.
I have to stretch my imagination to think that this outlook "enhances"
your life; maybe it does - I know it would be counter-productive to
mine. I see I did interpret your original note correctly, thank you.
By the way, just to clarify a point - I did not say that our highest
form is to be a vessel. By using the analogy of the vessel, I was
attempting to describe how information from spirit is altered, simply
by virtue that it has entered a person's consciousness. Actually,
consciousness IS a vessel - it's not something we need to strive for.
Another analogy that comes to mind is the game where you have a group of
people sitting in a circle and one person whispers a short story to
another and it's passed around to see how the story "evolves" by the time
it reaches the last person. That is probably a better representation
of the complexity of spirit communication, which, I believe Cayce was
engaged in. If Cayce tended to "shade" the information he gave with a
good vs. evil context, I'm postulating that it could have been his own
personal interpretations of the info he received. Anyway, it was the
dynamic of how information is altered by the consciousness between the
time it enters and the time it is passed on, that I was referring to
with the vessel analogy.
Hope I expressed it better this time.
- Karen
|
4.38 | "This garden Universe vibrates complete" | BOOKIE::ENGLAND | Do what you like | Thu Sep 07 1989 12:03 | 9 |
| Re: Karen
I dig it too! :-) I feel that life is a wonderful opportunity to
experience, explore, feel, create... So that's what I'm doing.
If life is *really* a trap, or a chore, or a time to pay dues, or
Hell...well then, I guess the joke is on me, 'cause I didn't notice!
:-)
Jerri
|
4.39 | Trappist monk or trapped monkey? | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Thu Sep 07 1989 12:20 | 19 |
| re: last few
As I have said before, we are both jailor and jailed. Yes, life
is a trap...until it isn't. That is, it *can* be, but it doesn't
need to be. This is related to a discussion held in here two years
ago wherein an individual stated the desire to "be" or "float."
I contended that I would rather soar than float. I believe that
these ideas are concurrent and dual or dichotomous, in other words,
yes, we can "be" and yet via desire, imagination and expection we
can reach beyond...always reaching for more. NOT in disdain as is
implied in the negatives Karen characterized Larry with, but with
awareness and gratitude for the current "being" as well as the other
avenue of "more". Yes, I prefer the optimistic, empowering feelings
of a future of more, but that doesn't mean I can't see the "potential"
for being trapped in some sort of stagnant lifetime nor does it mean
I won't be grateful for the "Beingness" I experience.
Frederick
|
4.40 | | DNEAST::PUSHARD_MIKE | | Thu Sep 07 1989 12:41 | 8 |
|
I think I can fall into traps,or,put myself in one. Its up to me to
reconize it and deal with it. Some are harder to get out of than
others,but,it is the experience that will help me grow.
Peace
Michael
|
4.41 | You remember me :-) | BOOKIE::ENGLAND | Do what you like | Thu Sep 07 1989 12:44 | 21 |
| Re: Frederick
> This is related to a discussion held in here two years
> ago wherein an individual stated the desire to "be" or "float."
> I contended that I would rather soar than float.
Yeh, I think that was me that said that. I soar too...but I don't
make it my goal (I'm not saying that you do).
If we can enjoy where we are, and soar beyond, and not get caught up
in our own beliefs...WONDERFUL! That certainly sounds appealing to me!!
Many of my comments are made in response to what I perceive as people
having a goal to get away from where they are...and sometimes it seems
as if they feel this makes them "better" somehow. Since I enjoy my life
very much (despite very difficult situations), *I* have a great
appreciation for life, and the fullness that is HERE...so that is what
I express quite often. I'm also very spiritual...but it's not something
I can explain very well in words.
Jerri
|
4.42 | Hot fudge with nuts! | CARTUN::BERGGREN | | Thu Sep 07 1989 12:57 | 13 |
| re: Frederick
Hi! Thank you for your input. I'd like to clarify that the disdain
you referred to that I have is a response to the *concept* that life
is a trap, and is not directed to him as a person. Maybe that's
understood, but just want to be sure.
Just in case - Larry if you're out there - I love ya babe!!!
Peace,
Karen
|
4.43 | | LEDS::BATES | Nel mezzo del camin | Thu Sep 07 1989 13:21 | 23 |
|
For a while I was 'trapped' by Larry's earlier thought that choice is
the trap of freedom, and then I read his recent entry here, and thought
about the way that the word trap snaps shut (thunk!) on our perceptions...
I remembered from who-knows-where that the word's origins are in the
Old English word for tread or footstep, the implication of movement
caught or stopped, and that when I think of it, by extension ultimate
freedom lies in the motionlessness, timelessness, boundlessness of union
with the infinite. Following that line of reasoning, the very choice to
be here is to accept being contained within some boundary, to move within
a space that has limits of some kind, no matter how tenuous or barely
perceptible those limits may be.
There is no punishment or blame implicit in the recognition that we do
have limits on this level of being - after all, with this envelope of
skin and flesh, "I" is the most basic 'trap' of all. The question - for
me at any rate - is to determine why that piece of the infinite spirit
that is currently within the form known as Gloria set foot into this
enclosure in the first place, and then what...?
|
4.44 | interesting replies all | BTOVT::BEST_G | my heart's a flambe' | Thu Sep 07 1989 14:08 | 12 |
|
re:. 43 (Gloria)
Hey! I like what you said. :-)
re: .38 (I think)
I thought it was "This God and Universe vibrates complete..."
but then again this is coming from someone with a "I led the pidgeons
to the flag" kind of mind....:-)
Guy
|
4.45 | Sounds like Garden to me ... | STARDM::JOLLIMORE | Dancing Madly Backwards | Thu Sep 07 1989 14:44 | 24 |
| .44 Guy
This Garden Universe vibrates complete
Some, we get a sound so sweet
Vibrations reach on up to become light
And then through gamma out of sight
Between the eyes and ears there lie
The sound of color and the light of a sigh
And to hear the Sun, what a thing to believe
But it's all around if we could but perceive
To know ultraviolet, infra-red and x-rays
Beauty to find in so many ways
Two notes of the chord, that's our forescope
But to reach the chord is our life's hope
And to name the chord is important to some,
So they give it a word and the word is ... Ohm.
From the Moody Blues _In Search of the Lost Chord_
(there's a lot of 'soaring' on *that* album!)
... He'll take to up, he'll bring you down. He'll plant your feet back on
the ground ...
Jay
|
4.46 | | ATSE::FLAHERTY | Nothing is by chance! | Thu Sep 07 1989 14:48 | 16 |
| Karen (.37),
I agree with the concept that a certain amount of the channeler's own
'stuff' comes through with the message. I recently had a long talk
with a channeler and asked her the question 'how did she keep her
ego/personality from interpreting the message?'. Her reply was that it
was true that what was being given stepped down through the layers of
consciousness and that the messages would be refracted through her ego.
She said she has worked on herself to get rid of her 'junk' in order
to keep what was being said pure, but even then her personality would
be integrated into what was being said.
Enjoying your input Karen, thanks...
Ro
|
4.47 | thanks Jay! | IJSAPL::ELSENAAR | Fractal of the universe | Fri Sep 08 1989 05:20 | 15 |
| RE Jay
Jay! You bring back memories.... Is this the same album as the following (and I
hope I remembered it well....)?
Cold hearted orb, that rules the night
Removed the colors from our sight
Red is gray... and yellow white...
But we decide which is right,
which is an illusion.....
Yes the moody blues *soar*!
Arie
|
4.48 | To have all these things in our memories... | USAT05::KASPER | If not now, when? | Fri Sep 08 1989 08:43 | 13 |
| re: .47 (Arie)
Nope, "Cold Hearted Orb..." is from "Days of Future Past", the "This
Garden Universe..." is from "In Search Of The Lost Chord".
Great albums, great group (The same group that brougnt us such lines
as "With the Power ot 10 billion butterfly sneezes..." - From "To Our
Childrens, Childrens, Children).
Are we dating ourselves???
Terry
|
4.49 | Don't shoot the messenger | USAT05::KASPER | If not now, when? | Fri Sep 08 1989 08:59 | 19 |
|
It's been awhile but I've read a number of Cayce books. I don't recall
his claiming we are 'bad', trying to become 'good'. I think his point
of view was that we created that duality and it is our goal to overcome
it (among other things).
Couple of other points. I felt the same way after awhile about his
religous orientation so I moved on to other sources but I still thank
him and respect his message, which isn't all that different from others
I've read or heard, from Lazaris to Shirley McClaine, from Zukov to
Arguelles to Dejavu. The other thing that I found unique in him was that
he wasn't claiming to channel anybody, just himself, that while in a
trance, he gained access to "information" (collective unconscious?) and
pass it on to those who needed/requested it. One reason for his status as
one of the great mystics, is that his work is so well documented. All
n-thousand of his readings are recorded, indexed and published (now in a
20 (or so) volume set available through the A.R.E.)
Terry (who_tries_not_to_confuse_the_message_with_the_messenger)
|
4.50 | Accidental Tourist? | DNEAST::CHRISTENSENL | Keeper of the Myth | Fri Sep 08 1989 10:10 | 12 |
| No unbrage taken Karen.
The point is trap is an analogy and with our common fear of being
trapped, the analogy succeeds, if and only if we ask ourselves
the two questions: "How did I get into this?" and "How do I get out?"
Cayce's writings started me on the adventure to seek the answeres
to these questions. The answers are incomplete with me and I feel
in the attempts to answer there is a growing emotional connection
with the spiritual self.
L.
|
4.52 | ... won't digress anymore.... after this one;-) | IJSAPL::ELSENAAR | Fractal of the universe | Fri Sep 08 1989 10:50 | 11 |
| RE .48 (Terry)
> Are we dating ourselves???
Remember Fran�ois Couperin? Playing the harpsichord with his colleague?
"pi�ces de clavecin".....
Dating? No I don't think so.... just wonderful memories.... :-):-)
Arie
(I won't interrupt anymore. I promise!)
|
4.53 | Disdain Remover | CARTUN::BERGGREN | | Fri Sep 08 1989 10:53 | 16 |
| Thanks for the excellent expansion on the idea of life/being/existence
as a trap! L, for gettin' the juices flowin'; Gloria, Frederick, Jerri &
Michael for your perceptions; Jay, for a wonderful trip down memory
lane with a group that has always been an inspiration to me, (I
remember when Days of Future Passed first came out - it was such a
maverick for it's time. Now *that's* dating myself! But how about
Seventh Sojourn - there's another classic!!!)
Its all been great - no more disdain! Guess this has been a sort of
"Disdain Remover" - think we should market it...?
See you in the Garden~~~
Karen
|
4.54 | | WMOIS::REINKE | SSB Configuration Control | Fri Sep 08 1989 10:54 | 41 |
|
re: Various notes relating to the influence of the channel on
what's channeled.
One is sometimes tempted to think that if only we didn't have to work
through these channels God (Christ Consciousness, your dead uncle,
etc.) could speak directly to us. I suggest that they do speak
directly; most of the time we're not listening!
Does it not also denigrate the channel and deny his/her purpose in life
to wish them and their [by implication] lousy personal vibes completely
out of the picture? Is that not a vestige of the concept of original
sin? If the medium is the message, then look to the medium you're
using to channel the guidance for your life.
My take on original sin, by the way, is simply that it's a description
of the human condition: most of us humans believe completely and
absolutely most of the time that we are separate beings in a sundered
universe -- one that is composed of either "ME" or "NOT ME" and "THEM"
and "US". Someone in an earlier note also alluded to Cayce's (and
others') interpretation of original sin as a mis-interpretation of the
universe as a duality of good and evil. If you read the myth
carefully, you will note that the serpent tempted Eve with the fruit of
the Tree of the Knowlege of Good and Evil. But if the good-evil
duality is an illusion we got hooked on a bum mindset! Original Sin
says that all our other illusions derive from that one. Moreover, if
you read between the lines in the myth of the fall, you realize that
God was either in cahoots with the serpent or s/he did not consult
his/her omniscience concerning human psychology. Warning the children
in the garden not to eat the fruit of a certain tree! What better way
to goad them into doing so?
For a delightful exploration of this and other biblical myths, I
recommend you read Carl Jung's _Answer_to_Job_. _Reflections_On_The_
Christ_ by David Spangler, published by Findhorn Foundation of
Scotland, is another book that has shaped my ideas on this subject.
Spangler has a chapter in that book called Lucifer and the Christ,
which I've found particularly helpful.
Donald Reinke
|
4.55 | Did your license plate remain the same? | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Fri Sep 08 1989 11:57 | 7 |
| re: .41 (Jerri)
Yes, I *do* remember you. Obviously there have been changes
in your life since then (you used a different last name then.) ;-)
Frederick
|
4.56 | catch up | ATSE::FLAHERTY | Nothing is by chance! | Fri Sep 08 1989 12:29 | 9 |
| Hi Jerri,
Good to see you here. I didn't recognize you; hadn't realized you
changed your name!
Hope all is well with you.
Ro
|
4.57 | Gnost thy self. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri Sep 08 1989 14:35 | 30 |
| RE: The Trap
As I rather suspect Larry knows, this is the central thesis of the
group of religions known as Gnosticism.
Gnosticism postulates that the physical universe and several layers of
non-physical universe was created by one or more bad-guy gods,
explicitly for the purpose of trapping or jailing our inner-most being
(not our soul, which is one of the inner "walls" of the prison, but
the soul of the soul or even the soul of the soul of the soul).
The word Gnostic comes from a Greek word meaning "to know". The
solution to being trapped was postulated to be knowledge. First off,
knowledge that you are in jail, and secondly detailed knowledge of
the exact structure of the jail -- most importantly, the knowledge
needed to scale the walls, pick the locks, slip through the cracks and
bribe or trick the guards when the opportunity to escape (at death)
comes.
The many different sects differed as to these details, as to how one
learned, etc. For example, some sects taught that once you realized
that the "rules" of morality were jailhouse rules designed to keep you
in line (ignorant) that there was then no longer any need to follow
them. Others taught the exact opposite, that immorality/hedonism
resulted in tying you to the material-world/jail, and made flight
virtually impossible even if you knew all the tricks; and so asceticism
was absolutly necessary, if you were to return to union with The Alien
God upon your death (which was the goal).
Topher
|
4.58 | | BOOKIE::ENGLAND | I'm a part of It's a part of me | Fri Sep 08 1989 16:38 | 11 |
| Re: Frederick
Yes, I broke the bonds of matrimony -- and yes, my license plate
is still FLOATN. Ha ha! You've got some memory!
Re: Ro
Thanks!
Jerri
|
4.59 | If you can't question God, who can you question? | BOOKIE::ENGLAND | I'm a part of It's a part of me | Fri Sep 08 1989 17:15 | 18 |
| Re: Donald
Thanks for what you shared -- lots of interesting things to contemplate,
and a lot of truth ringing clear (for me).
> you read between the lines in the myth of the fall, you realize that
> God was either in cahoots with the serpent or s/he did not consult
> his/her omniscience concerning human psychology. Warning the children
> in the garden not to eat the fruit of a certain tree! What better way
> to goad them into doing so?
...Or else God was playing games. This is one of many biblical questions
I've wondered about. I grew up with a lot of influence from churches...and
was always told not to question God. I had lots of questions and felt very
uncomfortable and unnatural stifling them. My beliefs have re-org'd a lot
since then. The books you mentioned sound very interesting to check out!
Jerri
|
4.60 | the Lord works in sneaky ways | BTOVT::BEST_G | hugging the big chemical | Fri Sep 08 1989 17:21 | 6 |
|
A discussion of how Jung came to the conclusion he did concerning the
Garden of Eden thing was given in _Memories, Dreams and Reflections_,
a book I highly recommend (IMHO :-).
Guy
|
4.61 | What were God's intensions? | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Mon Sep 11 1989 13:52 | 19 |
| RE: God's motives in forbidding the fruit of the tree.
If you find this kind of analysis interesting you might want to check
out:
Steven J. Braus; Biblical Games: a strategic analysis of
stories in the Old Testament. MIT Press, 1980.
The author uses game theory (explaining it as he goes) to analyze
the actions of the various "players" (God, The Serpent/Satan, Humanity,
and various individual humans) in many of the OT stories.
An interesting, rather non-standard, introduction to game theory (which
is only incidentally or metaphorically about "games" in the usual sense
of the word) as well as providing some food for thought (the fruit of
the tree of knowledge? :-)) about the OT.
Topher
|
4.62 | another book | IJSAPL::ELSENAAR | Fractal of the universe | Mon Sep 11 1989 17:21 | 15 |
| Also RE God and the serpent.
Another book that may be of interest is:
E.J. van Wolde
A semiotic analysis of Genesis 2-3
Van Gorcum (The Netherlands), 1989
The author uses linguistic/semiotic techniques and models to arrive at an
interesting interpretation of Genesis 2-3. In the writer's view, the eating of
the apple can be interpreted as the first step of mankind in spiritual
development. That the apple was eaten by Eve first, was just extra evidence....
for her :-).
Arie
|
4.63 | War of Minds?? | CSC32::MORGAN | Celebrating the Cybernetic Age. | Mon Sep 11 1989 19:35 | 11 |
| Reply to .59,
In the realm of myth nothing can really be certain except that the
human mind plays an integral part of the process.
Perhaps we should ask ourselves what did the human mind wish to say in
the Genesis story? Perhaps only that the Hebrew tribal deity didn't
like other surrounding tribal deities, conceptions and inspirations of
other human minds.
I sense a mind war. Don't you?
|
4.64 | Mother can you hear me? | USAT05::KASPER | Life's a gift, learn to accept it | Tue Sep 12 1989 09:38 | 14 |
| re: .62
If you look at the Garden of Eden story mythologically, from a Jungian
approach, it is symbolic of the time when we (or human consciousness as a
whole) began our evolution. It is the uroboric state in which there is
no ego consciousness, no duality. Only the state of paradise in the
womb of the Great Mother. The birth of consciousness begins with the
creation of opposites, man and woman, good and evil, etc. This phase
ends with the separation from the womb into the world out there.
For a good, in depth look at the phases of the evolution of consciousness,
read _The History and Origins of Consciousness_ by Erich Neuman.
Terry
|
4.65 | | WILLEE::FRETTS | All the Earth is alive... | Tue Sep 12 1989 10:03 | 12 |
|
RE: .64 Terry
> ... the state of paradise in the womb of the Great Mother.
I really like the feeling that these words bring up for me. And
in addition to your question/title "Mother can you hear me?", I
would like to add for the Great Mother, if I may...."Children can
you hear me?".
Carole
|
4.66 | Pointer | UBRKIT::PAINTER | One small step... | Tue Sep 12 1989 12:42 | 8 |
|
Reading recommendation:
"Adam, Eve and the Serpent" by Elaine Pagels.
She also is the author of "The Gnostic Gospels".
Cindy
|
4.67 | We have chosen and BEEN chosen...? | CARTUN::BERGGREN | | Tue Sep 12 1989 13:37 | 41 |
| re: last several notes on Adam & Eve, Eden, good/evil, etc...
I came across a book, Teaching the Heart to Sing by Julie Redstone
recently that offered a perspective on the above that I really like:
"It has been said that humankind are fallen angels. That once united
with the celestial choirs and the Light and Love pervading the
Universe, we are now submerged in limited thinking, and have become
shadows of our real selves. Now it is important to know that we are
not fallen angels. Only in the sense of having forgotten our true
heritage have we fallen from Grace.
There is no sin involved in this, other than the sin of leaving the
state of complete and total harmony with all that is, which is our
*natural birthright*. Mankind and womankind have been, are, and will
be *greater than the angels* as we awaken to our true being. For the
angelic kingdom has never left the state of oneness to enter the state
of duality that humans live in, and therefore has yet to experience the
*full individualization* of God/Goddess-consciousness to which each of
us is being born.
We, humankind, have the honor to have chosen, and *to have been chosen*,
to move through the sphere of duality, in order to fully emobody the
consciousness of God within form. I and you and all our brothers and
sisters of the Earth are beautiful Divine images, held securely in the
Mind of God. And it is our destiny to realize in full consciousness
the image which forms the ground of our individuality, and of our
being".
And one other passage somewhat related:
"This is what must be understood about doubt: that it is the fertile
ground for the creation of faith. That those who struggle with doubt
are struggling to find truth and God within themselves at a deeper
level than many who, on the surface, seem to have been given a gift of
faith".
- Karen
|
4.68 | | USAT05::KASPER | Life's a gift, learn to accept it | Tue Sep 12 1989 14:15 | 23 |
| re: .65 (Carole)
> I really like the feeling that these words bring up for me.
I like the sound too, and most of us probably do - but that's
the trap. The path that our evolution seems to be taking us is
forward to the Uroboric state (full circle, so-to-speak) but only
*after* the proper phases have been fullfilled. To try to crawl back
into the womb (with the weight of our ego's) will only bring us pain.
After our separation from egoless consciousness and the birth of our
ego we have to 'slay' the Terrible Mother (transform) and stand on our
own. From there we embark on our journey to find Self. It's a long,
hard road, as many of us know with a lot of traps and pitfalls. The
Treasure that awaits when we arrive Home is something I think we
all feel glimpses of but haven't really grabbed onto. When we arrive
the Great Mother (in her androgynous form) will be waiting with Love
and with open arms.
> "Children can you hear me?".
Absolutely!
Terry
|
4.69 | pointer to the Painter pointer | BTOVT::BEST_G | hugging the big chemical | Tue Sep 12 1989 14:38 | 8 |
|
re:.66 (Cindy)
Is that what you call a Painter pointer?
:-)
Guy
|
4.70 | | WILLEE::FRETTS | All the Earth is alive... | Tue Sep 12 1989 14:56 | 12 |
|
RE: .68 Terry
I guess I was coming from a slightly different perspective than
you when I responded to your words. I want to remember that I
was birthed from the Great Mother's womb. I want to acknowledge
this. Many do not do that, and I feel that this has caused much
sorrow and pain. I agree that we cannot go back to the womb, nor
do I want to.
C.
|
4.71 | When is Intermission? I need some popcorn! | BOOKIE::ENGLAND | I'm a part of It's a part of me | Tue Sep 12 1989 15:11 | 30 |
| Re: .63
What you said is interesting. I think any time we lock ourselves
into a belief system, we're playing games. Which is not necessarily
good or bad -- it's more a matter of how you play. It's sort of like
having a palette of infinite colors, with which to paint -- and deciding
what you want to do with it. The possibilities are endless, and so
could be the ways of exploring and looking at it -- not holding onto one
creation. There are some people telling others what colors to use...and
some people insisting that only certain colors exist. ;-)
Holding onto a set of beliefs (through myth, religion, new age
awareness, or whatever) seems very contrary to everything around us.
We are aware of so much...but we choose to block out things selectively
and "pretend" that only certain things exist, and are true, or are
important -- the things that fit into the reality we want to believe in
(instead of accepting what is at each new moment). That pretense, with
such determination and energy, seems to be a great contradiction to the
freedom we profess to have or strive for.
Sometimes when I look around at people scurrying here and there, with
such serious faces, getting so upset over little ant hills in life
(which almost everything is)...insisting on how things must be...it all
seems like such a big drama. Okay, let's have intermission already!! :-)
Is God playing games because God is imperfect? Is God learning? Is
God pretending to tell God what to do? Strange and interesting things
to think about.
Jerri
|
4.72 | | USAT05::KASPER | Life's a gift, learn to accept it | Tue Sep 12 1989 18:09 | 6 |
| re: .70 (Carole)
I sensed that. Your reply just sparked a desire to write a bit
more. It's a topic I've been reading a bunch on lately.
Terry
|
4.73 | | WILLEE::FRETTS | All the Earth is alive... | Tue Sep 12 1989 18:33 | 7 |
|
Ok Terry...thanks for letting me know.
Carole :-)
|
4.74 | in person | ATSE::FLAHERTY | Nothing is by chance! | Thu Sep 14 1989 15:14 | 11 |
| Hi Karen (.67),
I recently finished reading Teaching the Heart to Sing also and it
immediately became one of my all-time favorites. Julie Redstone will
be at the Unicorn Bookstore in Arlington on Thursday, October 19th in
case you're interested. Might be a fun group-type activity.
I'm looking forward to hearing her speak.
Ro
|
4.75 | Sounds good | CARTUN::BERGGREN | | Thu Sep 14 1989 15:36 | 9 |
| .74 Ro
Hi Ro,
Thanks for the info on Julie Redstone. I'm marking it on my calendar -
I'd like to go.
- Kb
|
4.76 | Meeting of the energies... | MISERY::WARD_FR | Going HOME--as an Adventurer | Mon Oct 02 1989 12:45 | 9 |
| A couple of days ago I heard what has to be considered a RUMOR
at this point (since it is at least second-hand information) and
that is that the Edgar Cayce Institute (is that the name?) has
invited Lazaris to talk to them and that he has accepted. I don't
know if this is true or, if it is, when or where or how this is to
take place.
Frederick
|
4.77 | | WILLEE::FRETTS | All the Earth is alive... | Mon Oct 02 1989 13:06 | 16 |
|
RE: .76 Frederick
This would not surprise me. A couple of years ago I attended a
full-day workshop in Boston sponsored by A.R.E. (Association for
Research and Enlightenment) - the topic of which was developing
your psychic powers. These workshops were given around the
country, and one of the presenters was trance channeler Kevin
Ryerson of "Out on a Limb" fame. A.R.E. seems to be open to
sponsoring and hosting like-minded folk, so their invitation to
Jach and Lazaris is not really out of character or anything. It
will be interesting to see if this does happen and what is
created out of it.
Carole
|
4.78 | New Book Available in Paperback | WMOIS::REINKE | Hello, I'm the Dr! | Fri May 18 1990 12:12 | 13 |
| A Seer Out of Season
The Life of Edgar Cayce
by
Harmon Hartzell Bro, PhD
US $4.95 Canada $6.95
Is now available from Signet Books. This is a scholarly treatment by
one whose credentials include the presidency of Drew University. I'm
halfway through it, and I highly recommend it.
Regards,
Donald Reinke
|
4.79 | enjoying these notes | BOSOX::BOUTHILLIER | A place in time is now | Mon Jun 04 1990 15:22 | 35 |
| Having just joined the network, your notes on these subjects are
like air for my curious mind. Your sharing observations on these
controversial topics which speaking for myself, I have tried to
put them aside and dismiss them in the past,because to accept them
meant a cleaning house of previious helf philosopies and beliefs
based on accepted approaches to the question"whats it all about??",as
explainedin established mindset which we convey in everyday encounters
with our souroundings. To expound any of these thoughts can be shocking
and unacceptable to many frieds and acquantances. But I have accepted
these consequences and must continue to seek out what I feel is
truth and grow,but also to remember to question and create an acid
test as to who benefits from this knowledge. I don't plan to pad
anyones's nest except my own.
In my case Cayce was the open sesame to a viewpoint so bizzare it
seemed easy to disprove?? now I am hooked,even found some of Cayce's
remedies to offer relief to physical symptoms which are simple and
akin to old home remedies. The fact that his readings were all
transcribbed and documented lets them stand the test of time and
the acid test we can indicidually apply to them.
Another author more current in chanelling has been RUTH MONTGOMERY-
who has written books on her bond with the hereafter. My favorites
are "A WORLD BEYOND', 'COMPANIONS ALONG THE WAY' also her latest
'HERALD OF A NEW AGE'. She comes from a background of being a
nationally syndicated political news reporter based in D.C. and
is the last person "she feels" to become involved with chanelling
except for a deep personal experience that set up a bond which carries
her outside of this world. Stimulating reading.....
Peace
Rog a ned
axt ecuecn
xcept ,
|
4.80 | Was he right? Time will tell! | CSC32::ENTLER | The Wizard | Fri Jun 07 1991 15:51 | 25 |
| **This seems like the logical place to put this.***
Many years ago I read many books both by Edgar Cayce and (Seth)Jane
Roberts. I believe in one on Cayce's books he mentioned that the
records of Atlantis would be found beneath the forepaw of the Sphinx.
The following article was in the local (Gazette Telegraph)newpaper
today in Colorado Springs:
************************************************************************
PHARAOHS' CITY FOUND AT SPHINX'S FOOT!
Egyptologists, probing beneath a tourist village at the foot of the
Sphinx, have found the remains of a city belonging to the
pyramid-building pharaohs.
"This discovery is much more important to Egyptology than all the
gold inTutankamun's tomb," said Zahi Hawass, antiquities director for
the Giza pyramids and Sphinx.
Hawass predicted the ruins will unravel not only mysteries aboiut
the pyramid builders but those of later civilizations.
_______________________________________________________________________
Wish there was more.
/Dan
|
4.81 | Time has been holding out for thousands of years. | CADSYS::COOPER | Topher Cooper | Fri Jun 07 1991 17:33 | 14 |
| RE: .80 (Dan)
Assuming the report is accurate, this is very exciting whether or not
it has anything to do with Cayce's prediction.
Do note, however, that there is a world of difference between, "at
the foot of the Sphinx" and "beneath the [foot] of the Sphinx." I
do not see that the former increases the liklihood of the latter even
by a little. Of course, if you are willing to accept that Cayce may
have gotten the message a little fuzzily, then we might be encouraged
to believe that records of Atlantis might be found in the newly
discovered city.
Topher
|
4.82 | More on the Nazlett find... | FDCV07::SNIDERMAN | | Mon Jun 10 1991 10:10 | 51 |
| Re: <<< Note 4.80 by CSC32::ENTLER "The Wizard" >>>
> Wish there was more.
>
> /Dan
My newspaper had a little more information:
"Historians Uncover Underground City at Egypt Pyramid",
by Mimi Mann, Associated Press
"Nazlett el-Sammen, Egypt - Hidden beneath a tourist village
at the foot of the Sphinx, Egyptologists have found the
remains of a city belonging to the pyramid-building
pharaohs.
"This discovery is much more important to Egyptology than
all the gold in Tutankamun's tomb," said Zahi Hawass,
antiquities director for the Giza pyramids and Sphinx...
"Hawass predicted the ruins will unravel not only mysteries
about the pyramid builders but those of the civilizations
that followed at Giza Plateau, in the desert southwest of
Cairo...
"Getting answers isn't going to be easy. The ruins lie
beneath Nazlett el-Sammen, a community of 70,000 people
whose livelihood comes mainly from selling tacky items to
tourists.
"Beginning 18 months ago, the ancient city slowly emerged as
laborers dug up Nazlett's neighborhoods to install sewer
lines financed by the U.S. Agency for International
Development.
"Besides giving villagers their first sewage system, the
project will keep underground filth away from the Sphinx,
which crouches between Nazlett and pyramids.
"As digging began, artifacts surfaced. Uncovered early were
stones of what Egyptologists believe to be the Valley Temple
of Pharaoh Cheops, whose Great Pyramid is the last survivor
of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World...
"Hawass, who announced discovery of the buried city last
week, said it stretches two miles and is the largest ever
found from the Old Kingdom...
Joe
|
4.83 | My Life With Edgar Cayce | STAR::DEYOUNG | | Tue Feb 11 1992 17:16 | 5 |
| I read this book back in 1974 and being an atheist was wonderfully suprised
by the body and depth of phenomena described therein! I still have it on my
bookshelf.
I don't know how it compares to other books about him.
|
4.84 | Problem-Solving | SWAM2::LEAL_SA | | Tue Mar 24 1992 17:39 | 9 |
| I have been meditating for years and one of the most important things
I've learned is to trust my gut instincts or my intuition. By
meditating I have opened up psychic channels which otherwise would be
clogged with the physical perceptions of reality. In so doing, I trust
and have faith in God to help me with whatever problem I am working on
and I am always guided.
Colleen Leal
|
4.85 | Nuts! | DPDMAI::DAWSON | t/hs+ws=Formula for the future | Mon Sep 07 1992 22:01 | 8 |
|
In the early 70's (while I was in the Navy in Norfolk) I
had myself tested at the Edgar Cayce Foundation. I had been having
"weird" dreams and occurances....I tested very high but then kinda put
it away until recently. Now that I'm really interested, I live 1800
miles away! :-}
D� (aka...Dave Dawson)
|