The Mystical Underground: Rick Bettua: Sharks And Synchronicities

A new episode of The Mystical Underground is live! “Rick Bettua: Sharks And Synchronicities”:

Join Trish and Rob for a conversation with…

Rick Bettua, who served thirty-two years as a U.S. Navy diver. He finished his career in 2008 as a command master chief petty officer and master diver, then returned for another three-year stint as an advisor, retiring in 2011.

In October 2004, he became the Navy’s command master chief of salvage diving, and in that role, he managed the world’s largest and most diverse diving command with more than 250 personnel operating throughout the Pacific and Indian Oceans as well as Iraq and Kuwait. I should add that Rick and I have co-authored a book, called BREATHE, which is about Rick’s survival story—or actually many survival stories throughout his career and afterward. After Rick retired, he moved to Queensland, Australia. He’s married and has two children.

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The Random Rat

 

During the height of the pandemic, we had a mouse problem. Our cats would catch mice in the yard, bring them into the house, and the mice would get loose and hide. Eventually, we got rid of them. They either died or, when possible, were released.

Recently, we noticed that bananas and plantains in our fruit bowl were being nibbled at during the night. “We’ve got mice again,” Rob announced, and started setting out traps. It quickly became became evident that what we had this time was smarter than the average mouse.

This critter avoided traps, the lure of bits of cheese, and one night I glimpsed him scampering behind the toaster oven on our counter. He was too fast to get a sense of his size. The next morning, I remarked that the mouse might be tapping into Rupert Sheldrake’s morphic field to avoid entrapment.

So we decided to set up our spy camera in the kitchen, directed at the bowl of fruit, For the next two nights, the camera caught the critter – a rat, not a mouse – leaping onto the counter, checking out the bowl of fruit, then diving in. When I showed the video to our neighbor, she identified the rodent as a roof rat.

I was going to buy sticky paper and put it around the bowl of fruit so the critter would get stuck. But my neighbor talked me out of it. She’d seen a mouse trapped on the stuff and said it was awful, the animal struggling, squealing, in the middle of the night. No, thanks. So I bought a 99% guaranteed mouse trap, moved all the fruit to the fridge, cleared the counter, and aimed the camera.

The first night, the critter came out at 1:45, checked out everything, avoided the traps, and scampered up the wall and vanished through an opening between wall cabinets. Unfortunately, the video no longer appears on the camera footage. Rob blocked the space between the cabinets, so we’ll see what this guy does next.

I looked up the esoteric meaning of rats:

When a Rat appears as your Spirit Animal, the creature often brings a message about your career. Rat’s arrival in your awareness urges you to ask yourself, “Have you gotten lazy? Or are you working too much and forgetting hearth and home?” In either case, Rat comes prepared to help you by offering foresight and adaptive ability while directing change toward a creative solution.

Well, we’ll see.

When I told Rob I was writing a post on this rat critter, he laughed. “It’s random.”

Really?

P.S. Tonight, several months after I wrote this post, our cat, Beo, leaped through the open window in my office with qa giant rat in his mouth. Hey, guy, look what I caught! Fortunately, the rat was dead and we scooped it up and put it in the trash.

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The Chopstick Synchro

 

Rob and I have been working on a project for a gaming company – the CEO is in Istanbul, the other two employees are in Amsterdam. They’re creating a mobile app that takes place in a Japanese diner.

Originally, there were going to be 4 characters and a female chef. They asked for a story by October 1 that could be told in 1,000 words. That meant each character needed a back story that could be woven somehow into a front story. We created two versions of back stories, but they thought the stories were “too dark.” They said the story should be lighter, with “trending lifestyle” material that can be woven into a light mystery.

1000 words is about 4 manuscript pages. Yesterday morning when Rob woke up, he had the word chopsticks in his head. Suppose, he says, these chopsticks are environmental hazards of some sort? So I googled chopsticks. The very  first link  was about the environmental hazard that chopsticks are.

The Surprising Dangers of Chopsticks

I had no idea that chopsticks were a hazard.  So we created a story around it and they went for it and asked for a second mystery within the story.  This is one of those synchronicities that involve creativity and dreams. Chopsticks was from a dream Rob had been having, but the word was the only thing he recalled. & that word was all that mattered. So this is a synchro where creativity and dreams coincided.

Next time you reach for chopsticks, keep in mind that about 80 billion pairs of chopsticks are produced yearly. That’s about 20 million trees annually that are used and is why more than 10,000 square miles of Asian forests are are disappearing each year. When many of these disposable chopsticks are produced, harsh chemicals are often used – acid, bleach, hydrogen peroxide, paraffin, sulfur dioxide. They can leach out when dipped into hot liquids.

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Eclipse…a dog story

This is Eclipse. Every day she leaves her house, by herself, and takes the bus downtown to the dog park where she spends a couple of hours getting exercise and making friends, and then she takes the bus back home again. She even has her own bus pass attached to the collar.

It started when her owner, Jeff Young, was taking too long when the bus arrived, so she impatiently ran ahead and got on the bus by herself. The bus driver recognized her and dropped her off at the dog park, and later Jeff caught up with her. After several more trips by herself, Jeff started letting her go on her own, and she always comes back home a couple of hours later.

All of the bus drivers know her and she makes them smile, and many of the regular passengers enjoy seeing her every day and will often sit down next to her. Even the police have given their approval as long as the bus drivers are okay with the arrangement. “She makes everybody happy.”

Great dog story!

 

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October Star Power Forecast

If you prefer the written version, it’s in the masthead.

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Mercury retrograde alert

 

About every 3 months, Mercury – the planet of communication, the intellect, the conscious mind – turns retrograde; it  looks as if it’s moving backward relative to Earth. The retro lasts about 3 weeks. The last one of this year is in Libra and starts on September 27 at 1:10 am Eastern,  and at 10:10 pm Pacific on September 26. It ends on October 18 at 11:17 am Eastern and 8:17 am Pacific.

Mercury governs both Gemini and Virgo, so these two signs may experience the retro more intensely. But we all have Mercury somewhere in our charts and are likely to experience communication  snafus during these  periods. These miscommunications span the spectrum from the absurd to the not amusing at all.

Here are some DOs and DON’Ts and MAYBES for these retros:

– Take nothing for granted. Clarify everything you say.

– Don’t buy a computer, car, or anything else with moving parts. You may  regret it later.

– Revise, reconsider and rethink rather than starting or submitting something new.

– Double check appointments

– People you haven’t seen in a long time may suddenly reappear in your life

– Old issues may resurface

– Don’t sign contracts

– Try not to travel during a retro. But if you do, be flexible. Your itinerary and schedule are likely to change, especially now, with Covid regs so fluid.

Don’t buy plane or cruise tickets during a Mercury retro.

This list is just for starters. To find out how this Mercury retro may impact you, click here, the September forecast.

 

 

 

 

 

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Vonnegut re-do

Kurt Vonnegut self-portrait

Here’s an older post from years ago that I came across about Kurt Vonnegut and Alan Vaughn. A good one, worth re-posting.

Synchronicities can happen anywhere, anytime, even when waiting out a major storm. As Hurricane Matthew approached, we kept the Weather Channel on, listened and occasionally watched the latest updates. Our house was shuttered and Trish and I were settled in with two dogs and three cats. Stuck inside, I took the opportunity to organize some of our books that were piled here and there, and see if I could find shelf space or set some aside for recycling.

I noticed two books separate from the others, one atop the other. One was The Dreaming Universe, by Fred Alan Wolf. The other was Kurt Vonnegut’s Man Without a Country. I considered putting Wolf’s book in a bag for Goodwill, but noticed there were several paper tabs marking various pages. So, curious, I open the book to one of them, glanced down the page and my gaze stopped on the phrase… ’Vonnegut’s experience.’

That seemed like an interesting coincidence since Vonnegut’s autobiographical book had been resting atop Wolf’s dream tome. So I backtracked a few paragraphs to find what Vonnegut’s experience was about.

The story comes from a book on dreams in which Alan Vaughan, one of the co-authors, wrote that he had watched an interview on TV with Vonnegut and a few nights later dreamed of Vonnegut. He wondered if the dream meant anything to Vonnegut, so the next morning, March 13, 1970, he wrote him.

“You appeared in a dream I had this morning. We were in a house full of children. You were planning to leave soon on a trip. Then you mentioned that you were moving to an island name Jerome. As far as I know, there is no such place, so perhaps the name Jerome or initial ‘J’ has some related meaning.”

Vonnegut wrote back a couple of weeks later. “Not bad. On the night of your dream, I had dinner with Jerome B. (an author of children’s books), and we talked about a trip I made three days later to an island named England.”

Here’s what Wolf had to say about the exchange about the dream. “Clearly there was a connection between Vaughan’s dream and Vonnegut’s experience, all happening the same night, although it is probable that the discussion between Vonnegut and his friend Jerome took place before the dream. But the connection cannot be considered to be causal or local since there was no signal between the two events. One would have to consider this a spontaneous telepathic dream containing the fact of the conversation mixed in a capricious manner, typical of such dreams.”

You could call it telepathic, yes, but also synchronicity.

I was going to end the post there, but as I wrote Wolf’s name in the title, I suddenly realized there was yet another synchronicity here. Just before I took on the book organizing task, I’d been working on a chapter on shamanism for  a work in progress on spirit contact. Specifically, I was writing about the meaning of power animals that can appear in shamanic journeys. I looked back to where I’d stopped and yes, I’d left off with  Wolf. For the record, some of the attributes of Wolf Medicine are communication, working in harmony, and sharing knowledge in a structured way.

Oddly enough, in 2009 we wrote another post here about synchronicity involving Alan Vaughan and Kurt Vonnegut Jr. Interestingly, Even though it’s a completely different story, it also involved Vaughan writing a letter to Vonnegut and in that instance Vonnegut had written back about being surrounded by children. He and his wife had adopted six children all at once after their parents had both died – the late mother was Vonnegut’s sister.

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Happy Fall Equinox

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

It’s that time of year when day and night are of equal length, supposedly representing both the light and dark in our own lives. Astrologically, the sun enters air sign Libra, which always strives for balance, harmony.

The weather doesn’t change much in Florida – it’s still a hot, muggy summer – but more northern states begin to feel a change in the weather and maybe some color in the trees.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Rob’s theory is that our cooler weather comes around mid-October. That may have been true decades ago, but now we’re lucky if we can turn off the air by mid-November or early December. Hurricane season officially runs from June 1 to November 30. This year it started on May 22. For me, living in Florida, the fall equinox represents hope that the state will escape hurricane season unscathed.

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The Mystical Underground: Rob Macgregor: Staff Of Kings: Episode 2

A new episode of The Mystical Underground is live! “Rob Macgregor: Staff Of Kings: Episode 2″:

Join Rob MacGregor, the author of the Indiana Jones prequel novels and the Mystical Underground, as they present the second episode of an audio production of the unpublished novel “Indiana Jones and the Staff of Kings.”
Sometimes called “The Lost Indiana Jones novel,” Staff of Kings will come out in six episodes on The Mystical Underground’s podcast feed, beginning August 22. It will continue each month through January of 2022. An extra mystery episode will post in February of 2022.

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The Cassandra Project

In the spy thriller, Six Days of the Condor, by James Grady, Ronald Malcolm is a bookworm who works at the American Literary Historical Society. Actually, the society is a front for the CIA, and Malcolm is an agent who spends his days reading novels with a few colleagues combing the pages for clues that might predict real life upcoming scenarios. Of course things go bad for Malcolm in the book and the 1975 movie, Three Days of the Condor that starred Robert Redford, Faye Dunaway, and Cliff Robertson. I’ve seen it a couple of times. It’s a good one.

Now we have a real-life program, called Project Cassandra, that was set up three years ago  to do about the same thing. The German military collaborated with literary academics at the University of Tübingen to read novels and search for hints of possible future conflicts. The small team of literary scholars was led by Jürgen Wertheimer, a professor of comparative literature.

“Writers operate on a plane that is both objective and subjective,” Wertheimer said in an interview with the Guardian.

But the German press wasn’t greatly impressed when word got out about colonels meeting with literary academics to predict wars and humanitarian crises.The idea that literature could be used by the defence ministry to identify civil wars and humanitarian disasters ahead of time, wrote the Neckar-Chronik newspaper, was as charming as it was hopelessly naive. “You have to ask yourself why the military is financing something that is going to be of no value whatsoever.”

From the Guardian article: Charges of insanity, Wertheimer says, have forever been the curse of prophets and seers. Cassandra, the Trojan priestess of Greek myth, had a gift of foresight that allowed her to predict the Greek warriors hiding inside the Trojan horse, the death of Mycenaean king Agamemnon at the hands of his wife and her lover, the 10-year wanderings of Odysseus, and her own demise. Yet each of her warnings was ignored: “She’s lost her wits,” says Clytaemestra in Aeschylus’ play Agamemnon, before the chorus dismiss her visions as “goaded by gods, by spirits vainly driven, frantic and out of tune.”

There are plenty of novels that predicted future events. Three decades before Hiroshima and Nagasaki, H.G. Wells wrote The World Set Free, about atomic bombs with radioactive elements that contaminate battlefields. British author John Brunner’s Stand on Zanzibar, published in 1968, pictured European states forming a collective union, China’s rise as a global power, the economic decline of Detroit, and the inauguration of a “President Obomi.”

We’ve written here in the blogs about novelists who have predicted future dramatic events. Fourteen years before the Titanic sank, Morgan Robertson wrote Futility: The Wreck of the Titan that accurately predicted a cruise ship very similar to the Titanic hitting an iceberg and sinking.  In George Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four, a one-party state uses “telescreens” to identify people from their expressions and heart rate. It was written more than sixty years before facial recognition software became prevalent. Even more creepy was Edgar Allan Poe’s unfinished novel, The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym, that predicted an act of cannibalism at sea with eerie accuracy, including the victim’s correct name–Richard Parker–forty years before the event.

Closer to home, Trish wrote Category 5 predicting a massive hurricane hitting Miami the year before Hurricane Andrew struck. A few years after the hurricane hit, meteorologists upgraded it to a category 5.

Wertheimer told the Guardian that novelists have a “sensory talent.” Literature, he reasons, has a tendency to channel social trends, moods and especially conflicts that politicians prefer to remain undiscussed until they break out into the open. “Writers represent reality in such a way that their readers can instantly visualize a world and recognize themselves inside it. They operate on a plane that is both objective and subjective, creating inventories of the emotional interiors of individual lives throughout history.”

If states could learn to read novels as a kind of literary seismograph, Wertheimer argues, they could perhaps identify which conflicted are on the verge of exploding into violence, and intervene to save maybe millions of lives.

To find out more about the techniques that Wertheimer and his team used, you can take a look at the in-depth article from the Guardian

 

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