Where They Are Now

Back in the Bush era, we had one progressive radio show – Air America – and it was my link to sanity in an insane time.

Megan was in high school and when I made the drive to pick her up, I was usually listening to Air America, particularly during the 2004 election cycle. It was during this cycle that I really began to understand that the election would probably be stolen because Diebold – which supplied thousands of the voting machines in the election – was owned by Bush supporters, diehard Republicans. And in the election booth that November, I punched out Kerry’s name – and Bush’s name came up. I did it twice more and the same thing happened.  But that’s another story!

Air America was on the air from March 2004 to January 2010, when it declared bankruptcy. It featured an outstanding lineup of talent: author Thom Hartmann, Ed Schultz, Randi Rhodes, Mike Malloy, Al Franken, and Stephanie Miller. All of these people were bright and articulate and politically savvy on the radio.  What’s interesting about them is where some of them are now, in 2014.

Al Franken, a Minnesota native,  is now a U.S. senator – and yes, he’s still outrageously progressive. Ed Schultz hosts nightly The Ed Show on MSNBC, and his focus is on middle class Americans, unions, the working Joes. Thom Hartmann, who should have his own show on MSNBC, continues to write compelling books. Randi Rhodes is on Sirius Radio. Stephanie Miller, who is funny and really knows her politics, has her own show on Sirius Satellite Radio. She should have her own show on MSNBC.

Rachel Maddow is in a class apart. She now hosts the Rachel Maddow Show on MSNBC, at the prime time slot – 9 p.m. Maddow holds a doctorate from Oxford. She’s openly gay. She’s upbeat, has a sense of humor, and she’s pretty, but not in the way the Fox News anchors are – who all look like Stepford wives.

Unlike Keith Olbermann, who first had her on his show as a guest, she invites people with opposing points of view. Sometimes they show up, most of the time they don’t – because they know they can’t defend themselves against the kind of investigative journalism that she does. You know, FACTS.

Maddow and her team scour local newspapers and websites for stories that might hold national interest and implications. Recently, she was the only national news person to report on the closure of the George Washington Bridge between New York and New Jersey, the busiest bridge (so they say) in the world.This scandal, which involves Chris Christie, the current New Jersey governor, may crush his shot at the White House in 2016 and could put him in federal prison for a number of crimes.

As Christie told it today in his TWO HOUR press conference, he was basically clueless (sure), and feels betrayed (uh-huh) by the people he trusted, some of whom he has since fired. There are more than 2,000 pages of emails available now on this bridge closure – which  tied up traffic for four days and had human repercussions. Emergency teams couldn’t reach a woman in cardiac arrest and investigative teams could delve into the disappearance of a child. That’s just for starters.

For the last several nights, Maddow’s show has focused exclusively on the Christie bridge scandal and has uncovered a pattern of Christie bullying and intimidation that smacks of the worst kind of politics: cross me, say something negative about me, and you’ll pay the price.

There are several theories about why Christie retaliated against the town of Fort Lee, New Jersey. But the bottom line here is that Christie appears to have used a federal facility – a bridge – for political gain and that’s a federal offense. I would like to see this blowhard in prison. But because he’s claiming he knew nothing about any of this (really? You’re that incompetent as a boss?) and because he’s a slick talker who may be the Republican party’s best hope for a presidential candidate in 2016, he will probably draw the DO NOT GO TO JAIL CARD.

As Rob points out, our governor, Rick Scott, became governor in spite of the fact that he was charged with Medicare fraud and belongs in prison.

So there you have it, American politics on the down and dirty side. I’m sure there ‘s a synchro in here somewhere, and eventually it will be found – by us, by you, by someone. And when it surfaces, we’ll post it.

In the mean time, though, we have this thought: everything in life appears to be political, even if you are not.

 

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Mike Perry’s Book Synchros

 People have different criteria about selecting books or deciding if they’re worthy of reading.  If I’m browsing in a bookstore and find a book that interests me, I’ll often read the first page and the last and if it feels right, I’ll buy the book.

Other people buy on the basis of the cover or the back cover copy and reviews.  And still others determine the book’s quality by opening it at random and reading whatever is there. But Mike Perry  takes a look at any page with a 6, 7, 67, or 76, his numbers.

Recently he posted about this on his blog, where the other number involved was a 3.

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from Mike:

I’ve been reading Rob & Trish’s book The Synchronicity Highway (and very good it is too). I’ve only got up to reading to page 49 but, as I sometimes do with books, I flicked through the pages quickly before I started reading to see if anything caught to my attention. It did.

I found that Trish and Rob have mentioned my synchro experiences three times in the book – and there’s a strange thing about the pages they are on.

The first in on page 7, so when looking at the book pages 6 and 7 are open (67 being one of the important numbers in my life).

The second synchro is on page 67!  “Bound to be a third,” I thought …

… and there it was on pages 105 and 106. Then it dawned on me 1+5=6 and 1+6=7 – so a third 67.

Now some will say things like this only happen because we are looking for patterns within our lives, but surely there is more to it than this. Otherwise why would so many of us say things happen in threes.

Are these threes perhaps pre-programmed as an attention seeking novelty item by the ‘Universe’? A bit too fanciful for you? Okay, maybe we create the third with our belief that there will be a third.

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Numbers, matrices of messages. That’s how it seems to me.

In the end, isn’t it all about belief?

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Dolphin Returns Home

 

 

In September, our daughter, Megan, had her first art exhibit.  Our friend, Nancy Atkinson, whom we met through blogging and actually met in person in Oregon several years ago, bought one of the paintings. She asked Megan to ship it to Hawaii, where she and her family own a condo. She thought the dolphin would fit perfectly there.

However, Mercury was retrograde from October 21 to November 10 and I had reservations about mailing the painting during that time. In astrology, the planet Mercury rules travel and communication. Three times each year it turns retrograde – and appears to move backward through the zodiac. During Mercury retrogrades,  there are often travel snafus, communication goes haywire, computers misbehave. It’s wise not to sign contracts during a retrograde period unless you don’t mind re-negotiating when Mercury has turned direct.  It’s a good time to review and revise and re-think plans.

But Nancy was going to be in Hawaii only during the retro period, so Megan went ahead and mailed it in late October.  She was told the painting would arrive at Nancy’s place around November 2 or 3. When the 3rd passed and the painting hadn’t arrived, Nancy emailed me and I asked Megan to check with UPS. They said the painting was still en route.

On the 9th Nancy and her husband flew back home. The painting had never arrived, even though UPS indicated it had been delivered. She called the concierge of their condo in Hawaii, who hadn’t yet seen it but said he would keep an eye out for it.

On January 6, Megan called and said, “Mom, you aren’t going to believe what I got in the mail. The dolphin painting! UPS said it was returned because it was never picked up!”

Mercury retro in action. The dolphin had returned home.  The painting traveled more than 9,000 miles from Orlando, Florida to Maui, Hawaii, and will now travel another 2,500 miles plus to Nevada.  May its journey come to a peaceful end!

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What Would You Do If…

These conversations are rarely pleasant but  in the greater scheme of things are probably necessary.

Rob: What will you do if… I die tomorrow. Or next week. Or next month.

 Rob and I were in the car when he said this, returning from a trip to Whole Foods. For our international friends, Whole Foods is an organic market  where so many samples of foods are set out that you can graze your way through lunch and dinner free of charge. We go there once a week or so because they carry foods that no one else does. Strange conversations seem to occur to and from Whole Foods.

 “What’s that supposed to mean?” I asked. “You planning on checking out?”

“Well, no, but would you know how to access our bank records?”

Not long after we got married, Rob took over finances. I was always tardy on paying bills, I am terrible at math, our credit sucked. I was happy to turn this over to someone else.

“I would go immediately to your  computer. I would figure it out.”

Not long after Rob and I first met, we had a reading with a Cuban psychic named Aura. She lived in a small apartment in Miami’s Little Havana, didn’t speak much English, and her predictions turned out to be startling accurate.

She told me I would become Rob’s second wife and would be married to him for a very long time. She said I would write many books under an abbreviated “genderless” name (TJ MacGregor) and that we would be creative partners. All that is true. She said I would die when I was 74 – don’t know about that one yet!- and that Rob would marry for a third time, but his second wife wolds always be the love of his life. I really liked that part.

So when Rob asked this particular question, my thoughts immediately went way back to Aura. “I’ll kill you if you die first,” I said. “That’s not how Aura said it would happen.”

It’s not that I believe 74 is the checkout date just because a psychic way back said it was.  What was important was the idea of it all, the way our lives ultimately play out.  I always suspected that my mother would die before my dad did but was sure of it when she was diagnosed with Alzheimer’s, her way of exploring the afterlife without actually having to die. My dad was more intellectual in that sense,  he had to be able to mentally connect the dots first.    And he eventually did and died five years after my mother did. 

But the exploration Rob and I have taken during our 30 years together  has been radically different from that of our parents. We have explored and written about many  aspects of psychic phenomena. So it’s not death that either of us fear. I’m not even sure if fear figures into it.  We all die. Death is  the ultimate unknown.

If consciousness researchers are right , then we choose our deaths in the same way we choose the circumstances of our birth and it may nor may not have anything to do with genetic predisposition. Free will. Choice. When we came into this life, we knew where the chips lay. And at each step in our journeys, we make choices, we exert our free will.

When you talk about this stuff openly, it comes down to this:

Trish: If you die first, I wouldn’t stay in our house.

Rob: Me, neither.

Trish: I would move closer to Megan.

Rob: Let’s go eat that vegetarian lasagna you bought for lunch.

And so this very strange and important conversation ends over food, what we will eat for lunch.

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Ancient Arrow strikes home

Great, a story about a mysterious archaeological site with an alien connection. Right up our alley. But is it true or a hoax?

Probably the latter, but a complicated one. It’s different from our last post on the mass death of black birds, which was was clearly a satire fake newspaper web site. Like the stories in the Onion, you can be tricked once in a while, at least for a few minutes. Then you get it. It’s a joke.

Not so with the Ancient Arrow Project article, which I’ve linked here.  The author clearly wants you to believe. There’s nothing tongue in cheek about it.

In brief, the story is this: In 1972, a group of hikers exploring a remote canyon in New Mexico discovered peculiar pictographs and artifacts. An archaeologist from the University of New Mexico assumed the artifacts and wall paintings were made by a nomadic Native Americans since there was no evidence of a village.

“There were, however, two very puzzling questions. All but one of the artifacts could be dated to the 8th century AD. The exception, known as the ‘compass’ artifact, appeared to be an unusual form of technology, and was found among more typical artifacts like pottery and simple tools. The compass was covered in strange hieroglyphic symbols, some of which were also found on the pottery. Secondly, the pictographs that were found in the area had inexplicably appeared, and they were strikingly different than any of the other native petroglyphs or rock art found in the Southwest or the entire continent for that matter.”

Because of the two anomalies, the site was taken over by the National Security Agency, and the project was dubbed Ancient Arrow. “It was decided that these artifacts might suggest a pre-historical, extraterrestrial presence on earth, and that the NSA had the appropriate agenda and wherewithal to initiate a full-scale, scientific expedition to determine the nature and significance of the site.

None of the experts could decipher the pictographs and the project was soon sidelined and remained top secret. Then in 1994, a landslide exposed an entrance into a cavern containing 23 chambers. Each chamber featured more mysterious rock art messages and in the final chamber an object was discovered, an optical disc, that seemed to be dormant alien technology.

At that point the project was handed over to a secret ‘black bag’ group called Advanced Contact Intelligence Organization (ACIO), which “organized an inter-disciplinary research team to assess the exact nature of the site and attempt to discover additional artifacts or evidence of an extraterrestrial visitation.”

Eventually, the code was broken using the Sumarian language as the key, and the story came to light about the WingMakers,  a group of humans from 750 years in our future. “They claimed to be culture bearers, or ones that bring the seeds of art, science, and philosophy to humanity. They had left behind a total of seven time capsules in various parts of the world to be discovered according to a well-orchestrated plan. Their apparent goal was to help the next several generations of humans develop a global culture; a unified system of philosophy, science, and art.”

In early 1997, the ACIO scientist who had originally discovered the access code for the optical disc and translated 8,000 pages of information, became convinced that the ACIO would never share the discovery with the public, and he decided to take action. He provided documents to a journalist, who wrote the story as it appeared on the Internet in 1998.

* * *

I was fascinated, but wondered why I’d never heard about it, why hadn’t it been the focus of  an episode of Ancient Aliens? Why hadn’t a book been published as was the case of Hunt for the Skinwalker,  regarding alien/paranormal encounters on a ranch in Utah linked to Native American culture.

The story is complicated because the WingMakers web site has created a new version, altering the original story. The new version has been called disinformation. But maybe the entire saga is just that…a fake story intended to misguide and mislead and keep the public believing that the idea of an alien presence is bogus.

I sent the article to a couple of friends with insight into intelligence programs.  Joe McMoneagle, a former government remote viewer (aka psychic spy), was kind enough to read the article and respond. Here’s what he had to say:

“What makes this totally unbelievable is the fact that this is so far outside the mission statement of the NSA that it isn’t even feasible in the wildest sense of the word. If anyone was involved with this stuff, it would be the same folks who are mixed up with the documents released from the late 1940’s, early 1950’s – MAGIC Documents. A group so secret no one knows they exist [now there is a surprising story.] I think this is a good tale, but totally bogus, Rob.”

I also sent it to Peter Levenda, author of the Sinister Forces series and a genuinely mysterious fellow who has shown up in our lives from time to time. Here is what Peter had to say:

Yeah, this looks like a hoax.  There are no such ‘doctors’ that I can find, and their institute doesn’t seem to exist except on the Net. However, this dovetails with an email I received yesterday…about an archaeological find in the Grand Canyon….The whole thing is very hinky, but the archaeological site, etc seemed like we were talking about a similar phenomenon just from different angles. Weird!”

The Ancient Arrow Project seems to be a hoax, but one that leaves a lot of unanswered questions.

 

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Fool me once…

…then fool me again.

And it almost happened. At least for a few minutes, I took two recent bogus Internet stories seriously, probably because I wanted them to be true so I could write cool blog posts.

But the first thing in both cases that alerted me that these stories might be made up was a little question in the back of my head.  Why hadn’t I heard about this before now? Well, interesting things do happen that we miss, even if our antennas for news of the weird are usually extended. And these two bits of news definitely fit  in that category.

The first one comes from a little known news outlet called Rock City Times in Arkansas. I noticed the link to this story on a podcast website on Jan. 2. It was fresh news from New Year’s Eve. In fact, the event in question—a massive die-off of red-winged black birds that fell from the sky over a one-mile area– occurred close to the stroke of midnight. There have been other mass deaths of birds reported and it seemed that this one was the most recent. I was hooked…well, at least for a while.

To my astonishment, the story said that this was the fourth year in a row that red-winged black birds had fallen in mass on New Year’s eve on this town. I did not know that. But this event was far and above the worst case ever reported. Supposedly, 18 million black birds simultaneously plummeted to their deaths. How, I wondered, had they come up with the number so quickly?

The story quoted a local couple who had witnessed the plague of dead birds, and a meteorologist who said several clouds of birds had been spotted on radar before the big plunge. An ornithologist suggested the death-dive indicated that this species of black bird was going extinct, that a mere 500 red-winged black birds remained. How did he know that?  Somehow, the scientist even knew that the birds had come from distant places, turning the small town of Bebe, Arkansas into Jonestown of the bird world.

Amazing, I thought. Great story for the blog, and started putting together a quick post when suddenly my computer froze. My Mac Pro had never simply stopped functioning. I couldn’t type. I couldn’t escape the page. I couldn’t do anything but restart the computer. Fortunately, that worked and I was back in action. But before returning to the blog post, I was distracted by various household ditties and it was a few hours before I sat back down and I discovered my post had vanished. And I’d just told Trish I’d found a very interesting story earlier, but oddly, very oddly, I couldn’t remember a thing about it.

I clicked onto my Internet history for the day, and fortunately I wasn’t hallucinating. There it was—the Rock City Times story of massive death of blackbirds. This time I took a closer look and noticed that below the name of the publication was a curious line: Arkansas’ 2nd Most Unreliable News Source.

I realized I’d been had by a satirical web site, a protégé of The Onion, which has produced fake news for years and fooled untold numbers of readers…at least for awhile.

Fortunately, synchronicity saved me.  My computer simply froze at the moment of truth. The post was never written. But, hey, at least I got something out of it—an alternative post about how stupid I almost was.

I’ve left out the other part of the story. Yes, another web site almost blind-sided me earlier that same day. It features a really interesting, well-written article that amazingly combined my interest in archaeology and the UFO/alien scenario. I’ll go into that one in the next day or two. Fool me twice…and my computer stops working.

 

 

 

 

 

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Appreciation & the Dog Park

Many spiritual texts talk about appreciation, about how it’s a powerful aspect of mindfulness, of living in the moment. So when Rob and I arrived at the dog park the other day, I asked myself how I could appreciate the dog park.

Okay. First off, our golden retriever loves coming here. This place is where he gets to run free – no leash – and to hunt for squirrels along the fence and to chase balls and Frisbee that Rob throws him. This park is where, during the hot summer months, someone brings plastic kid swimming pools and all the dogs plop down in these pools to cool off. The dog park is where you, the dog, are allowed to be, well, a dog.

Noah has a routine once he enters the park. I can appreciate that. I have my routines, too. His routines involve smells; mine involve words. Both get us to that same place.

Some days, Noah is interested only in squirrels, parallel to the days when my interests are primarily with whatever I’m writing. Other days, Noah is strictly focused on the ball or Frisbee that Rob tosses him. Or, he wants to mingle with  dogs and could care less about ball and Frisbees.  On those days, I tend to receive more emails, Twitter followers, more Facebook friend requests.

Then there are the days when Noah throws his weight around, 110 pounds of muscle and speed who dislikes Boxers, German Shepherds, and large poodles who get in his face. On those days, I tend to feel impatient or irritated and he reflects it.

On this particular day, though, Noah was most interested in sniffing his way along the periphery of the fence, as he’s doing in the above photo. He’s presumably hunting for squirrels, and Rob and I followed him.

The acacia trees were in full, glorious bloom, the branches hanging low enough so that I could actually touch the flowers. One of these blossoms captivated me and I stood there a few moments, touching it, admiring the colors, appreciating the perfection of it all. Then I snapped a photo of it with my phone and it became the thing I appreciated most about that day.

A week or so later, we were at the dog park after a big thunderstorm and heard the squawking of wild parrots. They apparently like the seeds in one of the trees that provide shade for the humans and I snapped this photo:

So now my daily habit is to find at least one thing to appreciate. When I do that, my perceptions are altered and everywhere I look, I see something or someone to appreciate.

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The Doppelgangers: Rob and Ed

 

 When Megan was home during the Christmas holidays, we did a girl thing that involved four hours at Angie’s place, for hair stuff. Angie has the lead story in chapter 6 of our new book, The Synchronicity Highway.

Angie is now living with Ed, the Brazilian guy in her synchro, who bears an uncanny resemblance to Jean Luc Picard in Star Trek. The hours he keeps are probably as weird as Jean Luc’s, too. Ed gets up at 4:30 a.m. to deliver bread to various large markets, and gets off around noon, then goes back to bed for several hours, wakes up for the evening, and goes back to bed around 9:30 or 10 p.m. But hey, when you’re directing the Enterprise through the outer reaches of space, your hours are going to be weird.

While Megan and I were at Angie’s apartment and Ed emerged from the bedroom from his afternoon siesta and smiled hello, I saw the resemblance to Jean Luc in the smile, the bald head, the eyes.

“Okay, here’s a weird thing,” I said to Angie. “At Starbucks, Home Depot, at random places, people tell Rob that he resembles Walter in Breaking Bad.”

 And you know, he does. Bald is in these days, But ladies, be forewarned. Bald does not understand why you spend money getting your hair cut, tended to, dyed, straightened.

For Rob and Walter, Ed and Jean Luc, we have a Doppelganger explanation. It’s not just the bald heads. For Ed and Jean Luc, the similarity lies in the smile, I think. For Rob and Walter, I think the similarity lies in the eyes. It’s weird. I’m not sure sure what Doppelgangers are in the grander scheme of things,  but there’s no question that they exist.

 Just ask Mike Perry , whose Doppelganger experiences we wrote about in The Synchronicity Highway. 

 

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Clicking is Seeing

If you click the link below, you’ll see a video of a man who clicks his tongue to see. He’s called the Bat Man.

echolation

 

 

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Animals in Our Lives

I take a lot of photos of our pets and the other animals in our area and in our travels. Some of them make me laugh out loud, others drive home the point that animals live so completely in the moment that their capacity for joy seems infinite. Here are some of my favorites:

That’s Noah, retrieving the morning newspaper

Copper, our neighbor’s cat, looking quite regal in the yard fountain

Nika and Noah, chilling together

Nika and Noah, true love

Simba and Powder, sniffin’ butts, kitty style

Nika, helping Rob drive

Megan & a goat by side of the road in Costa Rica

Hey, humans! Wait for us! Florida Keys

Cuban tree frog paying homage to frog pastie on Rob’s office window

Ball!

Black goose & Megan, Orlando

SQUIRREL!

Stephanie, the macaw of Arenal, Costa Rica

Megan & the sparrow hawk of aruba

Kali, the conure

the owl in the Amazon whom we rescued for a tube of lipstick

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