Another Dog Park Story

The place where dogs fly…

***

Okay, some of you may be getting tired of these dog park synchro/stories. But, I promise, this one isn’t about politics. By the way, that’s Nika on the ground, with the ball in her mouth, and Lily the pug leaping for another ball above her.  And oh, this picture hasn’t been photo shopped, as one man on Rob’s facebook suggested about the pic of Noah. I mean, really, these are dogs, not UFOs; who would bother or have the time to photo shop something like this?

++

So here’s what happened. With summer already here and the afternoon thunderstorms a given, we’ve been trying to get to the dog park before the skies open up. Today we got there around 4:15, not too many people there.

Karin and Colleen are sitting on a bench in the shade and their dogs are crowded around them. Hey, they aren’t fools. The sun is hot and the shade is the place to be. The dogs: Starr, a Corgie, and Cody, a husky, belong to Karin; Colleen owns Bronson, Thunder, and Rip.

Colleen has been unemployed for the last year, her unemployment just ran out, and she has been dog sitting, which means the pooches in her care come to the park twice a day and eat a lot of treats in between. Good deal for them, good deal for Colleen, whose owners pay her.

Karin inherited Cody, which was her son’s dog, and what a trickster he is, loveable and mischievous.”Hey,” Karin says. “Where’ve you been?”

“Just busy,” I reply.

“You guys off to see Megan this weekend?”

“You bet. We  want to use our free passes at Disney before her internship ends. We’re going to spend a night in Cassadaga first and ask a psychometrist to read a vial of holy water.”

Judging by the look on Karin’s face – and Colleen’s – I suddenly realize how strange this sounds. Oh hey, yeah, off with our holy water to see what a psychic says about it.Huh? What holy water? WTF are you talking about? I can see these questions on their faces. So I rapidly backtrack.

“A guy in Montreal thinks he may have been abducted. By, you know, aliens. We did some blog posts on it. He has been carrying holy water around with him for a year, as a means of protection. Anyway, we’ve put together a proposal, Aliens in the Backyard, about the abduction experience – his and those of some other individuals.”

Uh-oh. Colleen’s expression screams, HUH? Karin murmurs, “Wow, you lead an interesting life.”

And I haven’t even told them anything else about it. I suddenly realize, oh duh, that in this particular area, these kinds of ideas don’t register for most people. Maybe if we lived in Sedona or Santa Fe or San Francisco,  it would be a different story. Or maybe it’s more about mindset than about  place.

These events happened on Wednesday, May 23, the day before we met with Kathy, the Cassadaga psychometrist who read the vial of holy water that Charles Fontaine of the Quebec encounters carried for a year after his UFO encounter. We’ve written about Kathy before.  In the next couple of days, we’ll post some of Kathy’s impressions  about the vial of holy water and the Quebec encounter.

 

Posted in synchronicity | 10 Comments

10 Signs of Spiritual Awakening

These are somewhat basic, but good reminders. Send to your friends. And don’t forget #10!

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=txTsbeuY5gM&feature=email

Posted in synchronicity | 10 Comments

Name Synchros

(from soul cards)

It’s not uncommon to meet someone whose first name is the same as your own. In Spanish, such a person is called your “tacayo.”  But have you ever met someone whose first and last name is the same as yours?

The odds of this happening are probably dependent on how common your last name is. My maiden name, for instance, is Janeshutz, so it’s unlikely I’ll ever meet a Trish Janeshutz. But I already know there are a few Trish MacGregors out there; I’ve seen their names on Facebook.

Here’s an odd story from Christine Chamber that addresses this strange thing about name synchros. In some ways, it reminds me of stories about twins separated at birth, who subsequently meet years later and discover all sort of parallels in their lives – like yesterday’s post!

++

Not long after we moved to St. Augustine, I opened my first bank account and learned that another Christine Chamber lived in our town. Her husband was a sheriff’s deputy and her family was old St. Augustine residents. Here’s the bombshell: in 1989, on the front page of our local newspaper, there was a report of a bad traffic accident. Christine Chamber was involved but not seriously injured.

From that article, I learned she was a nurse who worked at Flagler (I worked Home Health FOR Flagler); the auto she was driving was the same MAKE, MODEL, YEAR, and COLOR of my old car; and, she is my age. I was blown away. What are the chances that both of us would have the same name, be the same age, share the same profession, drive a brown sedan of the same model and year? I received a lot of calls from folks thinking it was ME in the wreck. Nope. It was her. Have we ever met? Not yet. But I plan to try to do that one day. I’d like to know what she looks like.

 

Posted in names, synchronicity | 13 Comments

Identical synchros

These twin stories have been around for a long time. But this one certainly drives home the point that twins may be ore connected within Indra’s net that even they suspect!

Posted in synchronicity | 16 Comments

Insights @ the Dog Park

Noah, leaping for a ball!

++

We’ve written about our dog park before, usually in relation to U.S. politics. Well, this entry is entirely different. Just books and authors and, of course, dogs.

When Nika was younger, we used to take her and Noah into a part of the park intended for smaller dogs. Here, they played Frisbee and catch the ball with Lily, a funny, very focused pug (that’s her to the left of Noah), and Willow, a border collie, whose partial body and tail are visible in the photo.  One afternoon, we dog people stood around and talked about stocks with Ralph, who was once a broker on Wall Street, and Cassie, who owns Willow and tends someone’s  horses.

Cassie is one of those women whose presence tells you she considers her dog, Willow, and maybe all dogs and animals, as a lot of notches above humans. She’s originally from New Jersey, and is a skilled horse person who has made horses her profession. Here where we live, she tends four horses that belong to a wealthy person, that’s’ all we know about her.

This area was built with equestrians in mind. They compete, they play polo, they are pro jumpers and Olympian trainers.  Tommy Lee Jones owns a home here – and his own polo team. Bruce Springsteen lives here part-time because his daughter is an equestrian jumper. For a while, Madonna rented a place and so did Bill Gates. I don’t know if either of them are equestrians, but it was rumored that the chopper we saw flying in over the Aero Club every afternoon belonged to Gates, who had rented a house here for the winter.   But until this particular afternoon, I didn’t know that a famous writer also lives here.

“We’re staying here this summer because my boss has another book to write,” Cassie said.

My antenna twitched.  “Your boss is a writer? Of what?”

Cassie looked embarrassed. “Hell if I know. I’ve never read any of her books.”

“What genre?” I asked. “Does she write romance, science fiction, suspense, paranormal, women’s fiction, or what?”

Cassie frowned. “Mystery and suspense, I guess.”

“What’s her name?”

Tami Hoag.”

I nearly swallowed my tongue. Tami Hoag, like Stephen King, shines in her field. Her writing is tight, her plots are complex, her characters are people we like. “I would love to get a blurb for her for my next book, Ghost Key.” I blurt this and am, frankly, shocked and embarrassed. Never, in thirty years of writing, have I ever been so forward, blunt, and grossly obvious.  And Cassie, gem that she is, tells me to drop her an email and she’ll forward it to Tami.

So I do. And I tell my friend, writer Ed Gorman,  about it and he jokingly says that he would have held Cassie hostage until Tami had to ride to her rescue and give your book a blurb. Ed isn’t kidding and that speaks volumes about the value of a blurb from someone like Tami Hoag.

Stephen King gave The Hunger Games a glowing blurb, and that book went on to become a NYT bestseller and an enormously profitable film. Of course, it helps that the trilogy deserves accolades.

What’s interesting about Hoag is that she’s also an Olympic competitor. That’s part of the reason she employs Cassie. And being a competitor at that level obviously means  you’re serious about what you do. I emailed my request, then later gave Cassie a galley of the book. A few days  later, she came over to me at the dog park and says, “Okay, I gave Tami the galley you gave me and if she doesn’t blurb it I’ll kill her.”

Not long after, she reported that Tami looked at the galley then gestured at the pile of books next to her desk. “You see this? These are all the books my publisher asked me to blurb. I can’t read one more book. I’ve go to finish the book I’m writing.”

What I took away from this whole thing is pretty simple: writers  who are now in the upper one or two percent were once in the lower one or two percent. They are under tremendous pressure to produce something new because these writers are the ones who probably sustain the publishing industry and pay the salaries of the editors who give manuscripts a thumbs up or thumbs down.

I heard a story,  maybe a writers’ urban legend, that when Stephen King visited the office of NAL (Signet, Penguin, lots of imprints) he moved up and down the hall, pointing at this editor, that editor. “I pay your salary and yours and yours…” And this image of King, a master story teller, made me laugh so hard my ribs actually hurt. It’s not even funny. But I can envision King doing that.

The other detail I took away from this experience is that Cassie, Tami Hoag’s horse whisperer, is a really cool woman who understands horses and dogs in ways the rest of us don’t.  When we see her in the afternoons at the dog park, she and Willow, are playing with the blue ball that is the center of his existence right then, in the NOW, and I am reminded that my life isn’t just about writing and publishing. Writers write, artists paint, musicians create, singers sing,  actors act, we all have some creative compulsion that drives us.  But it’s never the sum total of who they are.

Posted in synchronicity | 34 Comments

Meet Einstein

… a most amazing parrot!

Posted in synchronicity | 8 Comments

Anderson Cooper’s ‘360’ circles around UFOs

We don’t see many programs on UFOs in the mainstream media. But since Anderson Cooper’s ‘360’ featured a half-hour segment in late April,  it’s worth analyzing what he presented. The segment was called “Do you Believe in Space Aliens?”

I guess the term ‘space aliens’ was used to distinguish the subject from border-crossing aliens. That’s understandable, but the term also limits the possibility of where UFOs and their alien crew are coming from. Sure, (outer) space is a possibility. But maybe they are inter-dimensional, maybe they are us coming the future. Who knows, maybe they’re from the past, a destroyed high tech culture, ie. Atlantis, that developed time travel. Maybe there is no one answer about who they are or where they are from.

Anderson Cooper’s story on April 24 focused on UFO sightings from 2008 that were witnessed outside of Philadelphia in Bucks County. Anderson invited an eyewitness who explained how she was awakened by her growling dog to discover glowing lights above her house. It was shortly followed by a sprinkling of metallic-like glitter on her tree, making her think “it was snowing in July.” Apparently, she feared being ridiculed later on so she only used her first name, Denise. Actually, the ridicule would begin within minutes while she was on national television.

But first  Cooper introduced Pennsylvania state Mutual UFO Network director John Ventre to talk about what happened to the tree.

Ventre said MUFON sent leaves from the affected tree to two different labs, both of which reported “high levels of magnesium and boron,” two to three times higher than controlled samples detected on neighboring trees. Furthermore, the leaves had produced anthocyanin, which Ventre accurately described as a plant’s natural defense from heat and radiation. But were those levels of anthocyanin excessive or unnatural? And what gives with the elevated magnesium and boron?

As one Internet critic noted: “This is the part where you bring in one of the lab analysts, right? Or a botanist, maybe?” Time to dig deeper into the physical evidence, right? Nope.

Instead, Cooper brings in a couple of abductees, who have nothing to do with the Pennsylvania story, then debunker John Nickell, who dismisses Denise as a misguided person who saw Jupiter shining in her bedroom window.

“So Jupiter dumped stuff on my tree,” Denise wondered, “is that what you’re saying?”

No, Nickell countered, “I expect the stuff on your tree was, probably, you saw some sand or something in the light.”

Right. But there were still a few minutes left, time to find out more about the hard evidence, the boron or the magnesium or the anthocyanin.  But, no, AC brings on a psychic to talk about star families.

Oh, well. Nice try. But the bottom line was–as usual with this subject in the mainstream media–keep it light and entertaining. Don’t get too serious.

All that said, I want to introduce readers to a blogger from the mainstream media, logging on the site of a daily newspaper, about UFOs. It was that log, called De Void, where I first learned about Anderson Cooper’s UFO report. De Void is a web log from the Herald Tribune of Sarasota, Florida, and is written by Billy Cox. I love the sub-title of De Void:  The Mainstream Media’s Lonely UFO Web Log.

Good going, Billy.

 

Posted in synchronicity | 11 Comments

UFOs in Fresno?

There are three videos here and the second  has some of the clearest images, in daylight.  But all three of them really beg the question: what are these things?

 

Posted in synchronicity | 7 Comments

Quebec, P.S…Spying on the Spies

One of the advantages of the blogging is that there are several means of observing who is coming onto your blog. One in particular, Statcounter, is free and pulls up quite a bit of info on who’s coming on, where they are coming from, what they are looking for. Often times, we get people just looking for particular images, such as tiger or dolphin, the co-exist bumper sticker (that’s a popular one) or… girls in prom dresses holding chickens. Yes, we have gotten multiple search hits on the latter. And we deliver, too!

Meanwhile, we occasionally get hits from interesting sources, such as the White House or the Navy or the Department of Defense. Frequently, such hits come after a topical post.

However, what’s really unusual is what happened a few days ago. Someone working for the Royal Canadian Mounted Police in Ontario spent eight hours on our blog. An entire work shift, 8:30-4:30. They were very interested in the Quebec Encounter posts, downloading everything. We noticed that as soon as they went offline, someone else from Ontario, a city called Timmons, came on and continued pursuing the same posts.

We let Charles know about this investigation–theirs and ours!– and asked him what he thought. It was Charles’ UFO encounter from March 2011 and the aftermath that was the topic of those posts. He believes it was an authorized action, but that the RCMP typically do not investigate UFO reports. He believes an order came from higher up, possibly from a U.S. agency.

“If a Federal worker would be found on a blog without any reason all day long, he would lose his job. That person was given an order to find out everything available about the encounter,” Charles wrote.

“I believe they are looking for us. Not because we are criminals, but because they would like to search our backyard – even though a year has passed. They are aware of our physical problems, the headaches, so they know that we may be been irradiated. They want to find out more.”

Charles also said that he has no interest in discussing the event with the RCMP or any other government agency and face possible public scrutiny. He wants people to know what happened, but he doesn’t want his family exposed to ridicule.

Our sense was to observe the RCMP, but keep quiet. However, Charles asked us to post about it so they would know that we know they are watching in the hopes that they will not pursue the matter.  It’s like that funny E*Trade commercial with the baby using hand gestures and saying, “I’m watching you watching him.”

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in synchronicity, UFOs | 22 Comments

A chanting synchro

On a recent Sunday morning, I got up early to attend a two and a half hour Vedic chanting workshop with Nicolai Bachman of Santa Fe, New Mexico. He was appearing at the yoga studio where I teach meditation. I had some time before leaving for the workshop so I decided to read. I took out my Kindle and pulled up Supernatural, by Graham Hancock.

According to Hancock,  50,000 years ago mankind made an abrupt change from beings with no art, no sophisticated symbolism, no religion, into recognizable humans with creative abilities, innovative thinking, and contact with the spirit world.Hancock’s thesis is that this change in the human mind came about through the use of hallucinogenic plants. Rather than viewing the brain as an organ that creates fantastic images while under the stimulation of such plants, Hancock (and others) contend that the brain opens channels to other realities, hence contact with the spirit world, hence the birth of religion in its initial form of shamanism.

Writes Hancock: “By this reckoning, hallucinogens and other means of inducing altered states of consciousness work by temporarily ‘re-tuning’ the brain to pick up frequencies, dimensions and entities that are completely real in their own way but that are normally inaccessible to us.”

I read for about half an hour, then headed to the workshop. Nicolai began by going over pronunciations and tones of the letters of the Sanskrit alphabet. He also discussed some basics about Vedic chanting, noting that these chants are considered the oldest form of oral tradition on the planet, pre-dating written language.

We spent most of an hour focusing on one simple six-word chant. We repeated the six words over and over again, linearly and in various patterns, such as 1-2 1-2,  2-1  2-1,  2-3  2-3  3-2  3-2 etc, and 1-2-3  3-2-1  2-3-4  4-3-2, etc. It’s kind of complicated…and it goes on and on.

Here are those six words 1) osadhayah 2) sam 3) vadante 4) somena 5) saha 6) rajna. (Pronunciation and tone markings above some of the letters aren’t included.)

Now here’s the synchronicity. Here’s what the Osadhaya chant means:

Plants converse with soma, the king.

Before we started the chant, Nicolai explained that the ancients imbibed sacred plants that connected them with other dimensions and realities where they obtained knowledge. Of course, I thought,  ‘Wow, did I not just read that same thing in a text unrelated to Vedic chanting before coming here?’

So we began the chant, over and over and over, changing patterns, over and over and over. And I was out there in an altered, re-tuning the brain…without ayahuasca, imboga, or mescaline, just chant.

Posted in sound frequencies, synchronicity | 5 Comments