Romney: Ambivalence, Secrecy, and Why

This illustration depicts a pair of fish swimming in opposite directions. It’s the symbol for the sun sign, Pisces, one of two signs in astrology that is depicted by two of something. It happens to be the sun sign for Mitt Romney, born on March 12, 1947,  at 9:50 AM, in Detroit, Michigan.

Pisces individuals often have trouble making up their minds – their heads says one thing, their hearts scream another, thus the two fish are forever swimming away from each other.  This tendency is certainly evident in Romney. Known as the consummate flip-flopper, he holds one position today, the opposition position tomorrow. When confronted with his many flip-flops, he just laughs and denies that he said the opposite of what he’s saying right now. He seems to be oblivious to the fact that everything he has ever said as a public figure is recorded somewhere.

This ambivalence is glaringly prevalent in Romney’s approach to health care as a governor of Massachusetts and his platform about health care as a presidential candidate. When Romney was governor, he initiated mandatory health care for all residents of Massachusetts, probably his most outstanding feat as a politician. And Romney’s health care plan became the template for Obama’s health care plan. Romney, the  presidential candidate, promises to completely overturn Obamacare.

Huh? Go figure.

Well, the Obama campaign released an incredible ad today that highlights this ambivalence. “It tied the activities of Bain Capital to the death of a woman who lost her health care coverage as a result of her husband losing his job at GST Steel, one of the celebrated casualties of Bain’s business practices,” reports the Huffington Post (and every other news outlet).

Take a look:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=Nj70XqOxptU

The right-wing machine, of course, immediately came out against the ad – how scurrilous and nasty it is, one big fat lie. Yet,  on Fox News yesterday morning, Andrea Saul, a Romney spokesperson, blew this whole thing wide open by offering this defense of Romney: “To that point, if (the) people had been in Massachusetts, under Governor Romney’s health care plan, they would have had health care.”

WHAT?! Did she really say that? The right-wing machine went nuts. One conservative blogger said this was the moment when Romney had lost the election. Rush Limbaugh appeared to be on the verge of a stroke.

The left wing was instantly all over the story, noting the irony that Romney’s campaign has been forced to sweep his greatest feat as a politician under the rug, along with his undisclosed tax returns, his new home that features an elevator for his numerous cars,  and what his net worth actually is.

So while Rob and I were watching the news this evening, I suddenly blurted, “Pisces.

Rob’s hands went up into the air, pointing in opposite directions. “The two fish, swimming in opposite directions,” he said. “You should do a post on that.”

So I went online to look for Romney’s  natal chart.   Ambivalence is certainly part of the Pisces archetype. But even more to the point with Romney, I think, is his Scorpio moon. This sign for the moon is probably the most secretive in the zodiac. We will never know the full truth about Mitt. Never. We will never understand what possessed him to put his dog, Shamus, in a dog carrier on the roof of his car for a trip to Canada. We will never know what travesties he actually committed at Bain Capital. And we will never know how much dough he has parked offshore, how much he’s worth, or whether he has paid in dime in taxes for the last decade. We will never know what it’s necessary to know about any presidential candidate in order to make an informed choice in how we vote.

But because of what he did to his dog, Shamus, he has long since lost the vote of dog lovers everywhere, and as of 2009, the most recent figures I could find, that amounts to nearly 80 million people.

 

Posted in politicians, politics, synchronicity | 15 Comments

Smeagol, in Disguise

The digital revolution has created many companies that are reputable – and probably just as many that are not. As self-employed writers, we’ve been casting around for ways to keep pace with this rapid transformation and it’s been tricky. And the synchro here, I think, falls in the trickster domain. Hey, psstt, got something for you to check out, Trish and Rob, whispers Smeagol, from the shadows. And yes, on the surface, it looks pretty good. Then you dig a bit deeper and discover it’s mostly smoke and mirrors.

In 2005, my editor at the time, Kate Duffy, told me I needed to put up a website. Seven years ago, there were no companies – at least none that I knew of – where you could use their online software to create a site. So I paid a guy in New Jersey several thousand  to create a website for me. It was a pretty website, pleasing to the eye, and I could update it without having to pay him for every single update – which at that time was about 50 bucks a shot. But he rarely answered my emails and when, several years later, the landscape had changed, with  services cropping up with online software for creating websites, it was months before he transferred my domain names back to me.

I suspect that company is now out of business as there are many sites that offer online software for creating your own websites – and for a lot less than what I paid!  We use www.1and1.com for our two websites and our blog. Their prices are good, there are no hidden costs – and that’s important. We have published several of our out of print titles through smashwords, which is great if you can wade through their 80 plus pages of guidelines for formatting and know how to design a cover on your own. But if you don’t know how to do this – or don’t have the time –  they maintain a list of people who do know the ins and outs. The 3 titles I published through smashwords cost about $150 each and I used a wonderfully talented woman, Katrina Joyner. She scanned, formatted and designed great covers.

Around this time, my agent’s agency contracted with an outfit called Argo-Navis,  which bills itself as a company that brings your back list titles back into print – but for a very steep price. It would have cost me nearly $7,000 to bring some of my titles back into print through this company, and why would I do that when I could do it through smashwords for a fraction of what they were charging?  I wrote them off to greed and kept searching.

Then  along came Crossroad Press, who did everything Katrina did, everything that Argo-Navis did – for no upfront fee at all, and the split they offer is unheard of in publishing: 80/20, and that’s 80% of the cover price for the author. We did a post on them last month. In traditional publishing, the author receives between 8 and 15 percent of the cover price.  Rob and I signed for ten back list titles with David Wilson, who heads the company.

But because  I dislike having all my proverbial eggs in one basket, I kept researching. When I ran across Marcus Anthony’s webpage, where he’s got an actual store, I wrote him and asked a bunch of questions and decided to check it out. The site offers a friendly interface, you don’t have to know any html code to create a website. But their advertising is fraudulent.  They lead you to believe you can create a free website in moments, but the truth is that it took me five hours to realize that the thirty bucks I’d paid for the year, to create a webstore,  was just for the domain name. Really? I can buy a domain name from Go Daddy for ten bucks for an entire year.

I went onto their support forum – no phones, just echat- and spoke first to Erin, then to Tiffany – and learned absolutely nothing that I didn’t already know. Webs.com doesn’t have an app yet that can sell downloadable ebooks or PDF files and you have to manipulate your way around that flaw. It annoyed me that they don’t have phone support – whereas 1and 1 does. Marcus’ experience was obviously much different than mine. Erin and Tiffany weren’t helpful at  all.

On another recent search, I was looking for ways to publicize ebooks and ran across bookdaily. Sign up for free! You can upload a chapter of your book and they’ll send it out to their zillions of subscribers. I even found an article about them in Publishers Weekly, the industry magazine. So I signed up – and was then directed to PayPal. Turns out you can sign up for free – but you have to pay for them to send the chapter to their subscribers. In the finer print, I discover that the uploaded chapter doesn’t reach all that many people and isn’t worth what they’re charging. So there are numerous sites that advertise that their services are free, but they aren’t.

David Wilson from Crossroad sent me a link for unshelved, which is actually legit, prices spelled right out, and targets  librarians.

So it goes, as Vonnegut would say. Of course, stupid me, all of this took place while Mercury – the communication trickster – is retrograde. Sure, start something new while Mercury, your ruler moves backward through the zodiac. Sure, go right ahead – snicker, snort.

The retro ended shortly after this post went up.  Three cheers for Mercury turning direct!

 

 

 

Posted in authors, books, publishing, synchronicity | 6 Comments

Strangers in the Know

 

Golden Gate Bridge

This synchro is from a friend who works in a creative field but wishes to remain anonymous. It’s one of those powerful synchros that hits you smack in the face because of the odds involved,   life-affirming,  synchronicity on steroids. I have just one question about the story, which was pointed out by Bernard Beitman, who has a similar followup story. Can the Golden Gate Bridge be seen fro Golden Gate Park?

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My husband told me a synchronicity story this evening. He works with a man – let’s call him Jake – whose wife, Isabel,  had a brain tumor 10 years ago and had it surgically removed in San Francisco. Isabel was told she wouldn’t live to see her daughter walk.  It’s been ten years, and she has had to have the surgery a second time, and MRI’s every 3 months, but she’s still alive.

Jake and Isabel live where we do, in southern California, but went up to San Francisco for the weekend and decided to have a picnic at the Golden Gate Park.  They noticed a man there who was looking at the Golden Gate Bridge  and suddenly started crying. He looked harmless, but distressed, and Jake and Isabel  decided to try and talk to him.

The crying man, let’s call him Pete,  told Jake and Isabel that  his wife was in the hospital with a brain tumor. She was going to have an operation but Pete  didn’t think she was going to live.  Pete’s wife, Diane, had the SAME kind of tumor and the SAME doctor was going to operate on her who operated on Isabel, at the SAME hospital. Isabel told Pete that she lived through the surgery and was still kicking – and to have hope.  He felt very comforted by that chance encounter.

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I sent the synchro to Bernard Beitman,  a visiting professor of psychiatry at the University of Virginia. He’s writing a book on coincidences and I was curious to hear what he thought of this story. He sent me the following story, which he’s using in his book, in a chapter on health and coincidences. There are striking similarities:

A patient of mine, learning of my interest, described a very meaningful, coincidental encounter.

When 7 years old my son Peter became critically I’ll , and was diagnosed with leukemia. The onset was sudden, and it was quite a terrifying experience. 3 years later, just after my son had completed his treatments and declared healthy, I was back at the hospital, in the blood collection center to donate platelets….something I began doing regularly after Peter’s diagnosis. As I waited for an elevator, I overheard a woman close by down the corridor, who was clearly extremely distressed, talking on the phone. I heard her saying (to her husband?) that “they were running more tests”, and how brave “he” was being, and how frightened she was. She said “they are sure it’s leukemia” at which point she broke down in tears.

My elevator arrived, the door opened, and I walked in. As the door shut, I realized i had to go back …that I had to offer that woman some support. I knew I had heard enough to understand that she was feeling the same type of fear, helplessness , and despair I had experienced a few years back.  I went  to her. I realized that I was meant to  be at that place and at that time. I was meant to hear her, and meant to reach out.  Comforting that woman by sharing my experience was healing for each of us. I needed her just as much as she needed me. She needed another Mother…that had “been there”, to comfort her.  We connected, and I helped her through her difficult journey. She helped me  to establish a better sense of balance and fulfillment created by the opportunity help and to give back.

 

Posted in synchronicity | 20 Comments

The Reality Store

Dream #1, (Rob’s Dreams)

My attention was riveted to a luminous, circular object swirling down from the night sky. I held out my palms as the object descended in slow motion, and settled into my hands. I heard someone speaking in a firm voice. “The door to your future.”

I looked down at the circular object. It was a pie. I stuck my finger in it, tasted it. The voice spoke again: “The door to your future.” I accepted it. It made sense.

A loud buzzing sound pulled me from the dream back into my room. I patted the table twice before I found my travel alarm clock and stopped the buzzing. As I rubbed my eyes, the diaphanous filament connecting me with the dream faded. Before it was too late, I tugged on the thread of the memory. But now it didn’t make any sense. How is a pie the door to my future?

Dream #2

I’m working on a car. I’ve removed the frame and am studying the chassis. I see what’s wrong. I need a small washer-like part for one wheel. I call over a friend and ask him to help me put the frame back on. I tell him about the part I need. He says, “You need to go to the Reality Store. That’s where you’ll find it.”

“The Reality Store, where’s that?”

He gives me directions, mentioning three main roads to get there. I’m confused. I’ve never heard of any of them. The first one is Minority Way. I forget the second one, but the last one is Universe Drive.

Someone else approaches and tells me: “That part you need is going to be hard to find. Look in Division C of the Reality Store.”

Off I go in search of the Reality Store, but wake up before I arrive.

+++

The first dream is from a novel I wrote in 1987 called The Smoking Mirror. I wrote  it shortly before I was assigned to write I.J. & the Last Crusade for LucasFilm.  The second is a recent dream that seems quite metaphorical. The Reality Store was a very big place right over on Universe Drive. I guess you can find anything you desire there, if you know where to look. You might have to ask for help, for guidance.

 

 

 

 

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Silly synchro

‘Please don’t trade me for a microwave oven.’

You’ve heard of stupid dog tricks, right? Like the meditating pooch above. Well, there are also stupid synchro tricks, it seems. I had one happen to me recently. I glanced at a headline that said something about a microwave oven and a dog. The article was by a regular columnist in our daily paper. After reading the first paragraph, it occurred to me that I could’ve had the same thing happen to me.

It began with an ad from the Royal Palm Beach (FL) online Craigslist:

I need a Microwave, so will trade a Chihauhua mix puppy for one. Must be working and not too old!! 

Trading a puppy for a microwave? The columnist thought this was unusual, but when he investigated, he found out that the practice isn’t unusual. He noted that someone had recently traded a pet for patio work and that Craigslist was the place to trade your pet for household goods.

Did we try this trick? NO. But here’s the stupid synchro trick. Our twice-a-month housekeeper asked me the other day if I was interested in another dog. Her boyfriend, who has moved in with her, has a little dog that doesn’t get along with her dog. I said no thanks. We’re fine with Noah and occasionally with Nika joining us. But no more dogs.

Later, as she was working, she mentioned her college-aged daughter needed a microwave oven for her apartment. So she was going to look for a used one. As it turned out, we had Megan’s old microwave from college sitting out in the garage and in perfect condition. I told Nuvia that it was hers, and she didn’t even have to give me that dog for it!

So when I saw this headline a couple of days later: ‘Bowwow! Local pet-for-product swaps trendy,’ it caught my attention as a stupid synchro, a harmless trickster trick.

 

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Nika and the Pitt Bull

Fair warning: no synchro in this post. Well, maybe there is, buried somewhere.

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Our animal companions occupy a special place in our lives. They love us unconditionally, trust that we will love them back in kind and take care of their needs. In September 2011,  our daughter, Megan was living at home, and asked if she could adopt a puppy from a dog rescue organization in our area.  The puppy she settled on was a border collie/lab mix (we think) whom she named Nika.

Our golden retriever, Noah,  took to her instantly. They played together, slept together, and until she was big enough to stand up to bullies at the dog park, Noah defended her. A deep bond developed between them.

When Megan moved to Orlando for her Disney internship, we kept Nika because she was living in a high rise in downtown Orlando and working 8-10 hours a day. During our frequent visits, it was always obvious that Nika regarded Megan as her human. She loved us and Noah, no question, but when Megan walked into the house, Nika went nuts. And when Megan left again or we drove back home after a visit, Nika seemed out of sorts.

This little bundle of joy burrowed her way into my heart. Everything for Nika is about curiosity, joy, exploration. She doesn’t run, she hops. She doesn’t just race into the dog park to greet her friends, she tears in there, her tail whipping from side to side. And when she encounters a dog who is not so friendly, she instantly falls to the ground, rolls onto her back, and offers up her belly as if to say, Hey, dude, be my friend, okay? And she’s like that with humans, too. She loves everyone.

In June, when Megan’s Disney internship ended, she decided to start a dog walking business.  Her area is perfect for it – lots of high rises inhabited by young professionals who all have dogs that spend eight hours alone while their humans work. Nika went to live with Megan and Ollie, her roommate’s dachshund.

Noah’s world suddenly shrank.  He sort of moped around the house, didn’t run and play at the dog park, and was certainly less active than when Nika had been around. I’m convinced that Noah sank into a kind of depression. Whenever the two of them got together after a separation, their love for each was palpable. One time, Nika literally jumped out of window of Megan’s car to get to Noah.

All day today (August 3), I’ve been feeling out of sorts without knowing quite why – one of those days when you feel antsy, restless, for no apparent reason. So tonight we’re at dinner with friends, talking about an app we hope to develop, and get a call from Megan. Nika has been attacked by a pitt bull, in the elevator of the building where Megan lives.

Megan is totally freaked out, Nika is covered in blood, and the elevator and hallway are saturated in so much blood, she says, that it looks like the scene of a murder. I tell her to get Nika into the  shower so she can see where she’s injured.  After numerous phone calls, Megan says that Nika has a deep puncture wound in her neck and she and a friend are rushing her to an emergency veterinary clinic.

The upshot of all this? Nika went into surgery for the wound in her neck, the parents of the young woman who owns the pitt bull marched down to the concierge desk and insisted on  knowing who the “other dog” was, because that dog (Nika) was at  fault.  The concierge refused to give them Megan’s name; she was standing right there as the parents went on about this.

Megan blurted, “I own the other dog and she would never hurt anything or anyone.”

Matt, the concierge, said, “You need to see the security video,” and played it for them. It clearly showed the pitt bull lunging for Nika, grabbing her at the throat. The father said they would “help pay for Nika’s vet bill.”

$1200 and change.  Really? Think again, my friend.You’re going to be footing the entire bill.

The pitt is being taken away tomorrow by the county’s animal control shelter. Any time a police report is filed about a pitt bull, this is what happens.  I have to say that I feel bad for the pitt. This species fills animal care facilities all over Florida. Most of them are euthanized. As our friends said tonight after Megan’s call, “They are lovable dogs. But they can turn on you in a flash and when they do that, they are wild, uncontainable.”

Please keep Nika in your thoughts.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in synchronicity | 29 Comments

TRABAJOS

a santero’s altar

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Iowa Republican Steven King (no relation to the novelist King!)  penned a bill called the “English Language Unity Act,” which would declare English as the official language of the United States.  This guy also defends dog fighting, okay?

So the bill was taken up in a subcommittee hearing in Congress today – August 2. To make his opposition clear, Michigan Democrat John Conyers delivered his speech on the subject – in Spanish.

This evening on Rachel Maddow’s show on MSNBC, this bill was the lead story, with  the words TRABAJOS, TRABAJOS, TRABAJOS  in the background.

The word trabajos  literally translates as jobs. The Republicans are always talking about creating jobs and about how ending the Bush tax cuts on the top one percent would be a job killer, as though extreme wealth is synonymous with job creation. The facts say otherwise.  According to Bloomberg,  “fewer than 1 percent of the U.S. population have annual income of more than $1 million. In the top two tax brackets, slightly more than one-third — 35.5 percent — were employers receiving business income, according to 2007 figures from the Treasury Department.”

Now, among a certain faction of Cubans – and here’s the trickster synchro –  the word trabajos means something else entirely. A trabajo is a ritual that a santero – a practitioner of Santeria, a Cuban mystical religion – performs for a specific purpose. The santero or santera usually goes into trance to perform a trabajo and his or her spirit guides are the ones who actually tackle the problem.

In Santeria, everything is believed to be the result of spiritual forces, and saints or orishas whom the santero calls upon for help are really the guys in charge.  So when a santero’s spirit guides go to work (trabajar) on the spirits that are causing your problems,  it’s as if your body and soul become a spiritual battleground. As the santero’s spirit guides intervene with these malign forces, anything can be mitigated: health problems, love and romance issues, career and financial challenges, karma, even spirit attachment and possession.

When we saw those words on Rachel’s show – TRABAJOS, TRABAJOS, TRABAJOS – we burst out laughing.  It was as if she were saying that the Republican party is badly in need of the kind of spiritual intervention that only a santero can perform, and  santeros are, oops, usually Latinos, who under King’s bill would be required to learn English before they could do anything in this country. It’s as if the Republican Party is possessed by some sort of malign spirit that screams for domination and control.

“They need Ruben to intervene,” Rob said.

“Or Nelly.”

Ruben and Nelly, a Cuban santero and a santera whom we got to know during our early years as freelance magazine writers, are a post for another day. But the trickster is definitely busy during this election season in the U.S.

 

 

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Ghost Rockets

 

‘Ghost rocket,’ photographed July 9, 1946, by Erik Reuterswärd, Guldsmedshyttan, Sweden.

Before they were called flying saucers or UFOs, they were known as ‘ghost rockets.’ At least, that was the name one type of mysterious flying object was called when they were seen by thousands in northern Europe in the mid-1940s.

The term has not been in common use for decades, so when I heard ‘ghost rockets’ mentioned recently during an e-mail exchange with a former employee of AUTEC, the secret navy base in the Bahamas, I had to Google it to find out more.

About 2,000 sightings were logged between May and December 1946, with peaks on 9 and 11 August 1946. Two hundred sightings were verified with radar returns, and authorities recovered physical fragments which were attributed to ghost rockets.  Cameras weren’t prevalent as today, so that the above photo is the only known one of a ghost rocket.

At the time the ghost rockets were attributed either to meteor showers or long-range tests by the Russians of captured German V-1 or V-2 missiles. However, some investigators for the Swedish military apparently believed the objects could not be conventionally explained, and instead hypothesized an extraterrestrial origin.

Here’s a part of a formerly top secret USAFE (United States Air Force Europe) document from November 4, 1948.

“For some time we have been concerned by the recurring reports on flying saucers. They periodically continue to pop up; during the last week, one was observed hovering over Neubiberg Air Base for about thirty minutes. They have been reported by so many sources and from such a variety of places that we are convinced that they cannot be disregarded and must be explained on some basis which is perhaps slightly beyond the scope of our present intelligence thinking.
“When officers of this Directorate recently visited the Swedish Air Intelligence Service, this question was put to the Swedes. Their answer was that some reliable and fully technically qualified people have reached the conclusion that ‘these phenomena are obviously the result of a high technical skill which cannot be credited to any presently known culture on earth’. They are therefore assuming that these objects originate from some previously unknown or unidentified technology, possibly outside the earth.”
The document ended with the statement that “we are inclined not to discredit entirely this somewhat spectacular theory [extraterrestrial origins], meantime keeping an open mind on the subject.”

 Notice that the date of the document is 1948 and of American origin. As a result, the term flying saucer was used instead of ghost rocket. That’s because on June 24, 1947, private pilot Kenneth Arnold  reported a string of nine, shiny unidentified flying objects soaring past Mount Rainer at a minimum of 1,200 miles an hour. Arnold’s description of saucer-like objects led to the coining of the new term–flying saucer. His report is usually referred to as the first modern era UFO sightings, and was followed by numerous reported sightings over the next two to three weeks.

While ghost rockets were a WWII-era term, Curt Rowlett, the former AUTEC employee mentioned above, used it to describe a sighting. Here is what he had to say:

“On one voyage on an AUTEC vessel in the summer of 1985, we were underway in the channel between the north end of Andros Island and Grand Bahama Island, bound for a port in West Palm Beach, Florida.

“During the midnight to four o’clock a.m. watch, my watch partner and I sighted what I would later describe in a Strange Magazine article as two “ghost rockets” that flew side by side over our ship on a west to east trajectory.  These “rockets” were highly unusual as neither made any sound, were traveling at an oddly slow rate of speed, and left behind contrails that glowed brightly and which were “multi-colored,” in that the contrail smoke changed from white to green to blue to pink and then disappeared completely after about ten minutes.  (I estimate that they passed over us at an altitude of about 500 to 1000 feet; both rockets were white-colored and perhaps 50 to 100 feet in length).

“I never have been able to determine with 100% certainty whether or not those rockets were a part of some sort of secret Navy submarine or destroyer test being conducted in the area; I have always assumed that they were not and for good reason. As an AUTEC vessel, we would definitely have been informed that such a test was being undertaken and subsequently, warned to stay out of the area.  This had always been the Navy’s practice during similar rocket firing tests that I witnessed while working at sea in the same area.

“After returning from the voyage, I asked a friend at the AUTEC base who worked as a sort of “air and ocean traffic controller” about the incident.  He told me that he had no knowledge of any sort of test-firing of rockets on that night and due to the sensitive nature of his job, he certainly would have been in a position to know.  (And as a very close friend of mine, he would have told me even if it was supposed to be top secret.)

“Again, I have never heard any satisfactory explanation as to exactly what it was we saw that night.  I have also never heard of rockets that travel in such close proximity to each other, i.e., the side by side flight that we witnessed, or at such an unusually slow speed.  Students of Fortean subject matter will of course remember that there is a known history of so-called ghost rocket sightings in other parts of the world.”

Finally, ghost rockets live on into the late ’90s as the name of a New Jersey bluegrass band.

 

 


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Climate Change and Mass Dreams of the Future

NASA satellite images of Greenland ice melt

Everyone is feeling it this summer – a massive drought in the U.S. Midwest, sweltering temperatures in much of the country, an uncharacteristically wet summer in the U.K.  According to NASA, in fact, more than 40,000 heat records have been broken in 2012.

An article in the Christian Science Monitor   spells it out clearly:  the first five months of 2012 were the hottest on record in the contiguous United States. In June, 164 all-time high temperature records were tied or broken around the country, according to government records.

The news from NASA is even worse. For several days in July, Greenland’s  surface ice cover melted over a larger period than at any point in 30 years of satellite observations.  “On average in the summer, about half of the surface of Greenland’s ice sheet naturally melts. At high elevations, most of that melt water quickly refreezes in place. Near the coast, some of the melt water is retained by the ice sheet and the rest is lost to the ocean. But this year the extent of ice melting at or near the surface jumped dramatically. According to satellite data, an estimated 97 percent of the ice sheet surface thawed at some point in mid-July.”

The melt is causing sea levels to rise – definitely a concern for all coastal areas. Here in South Florida, we’re only about three feet above sea level. In mid-July, an iceberg twice the size of Manhattan – about 46 square miles – broke off from the  Petermann Glacier. Andreas Muenchow, a professor at the University of Delaware, calls it “dramatic, disturbing. We have data for 150 years and we see changes that we have not seen before.”

Take a look at the map of the U.S. created by Dr. Chet Snow, who co-authored Mass Dreams of the Future with Helen Wambaugh.  It depicts what the U.S. will look like after massive earth changes. The map was based on information gleaned from hundreds of hypnotic progressions to the future that Wambaugh conducted with volunteers.  The dates for this map are, so far, wrong: 1998-2012.

We wrote about Wambaugh’s work and our personal experience with an hypnotic progression in a post called Domed City, which coincided with one of the future scenarios the volunteers experienced during their progressions.   Even though the dates for Snow’s map are wrong, it certainly seems that the earth changes are already underway, that global warming is here.   Arguments persist that we humans have not contributed to global warming, that it’s all just a cycle in nature. But with 7 billion people on the planet, all leaving a heavy carbon footprint, that argument strikes me as specious.

Have a look at this video taken by an Australian tourist viewing a glacier near Ilulissat, Greenland as an iceberg broke off.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=HB3K5HY5RnE

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Search Terms as Oracle

One of the beauties of Statcounter is that it shows you the search terms that people use to find your blog. I sometimes view these search terms as fodder for fiction. Other times, I see them as symbolic of the collective mind. I pay close attention because in the past, the terms have yielded some stunning synchros.

Two years ago, for instance, we noticed that the word phoenix  was prevalent in the search terms and eventually a woman wrote us about an amazing  synchro involving her daughter.  Earlier this year, we noticed a number of searches for Wolfgang Pauli and these searches always came from Toronto. Several weeks later, we got an email from William Shatner’s Weird or What Show and subsequently appeared on it to talk about – Pauli!

In the last month, the most common search terms that have appeared on our blog – other than the terms coincidence or synchronicity are:

Quebec encounter

Desperate housewives logo

Nicholas cage, time traveler

Orange centipede

co-existence bumper sticker

The Quebec encounter posts generated a lot of interest on our blog, including interest from: the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, the FBI Criminal Justice Information Systems, the FCC,  Navy Network Information Center (nnic), the Department of Defense Network Information Center, the  Canadian Air Defence, various Air Force Bases, and from Gunter Annex,  the home of the Headquarters 754th Electronic Systems Group (HQ 754th ELSG). The 754th Electronic Systems Group provides and supports secure combat information systems and networks that increase the capabilities of our commanders and leaders of the United States Air Force (USAF), the Department of Defense and other Federal Government Agencies.

And that’s just the tip. My question is simple: why are all these American and Canadian government agencies so interested in anything having to do with UFO encounters, a phenomenon they claim does not exist and has never existed?

The Desperate Housewives logo is kind of funny. It’s an apple. What does the apple represent in certain religions? Well, the apple was the forbidden fruit in Eden, and when Adam and Even partook, they were cast out of paradise. On a synchro note, Apple’s logo is, of course, an apple with a bite taken out of it. Steve Jobs got tempted in paradise!

Cage, the time traveler. This post came about as a result of the similarity between two photos – one of a soldier in some long ago war and the other of Cage today.

Then there’s the orange centipede. The first post we put up that involved an orange centipede came from Renee Prince. Here’s a bit about their life cycle.

The co-existence bumper sticker may be a collective hope.

Now, I can understand the interest in UFO encounters. I can understand the interest in Desperate Housewives, the show, but why the logo??  I can understand the interest in Cage as a possible time traveler. But I mean, really, orange centipedes? If I were using these phrases as a launchpad for a possible idea for a novel, it would go something like this:

Protagonist has encounter with UFO/aliens, possible abduction. He is a religious conservative for whom sin (the apple metaphor)  is real. As a result of his encounter/abduction, he discovers that he can time travel. He travels back in time to the time of his encounter, the parts he can’t remember, and is confronted with aliens who are orange centipedes.  Okay, so it’s not the most original idea.   But maybe it’s a place to start. However, why do the bad guy aliens usually resemble giant insects or worms/snakes with no redeeming qualities?

The larger question is what do these terms tell us, if anything, about the collective mind? You might argue that with 7 billion people on the planet, the terms aren’t that unusual.  All right, I’ll buy that – until the terms show up so often, from so many different geographic locations  that you sense something is going on.

Sometimes it’s personal – and sometimes it isn’t. Not too long ago, we had a number of hits for the term, empath symptoms and shortly afterward, northern Florida experienced some of its worst floods in decades, wildfires in Colorado destroyed homes and hundreds or thousands of acres of land,  and the heat index in northeastern states hit triple digits. Before the Haitian earthquake in 2010, the most common search terms indicated that a massive quake was going to occur somewhere in the Caribbean or in North America.

In fact, an outfit called Half Past Human  supposedly scans the Internet for these linguistic patterns, interprets them, and offers their reports – for a price, of course. Essentially, this company is using the internet as a giant oracle. Their predictions – particularly around the time of the economic meltdown in 2008 – were very accurate. Other times, not so much. You’ll find some interesting predictions here,  where the site owner, George Ure, is connected, in some way, to half past human.

They aren’t the only ones using the Internet as an oracle, a prognosticator of what’s coming up. Bloggers do this daily. They sit down to write something and suddenly find themselves in the synchronicity zone, connecting seeming disparate bits of info into a larger picture. The bloggers listed here are people we’ve been following for quite a while. They each address the changing paradigms in unique ways, according to their talents and interests:

Daz,   Mike Perry,  AdeleGypsy, Nancy Atkinson, Sansego,   Marcus Anthony DJanAdelita, Mike Clelland,  Lauren Raine, acoustic wave, follow the signs…

These blogs are just a fraction of the ones we follow, where we learn something with every visit about the nature of life in all its permutations and wonders and secrets.  Bloggers may very well be the collective voice of what’s here – and what’s headed our way. I’m sure  I’ve neglected to include some blogs and sites: my  apologies.But the bottom line is this:

Fellow bloggers, what are the most popular search terms that bring people to your blog? Maybe if we put our collective heads together, the picture will get much clearer. And is there an app in here somewhere? Some synchro enthusiasts have already created an app were you can report your synchronicity and find out …well, something.

What can we divine from the search terms that bring people to our blogs?

 


Posted in oracles, synchronicity | 23 Comments