A Bit of Astrological History

250px-EvangelineAdams

People who hire ghost writers usually have a story to tell, but don’t have the skills to write it. They usually have abundant financial assets, since ghost-writing isn’t cheap, and only beginners would accept a project on spec.

Trish and I have both worked as ghostwriters from time to time and also have watched in fascination as the ‘authors’ have appeared on television talking about their writing careers. The reason they appear on TV is that they are already well known, if not famous, before ‘writing’ their books.

However, in rare cases the ghostwriter is more well known than the supposed author. That was the case with Evangeline Smith Adams, an astrologer from the early twentieth century. In her later years, she began writing books such as Astrology: Your Place in the Sun (1927), Astrology: Your Place Among the Stars (1930), and her autobiography, The Bowl of Heaven (1926). Interestingly, her ghost writer was not only well known, but infamous. He was Aleister Crowley, renowned member of the Golden Dawn, and an explorer of the dark side.

Thanks to Crowley, Adams became famous in her own right and has been called “America’s first astrological superstar.” A resident of New York, she ran a thriving astrological consulting business and hired a team of assistants and stenographers to prepare material for her clients. However, it wasn’t only her books and skills as an astrologer that vaulted Adams to notoriety.

Astrology was illegal in New York and she was arrested three times, in 1911, 1914 and 1923, for fortunetelling. All the cases brought against her were unsuccessful, and the May 1914 trial brought particular notability.

In that instance, Adams went to court to prove that astrology was a science. She asked to be allowed to cast a horoscope for someone chosen at random, working only with the person’s date, time, and place of birth. The judge rose to the challenge and gave her the birth data of an unnamed individual. Adams cast the horoscope and began to talk about the person’s life.

The judge was astounded. “What you say about this person is exactly right,” he told her. “I know because he is my son.” The judge then went on to make the practice of astrology legal in the state of New York.

The story of Evangeline Smith Adams appears briefly in Star Power for Teens, a book co-authored by Rob MacGregor and daughter Megan MacGregor. It’s a story that teens no doubt will not hear in their science classes.

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Her Twin Finally Checks In

 

In 2017, I received an email from Priscilla (Prissy) DAgostino, a grandmother living in South Florida, who experienced an episode of time travel while driving in the Florida keys. The fog she drove through sounded like what pilot Bruce Gernon experienced and that he and Rob wrote about in The Fog. We wrote about Prissy’s  experience here.

We’ve kept in touch since then. Earlier this year, her twin sister, Patti, passed away from lung cancer. Her symptoms began during the summer of 2020, when “everything tasted yucky,” Prissy wrote. “Little by little it got worse and worse and she couldn’t stand the taste of anything. All foods made her gag and she got very thin. Finally, she had some tests in December 2020 and was diagnosed. She had her first chemo on January 12 and died on January 16.

“It’s hard because I talked to her many times a week. We did everything together and I’m just not sure what to do now but yes she has been here. I felt really bad that she didn’t get to see Biden sworn in. If anyone hated Trump more than us it was her. She had a big cowlick in the front of her hair which I didn’t have and two days after she passed away the front of my hair went into this big cowlick and won’t do anything anymore.”

After listening to a podcast about spirit contact that she thought was one of ours from The Mystical Underground, she got angry that her twin hadn’t “visited.” That night, while sitting on the couch, Priscilla shouted, “Why haven’t you been around!”

A few minutes later, out of the corner of her eye, she saw the screen of her iPad wink. Suddenly, her sister’s Twitter page came up, with her photo and tweets. “This just doesn’t happen with Twitter. You have to click the profile for the photo to appear. I felt it was Patti, letting me know she’s around.”

Prissy’s  experience isn’t the first we’ve heard about where a spirit uses technology to communicate. Apparently, they use whatever they can to make contact. But it’s interesting that her anger and her profound need to know that her sister’s consciousness survived, is what precipitated the contact.

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The Mystical Underground: Debra Jordan-Kauble: Kissed By An Alien

A new episode of The Mystical Underground is live! “Debra Jordan-Kauble: Kissed By An Alien”:

Join Trish and Rob for a conversation with…

Debra Jordan-Kauble, who was the “Kathie Davis” in Budd Hopkins’ classic book on alien abduction, Intruders: The Incredible Visitations at Copley Fields that was published in 1987. Deb is the author of Extraordinary Contact: Life Beyond Intruders, which was published in June of this year. Extraordinary Contact is an updated edition of Abducted! The Story of the Intruders Continues, which was originally published in 1994.
We met Budd in 1987 when we covered a UFO conference in Hollywood Florida for OMNI Magazine. We’d read Missing Time and Intruders and it was a pleasure to meet him and spend time with him. We even had the opportunity to drive him to another town for a regression with a woman he’d talked with on a radio show. We always wondered who the real Kathy Davis was. Now we know.

debshome.com

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Weather Synchronicity

 

On August 29, 2005, Hurricane Katrina hit Louisiana. 16 years later, on  August 29, 2021, Hurricane Ida hit Louisiana at a Cat 4 hurricane with winds of 150 MPH and gusts clocked at 180 MPH. This type of synchronicity makes you wonder: who’s orchestrating this?

Another synchronicity on top of it. Rob and I are finishing up a book The Shift: Reports from The Mystical Underground and decided to include a story we’ve written about elsewhere, about how writers often tune in on the future.

On August 14, 1992, I  mailed off a novel, Storm Surge, to my editor at Hyperion. It revolved around a category five hurricane named Alphonso that slams into South Florida, flattens neighborhoods, and devastates the coast.  On same day I mailed the novel – in those days we didn’t email manuscripts – a tropical wave moved off the coast of Africa that, 10 days later, would become one of the most powerful hurricanes on record. The wave had completely escaped my  notice. The Internet was still in its infancy, smart phones and apps lay nearly twenty years in the future, and we relied on TV for our weather news.

By August 24, about the time editor was reading the novel, that tropical wave had become Hurricane Andrew. At one point, its winds were estimated to be in excess of 200 mph. It slammed into Homestead, Florida as a category 5 hurricane with a central pressure just below 922 and flattened the city.

The precognition is striking in several regards. In fiction and real life, both hurricanes were the first named storms of the season and began with an ‘A.’ They were category fives, and were tightly compacted storms rather than sprawling masses that covered the entire state. In the novel, Miami and Miami Beach were devastated; in actuality, Andrew struck farther south of Miami. The parallels disturbed me  enough so that for the next decade I didn’t write another novel that dealt with a hurricane.

Then in 2004, an hurricane idea knocked at my door. What if a sociopath breaks his girlfriend out of the county jail on the fictional island of Tango Key as a category five hurricane approaches the island? What if he and his girlfriend and another woman who also escapes take refuge in the home of Mira Morales during the storm?

The series features Mira, a psychic and bookstore owner; her daughter Annie; her fey grandmother Nadine; and her lover, FBI agent Wayne Sheppard. Tango Key was the perfect setting for this kind of story – an island twelve miles west of Key West, floating like a green pearl in the middle of the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic. But  remembering what had happened the last time I’d written about a hurricane, was hesitant about opening this door.

Then I reasoned that kind of precognition couldn’t happen twice, could it? Of course not. Besides, Tango Key was a fictional place. It existed only in my imagination. I hurled open the door and off the idea and I went.

I wrote Category Five and emailed it to my editor. It was scheduled for publication in October 2005. On August 29, 2005, Hurricane Katrina slammed into New Orleans as a category three hurricane with winds of up to 125 miles per hour. At its peak not long before landfall, it was a category 5 storm with winds of up to 175 miles per hour. Its central pressure at landfall was 920 millibars, which ranked third lowest at the time for a landfall hurricane in the U.S. Only Hurricane Camille of 1969 – 900 mb- and the Labor Day hurricane of 1935 – 892 mb – beat it. However, in October of the same year, Hurricane Wilma – another category five – became the strongest hurricane ever recorded, with a central pressure of 882 mb – but not when she struck the U.S.

On Tango Key, Hurricane Danielle struck with a central pressure below Andrew’s – 919 mb – and its twenty-foot storm surge destroyed the entire southern portion of the island. The twelve-mile bridge that connects the island to Key West fell apart halfway across, stranding all the inhabitants. Tango’s electrical infrastructure was obliterated and for the next two months the residents, without electrical power or running water, struggled to rebuild their lives within the context of this new normal.

As the media images of Katrina’s devastation began rolling in, I felt a kind of elemental horror about my novel and how it seemed to bring the synchronicities of Storm Surge and Hurricane Andrew full circle. On Wednesday, August 31, our daughter’s sixteenth birthday, I  got a call from her publisher’s publicist. The media, the publicist said, was hungry for information about Katrina and hurricanes in general. Since Category Five was about the kind of devastation New Orleans was experiencing, would I be willing to do radio shows as a hurricane expert?

When you’re asked to do this by the publicist of the company that has published your novel, you don’t say no. You say, “Sure, of course, great,” and then frantically gather your information and hope you don’t come off sounding like an idiot.

In the next several days, I was on so many radio shows that it began to feel like a part-time job. Some of the hosts were hostile about my theories that the frenzied construction along the U.S. coastlines and the eradication of mangroves, nature’s natural buffers against hurricanes, had contributed to the massive destruction along the Gulf coast. Other hosts laughed when I mentioned climate change and derided me for saying that humanity was partially to blame.

Now it’s 16 years later. What have we learned?

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Happy BIrthday, Megan!

Happy birthday to the best daughter ever! We love you bigger than well, you know, Google!

Hey, world!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

I’m flying!

 

 

 

 

 

 

Calling all pooches!

 

 

 

 

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Star Power for September

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

 

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The Heart of Light

 

 

 

 

 

 

For Australian author and clinical psychologist Chris Mackey, compassion healing begins with self-compassion. In his book The Positive Psychology of Synchronicity, he writes movingly of the depression that hospitalized him. As a young adult, Mackey went through two episodes of depression. But the third bout in his 30s resulted in his hospitalization. And it was ultimately the event that launched his work with positive psychiatry. He’s convinced that synchronicity and self-compassion helped heal him.

“Sometimes things are so bad you can’t imagine anything good ever coming from them. Being hospitalized with severe depression wold typically be one of those times,” Mackey wrote. “But through that living hell and my recovery, I learned some of the most valuable lessons, certainly for my work life but also for my life generally.”

In fact, fifteen years later, he rented a cabin in Marin County where he intended to write his book. He felt the peaceful setting stacked the odds in his favor. But as he reached the part about his hospitalization, he felt daunted writing about “the grueling topic of going through a severe depression as I knew it would take a lot out of me. But I also knew if I wrote about it, I wouldn’t have to go through the story again and again, and it might help others.”

So as he tried to write, he was thinking about how badly he lacked self-compassion at the time of his depression, how he’d been “self-rejecting.” But then he saw a strange and unexpected dot of light form on the page next to where he was writing. It became more intense and then formed a distinct heart shape. (The photo at the top). “It felt like a response to that memory, some form of consciousness outside myself. I felt I had just received a ‘cuddle from God’ as a counterpoint to the lack of compassion I had previously felt.”

And from that moment on, Mackey felt greatly fortified and found it much easier to write. “The words flowed and I easily wrote thousands of words through the day with minimal breaks. I felt connected and integrated within myself, insightful, assured, and a bit uplifted. In psychological language, I felt a high level of mindfulness.”

Once he finished the chapter, he felt “light and free and energized” and took a selfie on the cabin balcony. When he looked at it, he was startled to see that shafts of light rained over him.

“It felt like I had been through an enlightening and illuminating experience and the writing hadn’t taken much out of me at all. It was exquisitely satisfying to have done so. To this day I still think of the heart shape, the cuddle from God, as having played a big part in that.”

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The Bench

There’s something truly beautiful about this short film. When I checked it on IMDB, I wasn’t surprised to discover that it had won some impressive awards.

 

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The Mystical Underground: Rob MacGregor: Staff Of Kings: Episode 1

A new episode of The Mystical Underground is live! “Rob MacGregor: Staff Of Kings: Episode 1”:

Join Rob MacGregor, the author of the Indiana Jones prequel novels and the Mystical Underground, as they present the first 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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TOMORROW – 8 PM!

Stay tuned!

Tomorrow at 8 PM., Rob will be reading from the “lost” Indiana Jones novel, Staff of Kings.

 

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