Scoof and Goose
From the whimsical to the spiritual, Scoof and Goose cast their non-human eyes over a human world, trying their best to work out what exactly is going on.
Tuesday, 27 December 2011
Monday, 1 August 2011
Life Energy and Abundance
There are many names for the energy that powers your life, chi, life-force, prana and vital spark are but a few, here I will simply call it life. Life energy provides the power for you to move, breathe, digest food, think, experience, feel, imagine and exist as a being. This energy is depleted by the act of living, but can also be replenished. In a sense we have an internal battery which stores this energy and when the charge gets low we suffer from low energy. We need to take some time out to ‘recharge our batteries’ and this usually consists of some form of recreation, fun or healing.
If our batteries get critically low, or even flat, this can have an effect on all levels of our being- we start by becoming tired, moody, accident prone and may have ‘bad luck’ financially or have relationship and work problems. If we do not recharge our batteries at this stage we can become physically ill, develop mental illnesses such as depression, lose our jobs, become bankrupt and end relationships.
If the situation continues we desperately try to grab energy from anywhere we can, usually from those closest to us, we literally become draining. When this fails to provide us with enough life energy we sink further and may even die. The more depleted we become, the more difficult it is to recharge our batteries or even utilise the energy we grab. It is analogous to a car battery that goes flat, to begin with it can be recharged, but if left for a long period of time it becomes incapable of recharging. This can be seen in physical diseases such as ME, CFS, post viral syndrome and in mental diseases such as depression and agoraphobia.
When our batteries are in good working order and are just a little depleted, then recharging them can be as simple as a walk in the park or dinner with friends, but there becomes a point when this will not recharge your batteries. This is when techniques such as meditation and complementary therapies become useful. These techniques work by either trying to fix your battery by moving energy blockages (shiatsu, acupuncture are good examples) or try to top up your battery with a supercharger- such as with Reiki.
Everybody has their own recipe for recharging their batteries. Some get their energy from a rock concert, others from rock climbing! It is important to know what your sources are. You can tell what energises you as it makes you feel alive. Some things will energise you more than others, you may find watching a film leaves you uplifted, but climbing a mountain and looking at the view makes you feel ecstatic, inspired and bursting with energy.
Life energy has a natural flow related to your most important needs. This can be illustrated by Maslow’s hierarchy of needs. Imagine your energy battery is a barrel of water and that there are taps at various heights on the barrel. The bottom tap will be for basic security and needs such as shelter, food and drink. The next tap will be the well-being and health of your physical body, maintaining all your body systems and being free of physical illnesses. The next tap will be your psychological well being and the experience of positive states such as joy and peace, and if the water is not high enough in the barrel to reach this tap you will suffer from anxiety, depression and other mental disorders. Next will be your sociological well being, such as positive relationships with family, friends and colleagues. It is not until you get near the top of the barrel that the higher needs are catered for, such as appreciation of art, the ability to be inspired, the ability to excel. To fulfil your human potential you need to have a fully charged battery!
If we extend this analogy further you will see that there are some people with devastating physical illnesses, but have excellent mental health and overcome the odds to fulfil their potential. In these people it is not that their battery is flat, far from it, they are usually brimming with energy. In this case it is like a blocked tap rather than a lack of energy.
Having a fully charged battery and a good source of energy is what leads to abundance on all levels. Abundance of health, positive emotions, nourishing relationships and of course money. Money is a form of energy, financial energy, and there are many ways to obtain it, most consist of converting your life energy into it. A good example is earning money by working, you put in your time, literally your life energy, and it is converted to money.
Some jobs have a really good conversion rate whilst others leave you depleted for little reward. The best work is that which inspires you as it replenishes your life energy, people who do this sort of work report that it is not like work at all. Often this sort of inspiring work leads to positive feedback and the energy builds up to enormous proportions, think of successful authors, musicians, actors or athletes. Wage slave jobs on the other hand, deplete your life energy quickly and for only a minimal financial return. People doing these jobs often become ill as they work long, draining hours just to afford basic needs.
If you want to live a full and abundant life, find out what energises you the most. Generally life is replenished from nature, some find most alive in mountain areas, whilst others at the ocean. Look for what makes you feel alive, inspired, awake and ecstatic, these are the places you will find life energy. Avoid or change situations that leave you feeling drained or depressed, whether it is your job, location, associates, partner, lifestyle or diet. Modern society tries to hide this basic truth to keep people bound to wage slavery and there is no end of energy vultures out there (be especially careful on the Internet!) Be intuitive, you will soon learn to identify what nourishes you and what depletes you. Even if your situation seems hopeless, you can live consciously and slowly build up your reserves. Remember positive thinking and dreaming are not enough by themselves, you need to find nourishment and guard your life energy.
Originally posted on the Tribe of the Phoenix blog
If our batteries get critically low, or even flat, this can have an effect on all levels of our being- we start by becoming tired, moody, accident prone and may have ‘bad luck’ financially or have relationship and work problems. If we do not recharge our batteries at this stage we can become physically ill, develop mental illnesses such as depression, lose our jobs, become bankrupt and end relationships.
If the situation continues we desperately try to grab energy from anywhere we can, usually from those closest to us, we literally become draining. When this fails to provide us with enough life energy we sink further and may even die. The more depleted we become, the more difficult it is to recharge our batteries or even utilise the energy we grab. It is analogous to a car battery that goes flat, to begin with it can be recharged, but if left for a long period of time it becomes incapable of recharging. This can be seen in physical diseases such as ME, CFS, post viral syndrome and in mental diseases such as depression and agoraphobia.
When our batteries are in good working order and are just a little depleted, then recharging them can be as simple as a walk in the park or dinner with friends, but there becomes a point when this will not recharge your batteries. This is when techniques such as meditation and complementary therapies become useful. These techniques work by either trying to fix your battery by moving energy blockages (shiatsu, acupuncture are good examples) or try to top up your battery with a supercharger- such as with Reiki.
Everybody has their own recipe for recharging their batteries. Some get their energy from a rock concert, others from rock climbing! It is important to know what your sources are. You can tell what energises you as it makes you feel alive. Some things will energise you more than others, you may find watching a film leaves you uplifted, but climbing a mountain and looking at the view makes you feel ecstatic, inspired and bursting with energy.
Life energy has a natural flow related to your most important needs. This can be illustrated by Maslow’s hierarchy of needs. Imagine your energy battery is a barrel of water and that there are taps at various heights on the barrel. The bottom tap will be for basic security and needs such as shelter, food and drink. The next tap will be the well-being and health of your physical body, maintaining all your body systems and being free of physical illnesses. The next tap will be your psychological well being and the experience of positive states such as joy and peace, and if the water is not high enough in the barrel to reach this tap you will suffer from anxiety, depression and other mental disorders. Next will be your sociological well being, such as positive relationships with family, friends and colleagues. It is not until you get near the top of the barrel that the higher needs are catered for, such as appreciation of art, the ability to be inspired, the ability to excel. To fulfil your human potential you need to have a fully charged battery!
If we extend this analogy further you will see that there are some people with devastating physical illnesses, but have excellent mental health and overcome the odds to fulfil their potential. In these people it is not that their battery is flat, far from it, they are usually brimming with energy. In this case it is like a blocked tap rather than a lack of energy.
Having a fully charged battery and a good source of energy is what leads to abundance on all levels. Abundance of health, positive emotions, nourishing relationships and of course money. Money is a form of energy, financial energy, and there are many ways to obtain it, most consist of converting your life energy into it. A good example is earning money by working, you put in your time, literally your life energy, and it is converted to money.
Some jobs have a really good conversion rate whilst others leave you depleted for little reward. The best work is that which inspires you as it replenishes your life energy, people who do this sort of work report that it is not like work at all. Often this sort of inspiring work leads to positive feedback and the energy builds up to enormous proportions, think of successful authors, musicians, actors or athletes. Wage slave jobs on the other hand, deplete your life energy quickly and for only a minimal financial return. People doing these jobs often become ill as they work long, draining hours just to afford basic needs.
If you want to live a full and abundant life, find out what energises you the most. Generally life is replenished from nature, some find most alive in mountain areas, whilst others at the ocean. Look for what makes you feel alive, inspired, awake and ecstatic, these are the places you will find life energy. Avoid or change situations that leave you feeling drained or depressed, whether it is your job, location, associates, partner, lifestyle or diet. Modern society tries to hide this basic truth to keep people bound to wage slavery and there is no end of energy vultures out there (be especially careful on the Internet!) Be intuitive, you will soon learn to identify what nourishes you and what depletes you. Even if your situation seems hopeless, you can live consciously and slowly build up your reserves. Remember positive thinking and dreaming are not enough by themselves, you need to find nourishment and guard your life energy.
Originally posted on the Tribe of the Phoenix blog
Thursday, 21 July 2011
Woman Hasn’t Used Money Or Credit in 15 Years
Heidemarie Schwermer, a 69-year-old woman from Germany, gave up using money 15 years ago and says she’s been much happier ever since.
Heidemarie’s incredible story began 22 years ago, when she, a middle-aged secondary school teacher emerging from a difficult marriage, took her two children and moved to the city of Dortmund, in Germany’s Ruhr area. One of the first things she noticed was the large number of homeless people, and this shocked her so much that she decided to actually do something about it. She had always believed the homeless didn’t need actual money to be accepted back into society, only a chance to empower themselves by making themselves useful, so she opened a Tauschring (swap shop), called “Gib und Nimm” (Give and Take).
Her small venture was a place where anyone could trade stuff and skills for other things and skills they needed, without a single coin or banknote changing hands. Old clothes could be traded in return for kitchen appliances, and car service rendered in return for plumbing services, and so on. The idea didn’t really attract many of Dortmund’s homeless, because, as some of them told her to her face, they didn’t feel an educated middle-class woman could relate to their situation. Instead, her small shop was assaulted by many of the city’s unemployed and retired folk eager to trade their skills and old stuff for something they needed. Heidemarie Schwermer’s Tauschring eventually became somewhat of a phenomenon in Dortmund and even prompted its creator to ask herself some questions about the life she was living.
She started to realize she was living with a lot of stuff she didn’t really need and initially decided not to buy anything else without giving something away. Then she realized how unhappy she was with her work and made the connection between this feeling and the physical symptoms (backache and constant illness) she was feeling, so she decided to take up other jobs. She began washing dishes for 10 Deutchmarks an hour, and despite many were telling her things like “You went to university, you studied to do this?”, she felt good about herself, and didn’t feel like she should be valued more because of her studies than someone working in a kitchen. By 1995, the Tauschring had changed her life so much that she was spending virtually nothing, as everything she needed seemed to find its way into her life.
So in 1996. she took the biggest decision of her life: to live without money. Her children had moved out so she sold the apartment in Dortmund and decided to live nomadically, trading things and services for everything she needed. It was supposed to be a 12-month experiment, but found herself loving it so much that she just couldn’t give it up. 15 years later, she still lives according to the principles of Gib und Nimm, doing various chores for accommodation in the houses of various members of the Tauschring, and loving every minute of it. Schwermer has written two books about her experience of living without money and asked her publisher to give the money to charity so it can make many people happy instead of just one. She’s just happy being healthier and better off than ever before.
All of her belongings fit into a single-back suitcase and a rucksack, she has emergency savings of €200 and any other money she comes across, she gives away. Heidemarie doesn’t even have health insurance as she didn’t want to be accused of stealing from the state, and says she relies on the power of self-healing whenever she gets a little sick.
Heidemarie’s incredible story began 22 years ago, when she, a middle-aged secondary school teacher emerging from a difficult marriage, took her two children and moved to the city of Dortmund, in Germany’s Ruhr area. One of the first things she noticed was the large number of homeless people, and this shocked her so much that she decided to actually do something about it. She had always believed the homeless didn’t need actual money to be accepted back into society, only a chance to empower themselves by making themselves useful, so she opened a Tauschring (swap shop), called “Gib und Nimm” (Give and Take).
Her small venture was a place where anyone could trade stuff and skills for other things and skills they needed, without a single coin or banknote changing hands. Old clothes could be traded in return for kitchen appliances, and car service rendered in return for plumbing services, and so on. The idea didn’t really attract many of Dortmund’s homeless, because, as some of them told her to her face, they didn’t feel an educated middle-class woman could relate to their situation. Instead, her small shop was assaulted by many of the city’s unemployed and retired folk eager to trade their skills and old stuff for something they needed. Heidemarie Schwermer’s Tauschring eventually became somewhat of a phenomenon in Dortmund and even prompted its creator to ask herself some questions about the life she was living.
She started to realize she was living with a lot of stuff she didn’t really need and initially decided not to buy anything else without giving something away. Then she realized how unhappy she was with her work and made the connection between this feeling and the physical symptoms (backache and constant illness) she was feeling, so she decided to take up other jobs. She began washing dishes for 10 Deutchmarks an hour, and despite many were telling her things like “You went to university, you studied to do this?”, she felt good about herself, and didn’t feel like she should be valued more because of her studies than someone working in a kitchen. By 1995, the Tauschring had changed her life so much that she was spending virtually nothing, as everything she needed seemed to find its way into her life.
So in 1996. she took the biggest decision of her life: to live without money. Her children had moved out so she sold the apartment in Dortmund and decided to live nomadically, trading things and services for everything she needed. It was supposed to be a 12-month experiment, but found herself loving it so much that she just couldn’t give it up. 15 years later, she still lives according to the principles of Gib und Nimm, doing various chores for accommodation in the houses of various members of the Tauschring, and loving every minute of it. Schwermer has written two books about her experience of living without money and asked her publisher to give the money to charity so it can make many people happy instead of just one. She’s just happy being healthier and better off than ever before.
All of her belongings fit into a single-back suitcase and a rucksack, she has emergency savings of €200 and any other money she comes across, she gives away. Heidemarie doesn’t even have health insurance as she didn’t want to be accused of stealing from the state, and says she relies on the power of self-healing whenever she gets a little sick.
Octopus Morse Code
It is easy to send Morse Code when you are an Octopus with eight arms!
CW OPS Whip Whippersnapper Text Messengers on National TV
It may have been Friday the Thirteenth, but it was a lucky day for Morse code--and particularly for veteran CW contest ops Chip Margelli, K7JA, and Ken Miller, K6CTW. During a May 13 appearance on NBC's The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, the pair was able to pass a message using good old fashioned Morse code more rapidly than a pair of teenaged text messengers equipped with modern cell phones. The victory, which replicated a similar challenge that took place recently in Australia, has provided immense encouragement to Amateur Radio's community of CW operators, who been ballyhooed the achievement all over the Internet. The text messaging team consisted of world text-messaging champ Ben Cook of Utah and his friend Jason. Miller said afterward in a reflector posting that the CW team won fairly handily.
CW OPS Whip Whippersnapper Text Messengers on National TV
It may have been Friday the Thirteenth, but it was a lucky day for Morse code--and particularly for veteran CW contest ops Chip Margelli, K7JA, and Ken Miller, K6CTW. During a May 13 appearance on NBC's The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, the pair was able to pass a message using good old fashioned Morse code more rapidly than a pair of teenaged text messengers equipped with modern cell phones. The victory, which replicated a similar challenge that took place recently in Australia, has provided immense encouragement to Amateur Radio's community of CW operators, who been ballyhooed the achievement all over the Internet. The text messaging team consisted of world text-messaging champ Ben Cook of Utah and his friend Jason. Miller said afterward in a reflector posting that the CW team won fairly handily.
The Great Transition
Below is a very interesting talk by Storm Alteryus at the UK PROBE conference in blackpool. It is about the earth changes and the new tribal society.
Friday, 8 October 2010
Guided Meditation- The Milky Way
This guided meditation takes you on a journey to a corroboree, a ceremonial gathering of tribal people, who are dancing around a camp fire. They invite you to join in and take you walking up the Milky way, where you meet some angelic beings who heal you with sparkly light!
Monday, 27 September 2010
How the Kangaroo got its pouch
This is an Aboriginal Australian dreamtime story about how the kangaroo got its pouch in reward for kindness showed to an old wombat. It is typical of the creation stories of Aboriginal Australia, which often have a moral aspect to them.
This story was published in Stories from the Billabong
This story was published in Stories from the Billabong
Friday, 24 September 2010
The Priestess of Gaia
In this vision of the future, a priestess travels to the Milky Way in an extraterrestrial craft controled by thought. She meets with her spirit guide and other beings from across the galaxy.
Sunday, 29 August 2010
The Scared Well
We recently made a video of our local sacred well, Coventy Well, on the Torrington Commons.
Thursday, 26 August 2010
The Green Man
The Green Man story represents a return to nature. I have created my own version of the story based on one told to me by a storyteller, as is normal in the oral story telling community. Feel free to take the main points of this tale and use them to create your own Green Man story.
It was a long an arduous journey across very difficult terrain. On horseback I travelled many miles in the searing heat of the summer sun and to cut my journey short decided to travel through the great forest. There were many myths about this forest and most people avoid it, fearing that they may become lost or pixie led. It was however the quickest route and would cut down my travel time by a whole day. So it was with some trepidation and some excitement I drew into the forest along a small track.
The track seemed to be well travelled at first, but quickly became quite overgrown. I began to doubt whether or not to proceed, but decided not to turn back. It was nearing noon and the sun was radiating with its full midsummer heat. I had travelled a long way and was thirsty and hot. My clothes clung to me with sweat and even my horse was beginning to flag. After some time to my delight I found a river. This river was flowing with fresh water and had luscious vegetation growing along its banks. I guided my horse downstream until I found a wonderful pool of water next to a cascading waterfall. At last I could rest!
I tied my horse to a tree by the river and we both drank greedily from the fresh water we had so fortuitously found. It was the middle of nowhere, so I decided to strip off completely, peeling off my sticky clothes and putting them on the riverbank to dry off in the sun. With joy I jumped in the pool and swam, rejoicing in the cool water. I decided to explore a little and swam over to the waterfall, which was very loud and beautiful. I stood under the falls loosing myself in the moment, feeling the joy of the crystal clear water cascading over my tired body. Wandering by the green bank I foraged for some edible mushrooms, wild and tasty. I sat and watched the river, resting my weary body on the grassy bank. The sun was not so high in the sky, so I thought it was time to return to my journey and thanked the river for its refreshment.
As I returned to the pool I was shocked to see no sign of my horse or my clothes. I searched around for a while, thinking I must be lost. Frantically I ran through the forest searching, but to no avail. All I managed to achieve was to get lost, totally. It was now late afternoon and I was in the middle of the great forest, I was tired and frightened and lay naked against a tree.
I must have dozed for a good while, because when I came too it was dusk. The forest became eerie and I was aware of the seriousness of my predicament. I foraged around finding some wild berries to snack on and a few edible mushrooms. I found shelter in a small cave and after the initial shock became resigned to my fate. Perhaps someone would find me.
The next day was beautiful, I felt rejuvenated after spending a night in the forest. There was a slight mist in the trees and my belly told me it was time to find food and water. I spent that morning finding my bearings and by the afternoon could hear the rushing of the river. I ran towards it and jumped in, greedily drinking the fresh water. I also found plenty of food to forage on the banks and sighed in relief, I could survive.
For the next few weeks I stayed close to the river and made a shelter out of branches and leaves. It was simple, but joyful. I found as time went on that the wildlife approached me and accepted me into their home. My friends became the hawk and the deer and I even managed to communicate with them in a primitive way.
Summer did not last long. It was getting colder and colder by the day, the water almost too cold to swim in. My shelter did not seem up to the task of keeping me warm, so I ventured to the cave I found all those weeks ago. Life became more difficult, most of my time was spent foraging for food or walking to and from the river. The days became shorter and colder. The food became scarcer and I began to worry about the onset of winter.
To keep warm I took one last swim in the river and then rolled in the mud, caking my entire body. I found some fallen leaves, as it was now well into autumn, and rolled in them. The sun had enough heat left in it to dry me. I became clothed in the forest and it kept me a little warmer. I gathered leaves for my bed and lived like a wild man.
As food became even more scarce I began to get hungry, eating only a handful of berries each day. I was cold and weak and could not manage my trips backward and forward to the river. I collapsed outside the cave and waited for nature to take me. Then something miraculous happened. A wolf bitch and her cubs had taken residence in a nearby cave and the wolf had become an uneasy friend as we co-existed. The wolf took it on to herself not only to feed her cubs, but to feed me too. I stayed in the cave with the small family for warmth and was brought rabbit, birds, rodents and other small creatures. I slowly regained my strength and watched as the forest became white with snow.
The snow provided me with a source of water and the wolf continued to feed me throughout the winter. I learned to communicate with her using growls and grunts and when the snow had cleared ventured out into the forest again. It was now spring and the sun was beginning to have warmth. I could find mushrooms and as time went on, berries and fruit. Having spent three seasons in this forest I decided I now had my best chance of finding my way back to civilisation.
I journeyed further and further into the forest until one day found a settlement at the edge. I did not want to approach, as I was still clothed in mud and leaves. I feared that they would imprison me. Then, one day, I heard the crying of a little girl, many miles into the forest. I recognised her as one of the people from the settlement and approached her carefully. She was frightened at first, but I won her trust by offering her some wild berries. I led her out of the forest and to the settlement. I often wonder if those people developed a myth about a wild man living in the forest that rescued their child, as from then on they left food offerings at the forest edge. I took them gratefully, cooked food once again was wonderful!
I lived close to the settlement for some time and it drew into summer. The sun was hot again. I decided to venture back to the river and bath in the magical pool by the waterfall. To my amazement there was somebody else swimming. A naked man, a weary traveller. As I got closer I found that he had left his horse tied to a tree and his clothes out to dry, just as I had, all that time ago. I silently put on his clothes and stealthily untied his horse and led it onto the path. When I was clear I rode off, the next green man had arrived to take my place!
Galaxy Merger
Here is a picture of one of my favorite galaxies that I have classifed as a Galaxy Zoo user. It looks like a merger of two spiral galaxies. Galaxy Zoo is a way for members of the public to contribute to science by helping to classify galaxies.
SDSS 587748929235452103 |
Sunday, 22 August 2010
Sacred Transsexuals embraced in enlightened tribal cultures.
Tribal cultures are much more enlightened with their approach to bigender and transgendered individuals. In Lakota culture the two-souled shaman, or Winyanktehca, is highly revered and occupies a special place in tribal society. In native Aboriginal Australian culture, the Sistergirls or yimpininni are accepted by the tribe and take a more traditional female role.
In the Tiwi Islands Sistergirls make up 4% of the population. From the Berdache people of the Native American culture to the Fa’afafine of Polynesia, transsexual and bigendered individuals often have a special place in tribal cultures.
In western Judeo-christian society, no such status exists and trans individuals are treated as at best mentally ill or at worst an abomination. How much better would life be if we all returned to our tribal roots- sacred nudity, total body acceptance, living in harmony with nature and a society based on mutual respect and integrity. It sounds to me that we have not been making ‘progress’ but have been the unwitting stooges of global control through the illusionary person.
The Winkte of Lakota Culture- revered as a transsexual shamanka
“Sistergirls have specific roles and responsibilities in communities, mainly to do with the raising of children, looking after the home and the elderly, and at feasts and celebrations they’re usually in the thick of it with cooking and decorating.
“It’s usually considered women’s work, but sistergirls are usually valued in these roles for their flair and expertise.”
In the Tiwi Islands Sistergirls make up 4% of the population. From the Berdache people of the Native American culture to the Fa’afafine of Polynesia, transsexual and bigendered individuals often have a special place in tribal cultures.
Transsexuals are embraced by tribal cultures |
In western Judeo-christian society, no such status exists and trans individuals are treated as at best mentally ill or at worst an abomination. How much better would life be if we all returned to our tribal roots- sacred nudity, total body acceptance, living in harmony with nature and a society based on mutual respect and integrity. It sounds to me that we have not been making ‘progress’ but have been the unwitting stooges of global control through the illusionary person.
Thursday, 19 August 2010
Farming Humans
A maggot like race of beings is farming human kind, indeed the whole planet, for their preferred food source- negative emotions. These beings are naturally occurring ‘decomposers’ and their actual role is to recycle negative emotions and energy, a little like maggots recycle dead flesh.
These beings work through deception and conditioning. They may be no more than maggots, but when a human is disconnected from their soul, using the veil, they appear to be very powerful. These beings are known by many terms, demons, illuminate, etc, and work primarily on a rational level. They are present on the astral plane, but can control individual people totally. They have infiltrated the media and governments, and exert control over people and keep them in a state of hopeless negativity.
The veil mentioned above, is the artificially created veil between the worlds. It was created using alchemy. We are not supposed to live such short lives, searching for meaning, addicted to materialism. We are powerful, almost immortal spiritual beings, who have been fenced in by the veil. This device cuts us off from the spiritual reality, our true selves and our power. It makes it appear that there is no more to life than the physical and that once someone has passed over, that they are lost. Enlightenment is a natural state reached when an individual punches a hole through the veil and connects with their real power and spirit. In the coming years the entire veil will be destroyed and people will suddenly realise their true nature.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)