What is a Wayback Machine???

Most people don’t walk around in a necklace made with genuine antiquities, and most folks don’t know the difference between an antique and an antiquity, and furthermore, most folks don’t know that they’re even allowed to own a genuine ancient item.

Very few people have ever had the experience of walking around wearing something ancient, something worn in ancient times by someone who lived thousands of years ago.

Perhaps that person was you.

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Relics & Artifacts

Yes, we’ll get to the Relics and Artifacts in a minute. I just wanted you to take a peek at the video above, to get yourself prepared for what’s going to happen in the realm of antiques and such.

We used to call them “junk stores” — overcrowded, dry and dusty with undisturbed age, the objects lanquished in the darkness, waiting for a new owner and new life.

Sometime around 1950, those same junk shops switched signs, and became “antique shoppes”, with fewer items, better arrangement, and much higher prices.

There were, in the 1960s and 1970s, a smattering of shops that sold things older than antiques — those items that are 2,000 years old or older are now called “antiquities”, to distinguish them from “antiques”, things that are 100 years old or more.

Stuff that’s around 1,000 years old are downright Medieval, and are collected as such. Medieval things are generally at about neolithic or at most, bronze-age in nature. Continue reading

A Short Photo-History of Atlantis

Atlantis was the foundation of the later Egyptian & Mesopotamian cultures.

Who was I?

To which Family and Clan did I belong? What was my favorite Cult in ancient times, and who my favorite God or Goddess?

What was my livelihood? What did I achieve in ancient lives? Where did I live? What did I wear? What did I eat? How did I care for my young? What education existed then? What sports? What games? What drugs? What sex was I and what did I do with it? How many children and grandkids did I have, and in which lifetime?

Can I trace my steps through 24,000 years of the Atlantean Civilization?

Take a Moment —

You’re at a psychic fair or Celtic Festival or craft fair — possibly even in the sense of “Fair of the Wise” — and you see this booth, which proclaims it as “Atlantean-Society”, so you walk over, and you’re shown how to trace your ancestry and existence in Atlantis, over 14,600 years ago.

You can find out about your lifetimes, your multi-lives genealogy, and you can see your own life-charts across the great civilizations of the distant past.

You can regain your ancient skills and knowledge, and with the help of a Past-Lives Coach, you will be able to study and evaluate your contributions and your achievements within the framework of the Atlantean Kingdom from about 40,000 B.C. until the Second Great Deluge in 12,443 B.C.

What was the chronology?

The Atlantean Kingdom became the Global Atlantean Empire, which was lost during The Great Flood — the world-drowning flood recorded in the cuneiform brick libraries of the Sumerians, leaving people back in the stone age, culturally speaking.

This early time period was, of course, the root-beginnings of the first oral tradition Creation Story Myths, stories kept alive from one generation to the next through verbal transmission.

This was the first raw beginnings of what later was collected from a variety of original sources and, when bound together in a single volume or set of scrolls, became known as “The Old Testament” — as opposed to the testaments that appeared around the time of Jesus, most of which were dumped out by the Second Council of Nicea because they were downright embarrassing and denied their right to rule and dominate and control all nice believers — okay they made a slight error in judgment. Make one lousy little mistake, like blotting out the sun, and they never let you forget. Continue reading

ZOOMSHOP – Medicine Wheel Chokers

 

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Museum Reconstruction of a 4500 B.C. Sumerian Lapis necklace.

The necklace in the photo above looks deceptively easy to acquire, but it isn’t. You can’t buy this necklace at any price. It is a “School Artifact”.

Relics like these can be reconstructed from ancient materials. In this case, note that the maker of all the lapis beads is the same, from the same workshop. This is not the case with beads acquired through the ordinary marketplace. Matched sets of ancient beads is exceedingly rare. Continue reading

Pocket Missions by LeslieAnn

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Jack Calisher outside his lumber mill, circa 1878.

Recognize this street? Well, you should. You died here in a gunfight in 1878, and that wasn’t the first or last time you died, but it’s an easy Past Life to remember, because the trauma was so strong. It wasn’t that big a deal to die — here you still are to tell the tale. “Death Row” was the name given to this Old West “Main Street” that saw over 100 gunfights in its day.

That’s one thing about death that people don’t generally realize. Death is not permanent.  In fact, death is so damn impermanent, it’s a pain in the ass, and I’ll explain why. You finally get the hang of a life you’re living, and wham! Along comes Death to wreck the show … but wait, weren’t you just barely crawling along, whizzing around in a wheelchair with a bottle of oxygen and a long clear plastic tube.

So how would you like to remember this death? You’d rather not re-experience a death? I don’t blame you, death is never pleasant, although it can be a great relief if you’re in terrific unbearable and unrelenting pain. Still, it’s not something we naturally seek, nor are we intended to. You’re here to do a job because you can. You were born with the ability to carry out your work mission. Whether you do it or decide to whack off for your whole life is entirely up to you. Continue reading

What Ever Happened to George Gurdjieff’s Music???

To be fair, not all Gurdjieff’s music was from Gomidas. Actually a number of them were reconstructed from memory and were Arabic and tribal songs from the Caucasus and general region of Greece and Armenia, from which Gurdjieff had come when he arrived in Russia. Here is a very good example of what Gurdjieff could not present to his dance students in France, but which we can construct today from what little remains of the cultures he encountered back in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

Well, first off, a good deal of Gurdjieff’s Sacred Music wasn’t Gurdjieff’s music in the first place; Continue reading