About Howard Menger;
However crazy his alien claims were, he spoke the truth when he wrote, "All of us have lived through hundreds of incarnations on various worlds."
Menger distinguished between what he called reborns & reincarnated beings; the former were from a higher world, the latter was a direct rebirth from earth. Like Goethe, he also claimed to have felt irresistably drawn to a woman, Marla, except she was an earth-born.
Cusano, or Nicholas of Cusa, wrote:
It may be conjectured that in the area of the sun there exist solar beings, bright and enlightened denizens, and by nature more spiritual than such as may inhabit the moon – who are possibly lunatics – whilst those on earth are more gross and material.
Yesterday, I was just going through some clippings of what my friend Kate told me. She said,
"I believe when it is said that we are created in the creators image it is pertaining to the soul because we are not our body but instead we are our soul. I believe “let there be light” is a much more meaningful sentence or statement. As much of life and everything around us seems to share a similar energy here. One of which I don’t feel in entirety in a few other dimensions. But it is strong here. Maybe because we share that same energy with the plant and animals as with what we are."
Menger claimed, "If two planetary bodies are close in frequency, then, of course, the life forms are visible to each other. The life forms on Venus and Saturn, for example, are visible to each other, and their cultures interchangeable because of the compatible frequencies."
The amount of time it'd have required for man to perfect his organism, so that it could maintain itself without our supervision, and to internalize his habits, is far longer than some people have erroneously assumed. https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli...7/mode/2up
To be fair, and as a rule, most people don't start seeking until their thirties. The reason for this: "many of us who are working here suffer from memory blocks which are unveiled only after we have already become established in a way of life—in my case, married, with children and the attendant obligations." (according to Menger)
Walter Russell claimed, "Great men’s lives begin at forty, where the mediocre man’s life ends." It's never too late for even old men to make a contribution. At age 61, Goethe published his Theory of Colours.
I think you'll find Bertrand Russell to be a relateable companion, he once admitted, "I have imagined myself in turn a Liberal, a Socialist, or a Pacifist, but I have never been any of these things, in any profound sense. Always the sceptical intellect, when I have most wished it silent, has whispered doubts in me..."
Incidentally, my friend Subject_Pie8529 had told me, "I just share but I sometimes don't look for answers to these experiences. I just go with the flow eventually I get my answers without looking for them."
I can relate to not worrying over money. I was never taught how to make money, finance is completely foreign to me, I don't have the slightest inclination to learn about its management. I think it'd be a better use of my time prioritizing research, even if it means ending up in homelessness.
I abide by two mottos: "Invest in the future" and "Invest in others".
However crazy his alien claims were, he spoke the truth when he wrote, "All of us have lived through hundreds of incarnations on various worlds."
Menger distinguished between what he called reborns & reincarnated beings; the former were from a higher world, the latter was a direct rebirth from earth. Like Goethe, he also claimed to have felt irresistably drawn to a woman, Marla, except she was an earth-born.
(08-16-2024, 09:40 AM)Ninurta Wrote: I sometimes wonder if some of those extra souls aren't really just evil spirits animating human bodies.There was such a belief embraced by the Druids, that on new moon nights, impure souls competed for bodies, this was how the word "lunatic" was conceived.
(08-16-2024, 09:40 AM)Ninurta Wrote: From a purely natural selection standpoint, the age of the Earth at 4 1/2 billion years is not enough time for a human to have developed from a chimpanzee or whatever, so that pretty much closes the books, for me, on the notion of evolution as an answer for how humans developed on Earth.Exactly, a human couldn't have made the giant leap on his own. And that's where Venus comes in. There were allusions in the Bible to a time when man "walked with god", with a race of light-bearers (Isaiah 14:12), or "shining ones" (angels), whose history was duly distorted into the rebellion against heaven, yet the evolved Mind is never at war with itself.
Cusano, or Nicholas of Cusa, wrote:
It may be conjectured that in the area of the sun there exist solar beings, bright and enlightened denizens, and by nature more spiritual than such as may inhabit the moon – who are possibly lunatics – whilst those on earth are more gross and material.
Yesterday, I was just going through some clippings of what my friend Kate told me. She said,
"I believe when it is said that we are created in the creators image it is pertaining to the soul because we are not our body but instead we are our soul. I believe “let there be light” is a much more meaningful sentence or statement. As much of life and everything around us seems to share a similar energy here. One of which I don’t feel in entirety in a few other dimensions. But it is strong here. Maybe because we share that same energy with the plant and animals as with what we are."
Menger claimed, "If two planetary bodies are close in frequency, then, of course, the life forms are visible to each other. The life forms on Venus and Saturn, for example, are visible to each other, and their cultures interchangeable because of the compatible frequencies."
(08-16-2024, 09:40 AM)Ninurta Wrote: There pretty much had to be a creative of guiding hand for us to even exist at all at a level that would even wonder about it.My friend Kate once asked me, "Do you ever look at your arm and amazed that you can move it?". I had never before thought about how/why I could effortlessly moved my limbs in an instant.
The amount of time it'd have required for man to perfect his organism, so that it could maintain itself without our supervision, and to internalize his habits, is far longer than some people have erroneously assumed. https://archive.org/details/in.ernet.dli...7/mode/2up
(08-16-2024, 09:40 AM)Ninurta Wrote: I've never found my "place in life" or "calling" or whatever you want to call it. Most of the time, I've just done whatever there was to be done.
To be fair, and as a rule, most people don't start seeking until their thirties. The reason for this: "many of us who are working here suffer from memory blocks which are unveiled only after we have already become established in a way of life—in my case, married, with children and the attendant obligations." (according to Menger)
Walter Russell claimed, "Great men’s lives begin at forty, where the mediocre man’s life ends." It's never too late for even old men to make a contribution. At age 61, Goethe published his Theory of Colours.
I think you'll find Bertrand Russell to be a relateable companion, he once admitted, "I have imagined myself in turn a Liberal, a Socialist, or a Pacifist, but I have never been any of these things, in any profound sense. Always the sceptical intellect, when I have most wished it silent, has whispered doubts in me..."
(08-16-2024, 09:40 AM)Ninurta Wrote: The best way to put it I reckon is to say that I don't know what I want to do when I grow up... and I'm getting a bit too long in the tooth to make that sort of a decision now, so I just roll with whatever comes along.Well, what did you feel drawn to from an early age?
Incidentally, my friend Subject_Pie8529 had told me, "I just share but I sometimes don't look for answers to these experiences. I just go with the flow eventually I get my answers without looking for them."
I can relate to not worrying over money. I was never taught how to make money, finance is completely foreign to me, I don't have the slightest inclination to learn about its management. I think it'd be a better use of my time prioritizing research, even if it means ending up in homelessness.
I abide by two mottos: "Invest in the future" and "Invest in others".