Guest guest Posted July 10, 2002 Report Share Posted July 10, 2002 Our earth is more resilient than we are... If anything we are doing no more than the earth's bidding, whatever that may be... and the earth is doing the sun's bidding, which is doing some galactic bidding, which... and so on and so forth. Are we humans maybe just a bunch of mental megalomaniacs thinking that it is us our prerogative to maintain or destroy? I always remind myself that just 15,000 years ago there was an ice age here, the spot were I am sitting right now used to have two thousand meters of ice above it, that is more than 6000 feet... Wim (perspective?) zen2wrk (AT) aol (DOT) com [zen2wrk (AT) aol (DOT) com]Wednesday, July 10, 2002 8:03 AMTo: Subject: Re: Earth 'will expire by 2050'In a message dated 7/8/02 2:36:05 AM Pacific Daylight Time, david.bozzi (AT) inkblotpoetry (DOT) com writes: Interesting to note that numerous ancient calanders refer to the time circa 2050 as the 'End of Times'. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 10, 2002 Report Share Posted July 10, 2002 , Wim Borsboom <wim@a...> wrote: > Our earth is more resilient than we are... If anything we are doing no more than the earth's bidding, whatever that may be... and the earth is doing the sun's bidding, which is doing some galactic bidding, which... and so on and so forth. Are we humans maybe just a bunch of mental megalomaniacs thinking that it is us our prerogative to maintain or destroy? I always remind myself that just 15,000 years ago there was an ice age here, the spot were I am sitting right now used to have two thousand meters of ice above it, that is more than 6000 feet... Dearest Wimji, i like this alot - "whatever that may be ... .... and so on and so forth." Occasionally i recall about 9000 years ago in the Saami culture. What a romp that one! The Land of the Reindeer Trees which were actually actual Reindeers gathered about Senaldit and Iiiskg as they were lying in deep meditation in the bright green field of Somewhere-Nowhere communing with the Reindeer and the Beautiful One beheld in one another and every other appearance of another. So along comes a wild, wandering mystic and his friend to instruct us in some finer forms of communication about the Friend through the finest form of communication - Unconditional Love. And there were these beautiful forms of thought - siddhis being shared, OneHeart bared to Unbearable Beauty in this shared Knowing. Some call one of the neat tricks tummo, some call another one levitation, and some call all of this Grace. > Wim > (perspective?) LoveAlways, Mazie (another perspective, eh?) > > > zen2wrk@a... [zen2wrk@a...] > Wednesday, July 10, 2002 8:03 AM > > Re: Earth 'will expire by 2050' > > > In a message dated 7/8/02 2:36:05 AM Pacific Daylight Time, > david.bozzi@i... writes: > > > > Interesting to note that numerous ancient calanders refer to the time > circa 2050 as the 'End of Times'. > > --- > Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. > Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). > Version: 6.0.370 / Virus Database: 205 - Release 6/5/2002 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 10, 2002 Report Share Posted July 10, 2002 I always remind myself that just 15,000 years ago there was an ice age here, the spot were I am sitting right now used to have two thousand meters of ice above it, that is more than 6000 feet... Ragnarok, destruction by fire and ice... According to the ancients Scandanavians... Akvavit is fire-- add ice cubes--voila! Presto! Ragnarok Wim, where exactly are you located? Is there any ice left? Does it snow where you are located? Does it seem to be getting warmer or cooler there, in terms of average climate? Like the stock market, long term weather patterns tend to follow graduated inclines and collapses...usually just before an ice age, the average temperature (globally) increases, until suddenly, holes in the ozone layer allow the atmospheric insulation to thin out drastically, which, along with increases in volcanic activity often increase amounts of CO2 and other greenhouse gasses that absorb heat due to dark particulates in air. We could be on the verge of another ice age...and I completely agree that we often view such long term and huge cosmic events as if they revolve soley around we humans. But, I thought if you could let us know how the weather was where you are at, we might have an early warning! Blessings, Love, Zenbob PS., oldest hominid (possibly humanoid) remains found near Lake Chad in desert area. 7 -8 million years old. Had very human features, walked upright, carried American Express Card...never left home without it. Interesting... Blessings, Love, Zenbob Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted July 11, 2002 Report Share Posted July 11, 2002 Dear Zenbob, I live on the southern tip of Vancouver Island in British Columbia, very close to Seattle... We probably have the best climate in Canada, overall quite mild, never hot and humid, but it can be hot, it is surely rainy during the winter. When we have snow it only stays on the ground for about two or three days except once every 11 years when we might get about 3 feet... The island (about 200 miles long and 60 miles wide) is then totally immobilized... Some people here have not heard of snow tires yet... We have glaciers on the island and some very clear rivers with beautiful rock formations. The island is surrounded with hundreds of smaller ones, many of them gems. Too bad the ocean is cold here. I maybe the only one who can stay in it for more than half an hour... tummo fire is good for something... We have nude beaches here. To use our island as a barometer for climate change is not so easy, the patterns have been very much the same here over the last 31 years... (we came here in 1971) we can count on rain, we can count on shine... The hills, mountains and rocky outcrops here show beautiful polished evidence of the glaciers from 15,000 years ago, in fact our property here is all glacial silt, with lots of pebbles and very fine sand and some huge rock. We have a large organic vegetable garden, the soil of which consists of the sieved glacial silt... with enormous amounts of seaweed, lake weed, grass clippings, compost and manure mixed over the years. In the very beginning we used the Japanese method of using our own "night soil" for the veggies and potatoes. Since we share a lot of our produce with friends we do not do that anymore, we also have fruit trees with heritage fruit (special apples and pears). Emmy, my wife is a wonderful gardener and cook and wife and human being. Wim Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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