09-16-2015, 03:46 AM
15 Sep 2015
This is the meditation I had. It's the first time in a month that I've been able to sit in an extended meditation.
I didn't set an intention, per se, but one was set for me. Hang in there, all will become clear.
Was dropped into my meditative state when my main guide/teacher pops in and says, You want to know about September. Um, yeah, I say, I've been trying but nothing's been happening. It wasn't time yet, he says. Come, child, you will see now. I follow him out of the darkness of wherever I was in my meditative state and into a large bright, airy room. Windows. Lots of overhead lights. Desks with monitors and people watching the monitors. A big counter off to one side, with people working behind the counter. Shelves filled with books lining the perimeter of the room. It reminded me of a computer lab in a public library.
Where are we? I ask my guide. You will see, he says. I look around. Lots of activity but very little noise. Just a hum of voices and the clicking as people type on keyboards. I recognize one of the people behind the counter because I've seen him in other libraries; it's Archangel Metatron. He's dressed in turn-of-last-century Victorian-style clothing and has little glasses perched on his nose. He's the "head librarian" for all the libraries I see. I wave at him. He nods his head, then returns to his work. We're in a library, I say. In a sense, says my guide. Come. I will show you some things.
I follow my guide as he leads the way to one of the computer desks. We stand behind the operator and watch the monitor. It shows a mass of people on the move. They're pushing their way to other places, other lands. It's a tide of people all on the move. That's happening now, I say. Yes, says my guide. Keep watching. As we continue to watch, the people of the various countries begin to push back to try and stem the tide flowing into their countries. Violence breaks out. Fighting. Screaming. Blood. It becomes an all out war between those wanting in and those wanting to keep the others out. It isn't to that point yet, the operator comments, her fingers flying over her keyboard as she works on some sort of a report. But it's fast approaching. It will crescendo throughout the month and spill over into next month. In fact, most of what you'll see has its genesis in September but will erupt during the following months.
We move to another station. I watch as scenes shift across the monitor screen. This has to do with weather. In some areas, the lands are parched. Crops can't grow. People become hungry. Some die. In other areas, there's flooding but the outcome is similar in that crops can't grow in all the water and people become hungry. Volcanoes erupt around the world. Some are underwater. There's a shifting in tectonic plates. Earthquake.
On to the next station. This screen shows images of wars. There's an image of a mushroom cloud. Fighter jets in the sky. Rockets and missiles. From the clothing of the combatants, I'd say Middle East area.
Another monitor displays total pandemonium in stock markets around the world. Chaos. People lined up outside banks. Bankers needing police escorts and guards.
Another monitor shows political leaders making speeches to angry people. This occurs around the world.
The last monitor I was shown was Pope Francis and Pres. Obama waving to crowds of people. Different scenes, different crowds. The pope is quite the hit and he appears to be having a grand time. Then something happens, someone gets shot. Much chaos. The pope and the president are taken to the ground by security people. I catch a glimpse of the pope, his white robe is bloodied. I don't know if that means he's been shot or if it's someone else's blood. He tries to get up, he wants to speak to the people. To go to them. But the security people won't let him move. He's quite distressed. I get no information on the president. This focused solely on the pope.
My guide leads me away from the floor. Do you begin to understand, child? asks my guide. If you mean a whole lot of shit is going to go down, yeah, I say. Got that. No, he says. You miss the larger picture. I think about it for a few seconds and then say, It's not one particular incident, is it? It's a lot of things happening all at once and not getting time to deal with any of them. Ah, he says, pleased. You do begin to understand. I also understand that I didn't see everything, I say. I didn't see all the screens. He says, You saw what was necessary for you to see. Now. You must share this with the others. They must be aware that, as they assess what information they have been given, no one event will be more important than another. It will be the cumulative effect that will overwhelm the power structures upon which the world is based. As it has been before, it shall be again.
I have never had my guide be that forthcoming with information before. If anything, I usually get a pat on the head and told "You will learn", which is another of my top five most detested phrases I hear from my guides.
None of this is really breaking news but it felt more like a confirmation of what we're learning.
I spent several hours in meditation today. It felt good to be back.
This is the meditation I had. It's the first time in a month that I've been able to sit in an extended meditation.
I didn't set an intention, per se, but one was set for me. Hang in there, all will become clear.
Was dropped into my meditative state when my main guide/teacher pops in and says, You want to know about September. Um, yeah, I say, I've been trying but nothing's been happening. It wasn't time yet, he says. Come, child, you will see now. I follow him out of the darkness of wherever I was in my meditative state and into a large bright, airy room. Windows. Lots of overhead lights. Desks with monitors and people watching the monitors. A big counter off to one side, with people working behind the counter. Shelves filled with books lining the perimeter of the room. It reminded me of a computer lab in a public library.
Where are we? I ask my guide. You will see, he says. I look around. Lots of activity but very little noise. Just a hum of voices and the clicking as people type on keyboards. I recognize one of the people behind the counter because I've seen him in other libraries; it's Archangel Metatron. He's dressed in turn-of-last-century Victorian-style clothing and has little glasses perched on his nose. He's the "head librarian" for all the libraries I see. I wave at him. He nods his head, then returns to his work. We're in a library, I say. In a sense, says my guide. Come. I will show you some things.
I follow my guide as he leads the way to one of the computer desks. We stand behind the operator and watch the monitor. It shows a mass of people on the move. They're pushing their way to other places, other lands. It's a tide of people all on the move. That's happening now, I say. Yes, says my guide. Keep watching. As we continue to watch, the people of the various countries begin to push back to try and stem the tide flowing into their countries. Violence breaks out. Fighting. Screaming. Blood. It becomes an all out war between those wanting in and those wanting to keep the others out. It isn't to that point yet, the operator comments, her fingers flying over her keyboard as she works on some sort of a report. But it's fast approaching. It will crescendo throughout the month and spill over into next month. In fact, most of what you'll see has its genesis in September but will erupt during the following months.
We move to another station. I watch as scenes shift across the monitor screen. This has to do with weather. In some areas, the lands are parched. Crops can't grow. People become hungry. Some die. In other areas, there's flooding but the outcome is similar in that crops can't grow in all the water and people become hungry. Volcanoes erupt around the world. Some are underwater. There's a shifting in tectonic plates. Earthquake.
On to the next station. This screen shows images of wars. There's an image of a mushroom cloud. Fighter jets in the sky. Rockets and missiles. From the clothing of the combatants, I'd say Middle East area.
Another monitor displays total pandemonium in stock markets around the world. Chaos. People lined up outside banks. Bankers needing police escorts and guards.
Another monitor shows political leaders making speeches to angry people. This occurs around the world.
The last monitor I was shown was Pope Francis and Pres. Obama waving to crowds of people. Different scenes, different crowds. The pope is quite the hit and he appears to be having a grand time. Then something happens, someone gets shot. Much chaos. The pope and the president are taken to the ground by security people. I catch a glimpse of the pope, his white robe is bloodied. I don't know if that means he's been shot or if it's someone else's blood. He tries to get up, he wants to speak to the people. To go to them. But the security people won't let him move. He's quite distressed. I get no information on the president. This focused solely on the pope.
My guide leads me away from the floor. Do you begin to understand, child? asks my guide. If you mean a whole lot of shit is going to go down, yeah, I say. Got that. No, he says. You miss the larger picture. I think about it for a few seconds and then say, It's not one particular incident, is it? It's a lot of things happening all at once and not getting time to deal with any of them. Ah, he says, pleased. You do begin to understand. I also understand that I didn't see everything, I say. I didn't see all the screens. He says, You saw what was necessary for you to see. Now. You must share this with the others. They must be aware that, as they assess what information they have been given, no one event will be more important than another. It will be the cumulative effect that will overwhelm the power structures upon which the world is based. As it has been before, it shall be again.
I have never had my guide be that forthcoming with information before. If anything, I usually get a pat on the head and told "You will learn", which is another of my top five most detested phrases I hear from my guides.
None of this is really breaking news but it felt more like a confirmation of what we're learning.
I spent several hours in meditation today. It felt good to be back.