| Spirit Guide, Sakeina, Continued...
These are the people who do not want the world to change. These are the people your coded words, on the soul level, are guarded from. These people will make promises for the good of mankind. These promises, that cannot possibly be kept, mask the true intentions of these people to remove the power of all they deem less important to the good of the world. These are the people we will war with to bring about The Shift which will join all of mankind in peace and harmony. Beware those people who promise material betterment, magically produced, by only certain individuals who want you to believe you are helpless without them. You are far from helpless. You have the power, as the spiritual souls you are, to create all that you wish for yourselves. Do not believe any individual who tells you differently. You will be brought together over the next four Earth years, as shared previously, recognizing one another through the numbers. Those who do not want The Shift will not understand the numbers or the messages your souls will share with one another. Do not be afraid of the coming changes.
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JUST MY THOUGHTS By Christina M. Schumacher |
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I must admit that it's been a strange several months, though I guess by now, I really shouldn't consider anything strange. It just is and it just happens. However, I have learned that, as parents, we have help with our children if we just choose to pay attention. I was doing a pendulum session with Sakeina one evening in October. Before going to bed, I put my pendulum in its tiny bag and set it on the coffee table. A little voice inside my head told me to put it where it belonged. I heard it, but ignored it. The voice came again telling me to put my pendulum away where it belonged. Instead of heeding the voice, I left it where it was on the coffee table. At 10 pm, my 16 year old daughter came in the door and I watched her take off her shoes in the entry as she always does. We chatted for a few minutes, then she and her puppy went for her room and I went for mine. My husband had gone to bed earlier as he had an early morning to deal with. I heard her close her door and I went in and closed mine. The next morning, my 16 year old daughter went to put on her shoes, but they were not in the entry. I was sitting at the kitchen table drinking a cup of coffee and heard her ask, to no one in particular, "Where are my shoes?" We searched in all the logical places, but could not find them. This had happened once before with her shoes several months previous and they'd been found in our laundry room by the back door hours AFTER we had both searched there. This time, like the last, she got a different pair of shoes and left for school. Shortly after that, my youngest got up and prepared for school. I asked her if she had seen her sister's shoes, but I knew she hadn't. She'd actually gone to bed before her sister the previous night. Once she was ready for school, she took about ten minutes and searched around the house for her sister's shoes, but they were nowhere to be found. After the house was quiet, I went into the living room to get something off of the coffee table. That's when I noticed my pendulum was gone - bag and all. I searched all around the coffee table thinking that my daughter's puppy might have grabbed it, but that was unlikely as nothing else was disturbed and I had tucked it behind his eye medicine bottle.
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By Christina M. Schumacher |
The English language carries a multitude of strange sayings that come out of our mouths naturally. They have a meaning which we've learned from our parents or grandparents, but where did they stem from? Below are a few sayings that nearly everyone has used sometime in their life and their beginnings. "Wet Your Whistle" - In England, long ago, those who went to a pub frequently would have their own ceramic cups made. While doing this, they would ask the maker to bake a whistle into the rim of their cup. This whistle could be blown when the customer needed a refill. It brought immediate service. "Saved By The Bell" - Medical knowledge wasn't always at its best in the old days and there were times that certain illnesses would cause a person to appear to be dead. Just to be on the safe side, when a person was buried, a bell was placed at their gravesite with a string running to their hand or wrist. If the person woke after burial, they could ring the bell and be rescued from a most agonizing death. "Saving Face or Losing Face" - In the late 1700's, both men and women wore great amounts of makeup to make a good impression on one another. Due to not bathing often, the makeup built up as they would just add to the old makeup each day. When sitting by the fire, oftentimes, the makeup would begin to melt and run. It was up to the servant to notice this before things became to disastrous and put a screen in front of the fire to keep their masters and mistresses from "losing face." Meanings have changed a bit from their original intention for some of these sayings, but it's interesting to see the original purpose behind them.
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A Soul Returns By Angie Christie
The story I am about to tell you was seen in an old copy of a British magazine and I think you will find it very interesting. The story went as follows: I rubbed my eyes and looked at the clock which said 4 am. It was too early to get up so I turned over. Suddenly, a strange woman was standing by my bed. She had grey curly hair and was wearing a cream roses covered cloak. “Hello,” she said. “My name is Catherine and I am 52 and was a teacher.” What she said next set my heart pounding. “I have died, but I am coming back as your granddaughter.” At this she disappeared. I was stunned as my son Keith’s wife, Margaret, was expecting a baby. At 7 am, Keith rang. “We have got a beautiful baby girl. We are calling her Fiona,” he told me. When Fiona was 14 years of age, I told her about the lady called Catherine in a cream cloak. “Is it covered in red roses?” Fiona asked. “Yes!” I said, amazed. “Do you remember her too?” “No,” Fiona said. “It’s just something I know”. Fiona was 32 at the time of this story in that magazine, married and, like my ghostly visitor, works as a teacher.
Note from Angie: I have wanted to share this story with you because it reminds me of when my friend, Margaret Broughton, related a conversation she had with her granddaughter, Rebecca. You may remember from past stories that Margaret lost her son Peter in 1991 at age 17. Tracy, Margaret’s daughter (and Peter’s sister), was three months pregnant with Rebecca when Peter passed. Margaret was talking about Peter to Rebecca and mentioned to the child that she wished Rebecca had known Peter. She got a very indignant reply. “I DID know Peter, Nanny, but not for very long. He was very nice.” | |