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Posted by theghostdiaries on Wednesday, October 9, 2013 · Leave a Comment At the start, let us say that the Ghost Diaries neither believes nor disbelieves any of these theories. Some of them are pretty outlandish. Others feel slightly more plausible. Some people take offense at conspiracy theories, especially ones pertaining to tragic events. Tragic events create strong emotions, but it’s important to remember that asking questions and being suspicious of mainstream narratives are healthy byproducts of a functioning citizenry. Just remember: conspiracy theories and false flags have turned out to be true years, even decades after the fact…and this will continue to be the case in the future. Phew! The Death of Michael Hastings On June 18th, 2013, intrepid investigative journalist Michael Hastings was seen speeding through a red light in Los Angeles and then crashing in a blaze of rubble. The Boston Marathon Bombings The Chelyabinsk meteor Aaron Alexis and the Navy yard shooting by

Were We Lied To? You may have noticed that your mood can affect your posture. For example, if you are feeling depressed, defeated, or submissive, you may slump. If you are feeling proud, confident or dominant, your chest may rise and you may get taller. So it should be obvious that your emotional state will reflect itself in your body orientation. One study had subjects play a betting game while sitting in two different postures. The subjects with the expanded posture were more likely to take risks on two dollar 50/50 bets, and expressed a greater sense of power and control when rolling the dice. In a different study, students again were divided into groups sitting in expansive versus constricted postures. These studies have some interesting implications. Another take away from these studies is that changing your movement or posture is a good way to change your emotions.

When were birth certificates first issued or when were births registered The dates are all over the place. As far as Europe goes, most start some form of baptismal registration in the 1400s by having the parish priest in the town register the births of all children in the parish registers. They even registered the births of non-Catholics. In the early 1800s, France replaced parochial registrations with civil registrations. Canada was splintered. The US was (and is) a mess to understand. Mandatory registration in the US didn't happen until WWII. Hope it helps... Documentaries to Help You Exit the System Aliston had given me a long list of documentaries to add in the untold truth series, but there were too many of them. So here’s a list of the others that he passed on. Most of them are available free of cost to watch, the one called Food Matters and Gardens of Destiny are not available, the trailer has been put up but I’m sure you can find a torrent Wake Up Call Some of the topics covered in the film are the New World Order, Federal Reserve, Bilderberg Group, the Rockefeller/Rothschild families, Freemasonry, Bohemian Grove, the Illuminati, Illuminati symbolism, Problem-Reaction-Solution, 9-11, war profiteering, the phony ‘War on Terrorism’, the impending ‘Big Brother Surveillance Society’, the war on civil liberties, microchipping, mind control, media control and ‘education system’ indoctrination. How to Save the World Learn how bio dynamic farming might be the planets final hope to end world hunger and have sustainable farming for food production Paradise or Oblivion The Beautiful Truth

History of the birth certificate: from inception... [J Perinatol Is Work Necessary? I saw this bouncing around Facebook, and I would like to endorse the underlying philosophy: For those of you still using text-based browsers (hey, remember Lynx?), here we have Buckminster Fuller making a point about work and responsibility in a high-tech society. Namely: maybe people don’t have to work. As a practical matter, I recognize that this might be hopelessly utopian. But nevertheless the spirit is admirable, and that’s what I want to endorse. Whether you're a young adult trying to find your place in the world, or a not-so-young adult trying to find out if you're moving along the right path, it's important to understand yourself and the personality traits which will impact your likeliness to succeed or fail at various careers. It's equally important to understand what is really important to you. When armed with an understanding of your strengths and weaknesses, and an awareness of what you truly value, you are in an excellent position to pick a career which you will find rewarding. ENFPs generally have the following traits: ENFPs are lucky in that they're good a quite a lot of different things. The following list of professions is built on our impressions of careers which would be especially suitable for an ENFP.

All of my blogs are inspired by something. Something I read, a conversation I had, a video I watched, something someone did, or often said. It’s a Vesica Pisces, which I wrote about in this blog. Todays blog is a combination of several of these things. You see, i recently watched a video on Youtube of a Q&A with a man I have grand respect for, talking about the shift in consciousness that we’re experiencing on this planet. I don’t want to say who it is, for i’m not sure that’s important. What is important that what he said was basically that the shift is going to happen sometime in the next few years, and we pretty much just gotta wait for it, and if nothing happens, then all of the mayans and prophecies are wrong. As I was sitting there, listening to that… It got me thinking… I need to write a blog about this. I know, I used to say the exact same thing, and as i’ve been growing over the past year, my understanding of it has changed quite a bit. It’s up to all of us to change this world.

ten ways to be a great host Between high school and college I went to school in England and stayed often with a family in London. The parents, Tim and Caroline Gladstone, were the kindest and best hosts I've ever encountered. Whenever I rang their doorbell, Caroline would greet me, welcome me right in the door with my dirty backpack from the train station or airport, and ask me whether I wanted to eat first or wash up. Caroline would then proceed to set me up with the further instructions that Tim and she would meet me afterwards in the dining room to hear about everything I'd done, at which time, they'd also give me their complete schedule for the next few days. Within that very first hour of every visit (of which there were many) I was made perfectly comfortable, given the run of the house and yet also given a clear idea of my boundaries during my stay. To this day I remember their warm heartedness, graciousness, curiosity, intelligence and humor, and it made their home truly feel like home to me. 1. 2. 3. 4.

Last week, I wrote about the challenge of doing the right things vs. the nice things. As simple as the idea is, it can be far more complicated in real life. Sometimes it’s hard to discern – which is the right choice? This question of right things vs. nice things is not an esoteric discussion. The ability to do the right things is predicated on our ability to discern the right things. Leaders who consistently do the right things will separate themselves from other leaders. Here are a few considerations when you’re trying to separate the right things from the nice ones. What are you paid to do? What are your goals? What are the long-term implications? What were you made to do? What does your gut tell you to do? As I mentioned last week, my challenge is often finding the courage to do what I know I should do. Here’s the bottom line… To maximize our impact we’ve got to trade the nice things for the right things. Good luck!

Note: There are many different sorts of paradoxes. Most of the paradoxes referred to here would be categorized as dialethia. © 2007, 2008 Jonathan Zap Edited by Austin Iredale “Words that are strictly true seem to be paradoxical.”—Lao-tse “There is nothing absolute and final. “Objection, evasion, joyous distrust, and love of irony are signs of health. Dynamic paradoxicalism is my attempt to create a meta-philosophy that is a counter to fundamentalist and absolutist thought, which is nearly as common amongst New Agers and the Left as it is amongst religious fundamentalists and the Right. Dynamic paradoxicalism is based on the the principle that the opposite of a profound truth is often another profound truth. “Bohr challenged another scientific shibboleth in 1927 by proposing that opposites were not necessarily either/or, as all earlier Western dualistic thinkers had assumed, but rather might be both/and. “The reasonable man adapts himself to the world. Adapting to Circumstance vs. Huh?

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