My parents taught me to believe in Jesus and Saint Germain and Reincarnation. I was also raised a Lacto-Ovo Vegetarian in the 1950s which was kind of strange even for Los Angeles where we lived from 1954 until I was 21 in 1969 when I moved first to the Hollywood Hills where my Aunt who was an Actress lived in a house with a pool (the pool was why I lived there for awhile). However, I soon moved to Venice Beach because I got a job there. In 1969 I was 21 years old. Eventually I realized Venice was too crazy for me to stay there and moved back in with my parents and went to college 2 more years and studied Psychology, Philosphy and Cultural Anthropology. In college in San Diego County I realized studying Cultural Anthropology that I was a natural Shaman when I read about what a Shaman was in one of the textbooks for my Class. The definition was something like this: "A Shaman is someone who has psychologically died but their body lives on anyway. Because of psychologically dying they live in both the world of the living and the world of the dead at the same time. And because of this they can often facilitate healings of various kinds in people.
I find that people who are doctors and nurses and ministers and counselors often are Natural Shamans both male and female and because of this are better at healing people simply because they live in both the world of the living and the world of the dead at the same time.
Is it good to be a shaman? It can be many different things to different people. However, by the time I was 30 to 35, I realized that God had made me a shaman so I could help people and help heal people.
By God's Grace
So, writing about Time travel is really an extension of growing up and remembering many lifetimes from the time of Jesus, to Saint Francis of Asisi to Milarepa in Tibet etc.
For example, when I went to England for the first time in 1999 with my then 10 year old daughter and walked through the Tower of London I remembered being a soldier (an officer there) and the feeling I didn't like because I didn't have the freedom of thought or actions that I do now here in the U.S. This lifetime was likely around the time of Queen Elizabeth or right after then. But, just walking through the "Tower of London" I could remember being there over 500 years ago and it was a very strange feeling to experience what I once had experienced there before. Nothing was like people imagine it to be then it was an entirely different experience than anything people are experiencing now.
Unless you actually lived then you couldn't really know how bad it was compared to now.
However, even then life was usually much better in someplace like England then than it was in most of the rest of the world too. So, everything is relative.
It's sort of like now people have the wrong idea about what the 1950s and 1960s were like because what they believe was happening then wasn't at all what people mostly were experiencing then.
And it's not just that home computers (apple and PCS) didn't exist, neither did the internet, neither did streaming, neither did cable TV that much until the mid 1960s even in places like Palm Springs. For example, there was no cable that I knew of in the 1950s at all in Los Angeles. we had only 13 channels to watch and all but 3 were local and only ABC, CBS and NBC were national stations then where you all got the same programs at night. Also, no cell phones and phone calls on land lines were still very expensive if you called out of the city you were in like I lived in Glendale mostly from 1956 until 1969.
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