To the best of my ability I write about my experience of the Universe Past, Present and Future
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- Avalanche Warning Issued for Mount Shasta Area Through Friday
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Saturday, November 1, 2014
Living the Legends of Mt. Shasta
I was hiking down Grey Butte after a strenuous climb up Grey butte. We
had avoided the trail up at one point and went directly up a ridge so
none of us would slip on down the canyon off the snow on the trail.
However, descending we decided to take the trail back and it turned out
to be okay except for one of us that was wearing birkenstocks and socks.
He broke a dead branch off to keep himself from sliding off the trail. I
did the best with brand new Lowa leather boots from Germany. However, I
am not used to wearing the weight of boots way above my ankles. So, I
noticed that my right knee was starting to go out towards the end of the
hike. So, I was starting to get worried whether I could walk back to my
4 wheel drive.
So, since I was trained as a child to visualize as a form of praying things into reality (By God's Grace) I started to visualize A sun of Golden Light surrounding my right knee. Then I realized I should do this for both knees because of the unusual pull of heavier boots than I'm used to. Most of the time I wear Crocs (either blue, brown, or black) to massage my feet so I have better circulation. An added benefit of doing this is Crocs are waterproof, so I can walk through streams or in the rain if I'm not wearing socks that day. Also, if I'm working outside I simply take the hose and wash them off of dirt or sand if it is warm enough to do that outside. I used to be a real fan of Tevas that I wore through streams since the 1980s or so but as I have grown older keeping feeling in the bottoms of my feet so I can walk and hike and climb still at age 66 is nice too. It helps keep me alive now. As long as I can be happy walking and hiking and eating right I'll be happy to be alive and keep on going into my 70s 80s or longer. After all, the oldest person to have climbed Mt. Shasta right now is 85 years of age. The last time I climbed it to the top I was 21. 14,000 plus feet is a lot of feet into the air and there isn't much air to breathe at that altitude. The day in 1970 I climbed it I rescued a seagull who couldn't take off at that altitude. I saved him by chasing him off a cliff where he could fall far enough to get enough air under his wings to fly. Otherwise he likely would have died up there around 12,000 to 13,000 feet where we were then.
As I was walking along visualizing the golden suns healing my knees from the weight of my new boots I suddenly realized that I naturally am a part of the Golden City of Mt. Shasta. Mostly, I'm just like most normal people on earth except I have developed my supernatural abilities more than most people have.
A friend of mine said this last trip that what my abilities are likely are what being human is all about. What she meant by this is "All of us are much more than we might appear to be".
It's just like if you looked at Bill Gates or Stephen Jobs as kids would you ever have expected them to do what they did in their lives which changed so many of the lives of people on earth ever since?
There are many different kinds of abilities that all of us have potentially. And if you are given the right opportunities you might just save yourselves, your families and possibly mankind itself one day "IF you are given the right opportunities along the way".
I just put "Golden City" into the top left search window at this site so you could read some of the things I've written about my experiences with the "Golden City" of Mt. Shasta:
So, since I was trained as a child to visualize as a form of praying things into reality (By God's Grace) I started to visualize A sun of Golden Light surrounding my right knee. Then I realized I should do this for both knees because of the unusual pull of heavier boots than I'm used to. Most of the time I wear Crocs (either blue, brown, or black) to massage my feet so I have better circulation. An added benefit of doing this is Crocs are waterproof, so I can walk through streams or in the rain if I'm not wearing socks that day. Also, if I'm working outside I simply take the hose and wash them off of dirt or sand if it is warm enough to do that outside. I used to be a real fan of Tevas that I wore through streams since the 1980s or so but as I have grown older keeping feeling in the bottoms of my feet so I can walk and hike and climb still at age 66 is nice too. It helps keep me alive now. As long as I can be happy walking and hiking and eating right I'll be happy to be alive and keep on going into my 70s 80s or longer. After all, the oldest person to have climbed Mt. Shasta right now is 85 years of age. The last time I climbed it to the top I was 21. 14,000 plus feet is a lot of feet into the air and there isn't much air to breathe at that altitude. The day in 1970 I climbed it I rescued a seagull who couldn't take off at that altitude. I saved him by chasing him off a cliff where he could fall far enough to get enough air under his wings to fly. Otherwise he likely would have died up there around 12,000 to 13,000 feet where we were then.
As I was walking along visualizing the golden suns healing my knees from the weight of my new boots I suddenly realized that I naturally am a part of the Golden City of Mt. Shasta. Mostly, I'm just like most normal people on earth except I have developed my supernatural abilities more than most people have.
A friend of mine said this last trip that what my abilities are likely are what being human is all about. What she meant by this is "All of us are much more than we might appear to be".
It's just like if you looked at Bill Gates or Stephen Jobs as kids would you ever have expected them to do what they did in their lives which changed so many of the lives of people on earth ever since?
There are many different kinds of abilities that all of us have potentially. And if you are given the right opportunities you might just save yourselves, your families and possibly mankind itself one day "IF you are given the right opportunities along the way".
I just put "Golden City" into the top left search window at this site so you could read some of the things I've written about my experiences with the "Golden City" of Mt. Shasta:
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