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Exploring Leslie Flint findings on afterdeath (Read 4601 times)
Ee_Chuan_Seng
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Exploring Leslie Flint findings on afterdeath
Mar 22nd, 2005 at 8:50am
 
hi , I read about the afterdeath on Leslie Flint  ( pls refer the works of Woods & Greene ) and really hope is true..................any comment ??? If really death & afterlife is so wonderfull and we all will be together enjoying in another world after we die....thats really great....... Infact I just read it yesterday so still very surprise............should I ?

Thks
Ee
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george stone
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Re: Exploring Leslie Flint findings on afterdeath
Reply #1 - Mar 22nd, 2005 at 2:03pm
 
Does this person you are talking about have a website,and what does he or she say about the afterlife.George
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duffdav
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Re: Exploring Leslie Flint findings on afterdeath
Reply #2 - Mar 22nd, 2005 at 8:26pm
 
You can listen to what these 'dead' people say about the dying process and the afterlife in their own words and emotions. I have 60+ of the Leslie Flint direct voice recordings at http://www.freewebs.com/afterlife/flint/flintrecordings.htm

All are fascinating to listen to but among my favorites are Jeremiah, Harry Tucker, Alfred Higgins, and  Ted Butler. Rose1 and Rose2 give answers to some of the most practical questions of the afterlife conditions.

Sammy, a native from African Ghana is fun to listen to. Laughing Molly sounds like she is still hitting the bottle in the afterlife.

Everyone, skeptics included, should take time to listen to the recordings so as to have some kind of an idea what is going on when they make the transition. Some of the more knowledgeable had an idea while others said they thought they were in some kind of a crazy stupid dream.

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Boris
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Re: Exploring Leslie Flint findings on afterdeath
Reply #3 - Mar 24th, 2005 at 11:02pm
 
Oh, this is going to be very interesting!
I include here some quotes from the "Chinese Man", for which a
transcript is supplied.

---------------------
"But when you ask those who have been here for sometime (as you
understand time) who have made spiritual progress, they live in an
environment so far remote from anything you can imagine. For them
it would be increasingly difficult for them to manifest and
describe the condition under which they exist."

"For a man who is wise (as you understand it) he realizes
that which was wisdom in the past, as you progress becomes
ignorance in consequence of the wisdom gained."
---------------------

[my comment: this is talking about the higher levels that are
supposed to be more advanced than our thinking, that I was referring
to in my post to Herb. That is why I made note of Herb coming
across the possibility of our condition having some special abilities
that are not necessarily available at higher levels.]

---------------------
"Good souls, some not highly advanced, come to you with love and a
desire to serve you and mankind, through you, but never the less
they are limited as you are limited."
----------------

Mw comment: this is something I have suspected all along: that
there are souls or entities up there who might presumes to be our
gurus and explain things to us, but they, too, are limited. This is
why I have been willing to criticise the teachings of some of the
gurus of the new age, and comment how what they say does not make
sense to me. I suspect that there are a whole range of degrees of
enlightenment, at many levels of the other side. The above
communication seems to be coming from one of the higher levels,
from those who have advanced quite a distance beyond.

--------------
"Knowledge is something which is ever changing. Movement is life.
Man cannot remain stationary. Knowledge becomes ignorance through
the light of new wisdom. Wisdom of yesterday is not wisdom of today
because one has gained greater wisdom from experience."
---------------

Oh thank you, Mr. wise man, I needed to hear that, coming from what
might be a higher source. I need it to counter sources that say
things like "everything already exists or has already happened",
which makes no sense to me.

Thanks much for that post, and I hope more transcripts will be
made. I wish I had time to listen, but I don't.
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koo
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Re: Exploring Leslie Flint findings on afterdeath
Reply #4 - May 1st, 2005 at 3:41pm
 
I've listened to nearly all of them over the last few days, I found them really interesting and some were funny too.

Has anybody got any links with more recordings?
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gordon phinn
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Re: Exploring Leslie Flint findings on afterdeath
Reply #5 - May 2nd, 2005 at 7:48am
 
Quote:
I've listened to nearly all of them over the last few days, I found them really interesting and some were funny too.

Has anybody got any links with more recordings?  


Koo: no more online recordings that I know of, although "Duffdav" may know of some.  There's some stuff on the Leslie Flint Educational trust site, but just little one minute snippets to get you to buy the tapes.

A large collection of Flint audiotapes has been sold to a Canadian University Library, and I hope to visit for a week this summer and study them.  It all kind of hinges on how many of ther 2,000 odd tapes they manage to digitize by then.  The tapes themselves are too old and fragile for repeated use.

gordon phinn
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duffdav
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Re: Exploring Leslie Flint findings on afterdeath
Reply #6 - May 3rd, 2005 at 8:49pm
 
>>>Koo: no more online recordings that I know of, although "Duffdav" may know of some>>>

There are no more online that I know of either. My source, Ann Harrison, has 26 more to complete but she has been having some problems with computer viruses.

There were 500+ recordings done by the George Woods/Betty Greene team, the hundreds by Jim Ellis donated to the University of Manitoba and by others. I am going to see if some of my contacts can get any leads on other sources of more recordings to digitize Surely there must be more copies of these available somewhere.

>>>A large collection of Flint audiotapes has been sold to a Canadian University Library, and I hope to visit for a week this summer and study them.  It all kind of hinges on how many of their 2,000 odd tapes they manage to digitize by then.  The tapes themselves are too old and fragile for repeated use. ..gordon phinn>>>

Gordon, do your best to encourage UManitoba to digitize all they can of this collection and make them available to the world. Anybody knowledgeable in this area knows the information is priceless.

duffdav

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gordon phinn
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Re: Exploring Leslie Flint findings on afterdeath
Reply #7 - May 4th, 2005 at 6:55am
 


Gordon, do your best to encourage UManitoba to digitize all they can of this collection and make them available to the world. Anybody knowledgeable in this area knows the information is priceless.

duffdav

Thanks for this info; I was wondering about numbers re. the Woods/Greene collection.  Numbers at U of M seem to be about 2,000, but I believe that includes tapes of other English direct voice mediums too.  They're definitely digitising them all; just a matter of time I think.
gordon
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nrgstream
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Re: Exploring Leslie Flint findings on afterdeath
Reply #8 - May 4th, 2005 at 8:22am
 
If they at some point in the future plan to put such a collection out on the internet, maybe they could use a peer to peer technology like bittorrent. BBC, for instance, are going to put their huge audio archive out on the internet using bittorrent. As most of the data transfer will happen between the users, the load on their servers is then reduced. I'm guessing such a solution will make it less expensive for a university to share this on the internet (and more likely that it'll happen?)
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