Morrighan
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Multidimensional Navigator
Posts: 505
Isle of Everywhere
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Hullo.
Two new posts today, first in seven years. Oh my. Well, hi.
Here to share with you out of general interest to the greater community my most recent engagement as an afterlife guide to one transitioning from the physical to the beyond. It's part of my job, sometimes. I do what is mine to do and know what is mine to do.
My training long before I encountered TMI and, later, Bruce, is as a practitioner of the Bardo Thodol, known to the West as the Tibetan Book of the Dead but more accurately translated as The Book of Between States.
Well, big deal, there's a world of difference between being a student of it and being a practitioner of it. When you are a practitioner, the first thing to do is throw the book away. It will do you no good at all, and may even damage you and your (client). I hesitate to use the word client, but it will have to do. It's a paid gig, I'm engaged as a professional in the afterlife territories. There is a job to do, I take it seriously.
It is a cool Sunday evening in Co Clare, Ireland, and I receive confirmation of payment, an equitable exchange for services. We'd been at this for the better part of a day, and in fact the work had already started. That's the way it works. I start the job ahead of time, because when I work I'm in No Time. And there are things to do, things to prepare.
Buddhist robes, no. Candles, incense, no. None of that really matters. Don't need no holy book or chanting or gongs.
In any event my client the about-to-be-freshly-deceased is in the United States in a hospice unit. He's not a Buddhist. He has no care for book learning. He's about to pass over to the Great Beyond and ....
And this is where I come in. I know it's now, but I am also working in No Time. I hit the hay and Monday morning it all hits at once.
Being the afterlife practitioner carries a lot of responsibility. I can feel this one is very big as I am now present to his field. Even by my experience, I know this is going to be a long, hard day for me.
Now what happens down here in Physical Material Reality (PMR) is dramatic even by my measure as I begin to thread the path into his journey. He's relying on me to do my job.
Physically, I'm moving north to Co Roscommon and this is part of the deal. For I have a very special place a sacred place to be. This is the destination and it's by every standard as remarkable as I can do today.
I have been to this place before and it's been calling to me. This is no coincidence.
For there is first the old cottage in the forest. Little remains of the old cottage. The roof is gone. "Ten, maybe twelve people lived here," my host tells me as we survey the ruins. And probably a sheep or two to keep everybody warm.
The new old cottage is still standing. Built in 1913, only a single electric line was linked, and that was only hooked up a scant 10 years ago. The man who lived there lived alone. Nothing has been touched since he passed away. There are religious relics above the fireplace where he burned peat to stay warm. A rosary is on the floor of what was his bedroom.
"He was very close to the Virgin Mary," my host tells me. And that was more than two years ago that I first visited the new old cottage. There's a new, new cottage and this is my destination today as I escort this gentleman across.
For I know that it is time for this man to be healed, and I am journeying with him to this special place of healing. As above, so below.
We complete the journey .... would that I give you details! This is an inner journey ... and an outer journey. And you likely know when we do an afterlife retrieval that the retrieval itself takes, oh, 8 seconds, tops. And retelling what occurred in that retrieval can fill a book chapter!
Probably a book of material just on this one journey for one soul on his transition. But really, there isn't much to tell. And there also is.
Over dinner with my friend I casually tell the story of a humorous afterlife retrieval. And at the same time I am assisting my client, he wants to hear the story too, and he thinks it's hilarious.
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