Copyrighted Logo

css menu by Css3Menu.com


 

Bruce's 5th book, a Home Study Course, is now available.
Books & Tapes by Bruce Moen
    Bruce's Blog now at http://www.afterlife-knowledge.com/blog....

  HomeHelpSearchLoginRegister  
 
Page Index Toggle Pages: 1
Send Topic Print
The most interesting retrievals (Read 769 times)
Morrighan
Super Member
*****
Offline


Multidimensional Navigator

Posts: 505
Isle of Everywhere
Gender: female
The most interesting retrievals
Apr 8th, 2017 at 4:37pm
 
To me, the most interesting retrievals are those where the target is not "stuck" and when the retrieval target is not part of the work at hand.

Such a thing came up today as our teams worked on an entirely unrelated piece. Our formerly embodied individual knew full well she'd passed on and held complete freedom to come and go as she pleased. That's both criteria for "interesting" for me.

This time I passed the ball to my (embodied) work partner and allowed her to complete the work without my assistance.

The only other unique aspect of this today was we took some extra time to examine her (former) cell structure for reasons related to our primary work. I noticed her genetics were tied to a pre-Sumerian royal line, and we made note for future reference.
Back to top
 

If you push something hard enough, it will fall over — Fudd's First Law of Opposition.
It goes in — it must come out. — Teslacles Deviant to Fudd's First Law
WWW  
IP Logged
 
Page Index Toggle Pages: 1
Send Topic Print


This is a Peer Moderated Forum. You can report Posting Guideline violations.