Month: June 2002

  • The old fart‘s on Xanga now! 


    Yes!  Finally one quiz result that fits me to a T:










    Why know what you can look up? And why look up what you can extract from the minds of your enemies? There are those who think and those who act. I am the latter. I am a problem solver. I have a gift for reading people. I take pride in my wit and speed, not my strength or power. My power is of the mind. The ball is under the middle dish… Pay up.

    What’s your superpower?


    Thou shouldst not call up that which thou canst not put down.


    I’m at a meeting of the Grandmothers.  They are there to question and censure Jamie, a boy maybe 12-15 years old.  My role is as his advocate, as well as a sort of interpreter.  I make sure he understands the elders’ questions and comments.  Jamie is “slow” in mind only, not very bright but hyperactive and easily distractible.


    He is acting alternately silly and frightened as he is questioned and scolded.  I’m almost as much a stranger to this group as Jamie is.  Some of their terminology and customs are unfamiliar.  Jamie and I have a rapport, and as I mediate between him and the crones I’m gradually picking up a better understanding of their meaning and intent.


    One very old woman does most of the talking.  She is giving the kid a hard time about the dragons he has been conjuring up.  He gets defensive and grows even more restless.  The Grandmother is becoming quite impatient with him.  I cut in to break the tension and clarify the matter at hand.


    I say, “I think it would help if Jamie understood his options.”  This brings nods and mutters of assent from the assembled women.  The kid seems relieved to learn that he has options.  When the old woman gestures to me to go ahead, I turn to him.


    I say, “The dragons are dangerous.  Since they hurt people and do great damage, you must stop playing with them.”  The women are following this, nodding agreement, but their expressions imply impatience, a feeling of, “Yeah, yeah, get on with it.”


    Jamie does not like the idea of having to give up his dragons.  He puts on a stubborn pout and I can see he is on the verge of rebellion.  I continue, “Jamie, you can either leave the dragons alone,” (and I can tell there is little chance of his being willing to do this–he is obviously feeling threatened as he waits for the “or else”) “…or, you can become a great wizard so that you can control them.” 


    This breaks the tension.  Jamie is joyously, enthusiastically relieved and obviously had been unaware that he had such an option.  The women nod in acceptance, as if it is a fine idea that had not occurred to them, either.


    My work there was done, so I woke up.


    I am linus
    Which Peanuts Character Are You Quiz

    I’m a deadly sin; are you?


    No lie!!

  • Some of my readers are, I know, fellow fibromyalgics.  They are the ones most likely to understand this blog, and I’ll try to make it clear enough for all to understand.  Most of us call this malady “fibro”, but an international symposium a year or two ago recommended that it be called ME/CFIDS:  myalgic encephalomyelitis / chronic fatigue immunodysfunction syndrome.  It’s a bitch;  in online forums it is often abbreviated DD: damned disease.  Pain is one symptom, and there is also the lovely symptom they call “sensorimotor deficit”:  nerves don’t quite transmit signals correctly all the time.  Some of our pet names for that are the Frankenstein Shuffle and “stumblin’ ‘n’ fumblin’”.


    Muscles load up with lactic acid even when we sit still.  The upside of that is that our muscles don’t atrophy with disuse like normal people’s do.  Believe me, if one happens to be the type who likes to try to find the upside in every misfortune, this disorder gives one the opportunity to try over and over again.  I’ve just skimmed the surface of the interesting manifestations of the DD.  Symptom lists often run to fifty or sixty items.  All this was just background, an introduction to the story of my trip to town today.


    I hadn’t been to town for two months.  And the last trip before that one was in February.  I’m in the minority among diagnosed fibromyalgics in that I’m unmedicated.  Most of us take pain meds, antidepressants and/or sleep meds.  I do take guaifenesin because some say it can reverse the worsening course of the disease, and it doesn’t seem to be toxic to me, but it doesn’t relieve any symptoms–it makes them worse periodically.  My kidney function is compromised and my liver has some damage from amphetamines and a couple of episodes of hepatitis, and I have several allergies to common pain meds, so I use mind-over-matter techniques to deal with the pain, and use brainwave-entraining sound if I need help sleeping.  Usually, I just don’t sleep very much.


    Three paragraphs into the story of my trip to town, and I’ve not said anything yet about the trip.  But those were things you need to know to get this journey into perspective.  I would not have gone today, but it was supposed to be an easy trip:  fifty miles to Wasilla to drop our old car Lassie (1984 AMC Eagle wagon) at the repair shop, pick up a rental car and a few groceries and then home again.  An added incentive was that my application for a handicapped parking permit was approved and I wouldn’t have to walk as far as before.   Lunch would be a little plus, as would a chance for Greyfox and me to spend some time together.  When the weather is good, his days consist of working, eating and sleeping.


    I started my day by getting a shower ready, before Greyfox was up.  “…a shower ready?” you might ask.  What’s to get ready about a shower?  First, I put the tea kettle on, then I get the plastic camp shower bag out of the stall and fill it partway with cold spring water from a big jug in the kitchen while the kettle heats.  When I have a full two gallons of warm water, I haul it back down the hallway and hang it in the shower stall.  This morning, that was the point at which I ran out of steam.  The long muscles in my thighs started to tremble and my knees threatened to buckle.  Some days are better than others.  This one wasn’t the worst, but I knew if I was to get there and back I’d need some help.  I took a capsule of herbal stimulants, a combo of ephedra, green tea and kola nut.  By the time I was clean and dry and Greyfox was dressed, I’d stopped trembling.


    Halfway to the big town, we stopped at the library in our little town.  I took back the copy of Anthropology Goes to War, which I had been sent by mistake, and again wrote down the request for Anthropology of War, the book I wanted.  Then  we made a stop at the Post Office to pick up some stock for Greyfox’s stand, and on to the Credit Union.  Coming out of the parking lot there, I was gazing out the window at nothing when Greyfox pointed and asked, “What’s that?”  Beside the road was a patch of brightly colored flowers, ‘way too brightly colored.  On closer inspection, they turned out to be dandelion seed puffs that someone had spray painted in an array of fluorescent colors.


    That was the highlight of the trip.  Highway construction caused a number of stops going and coming back.  There is no alternate route to avoid the construction, just this one highway all the way from Seward on the coast to Fairbanks in the interior, with lots of little dirt roads to nowhere branching off, but unless you want to fly or float on the river, no alternate route.


    In town, my lunch at Taco Bell included a bad-tasting quesadilla, bad as in gone bad.  I ate a bite and got my money back.  Within an hour or two, I was feeling ill, my vision was blurry, and my stimulants were wearing off.  But it was the last stop on the way out of town so I opted to minimize the toxicity and didn’t boost the stim load.


    We made it home.  Exhausted, I put the perishables away while the guys unloaded our purchases and loaded the stock for Greyfox’s stand into the rental car so he can work tomorrow.  I had to go out and solve a little problem they were having with the car’s interior lights staying on after they shut the doors.  My solution:  I advised them to wait, and sure enough, the lights went out in a moment.  The whole family has ADD, so it’s a wonder that even one of us ever noticed that in newer cars the dome lights have that delay feature.  New cars are something we have little experience with.


    I’m beat, whipped, bedraggled, stiff, sore, aching, and beyond exhaustion.  If I run true to my usual pattern, in about three days I’ll be back to what passes for normal with me.  I’m having to use delete and backspace a lot more than usual, but at least the upset from the accursed quesadilla has passed.  To show for my trip, I have chalked up a day well-spent with my sweetie and a few shared laughs.  There was a bag sale at a thrift shop, and I stuffed a grocery sack with something for everyone at a cost of just $5.00, plus I found two collectible buttons, the pin-on kind like campaign buttons, for ten cents each.  And I have the enduring memory of a roadside patch of whimsical fluorescent dandelion puffs.  The best part is, I probably won’t have to go to town again for at least a month or two.


    Good night, all.


    Hey!  I’m Blossom…  never seen her; anyone wanna tell me what she’s like?… er…what I’m like.



    Commander and leader of the Power Puff Girls.
    Take the Cartoon Hero Quiz?.


  • Disillusionment, I’m told, is an unhappy event for most of you. I’ve gotten hints of this from clients who were anything but appreciative when I punched holes in their denial. My beloved old fart has long insisted that people generally prefer their illusions over reality’s “cold hard facts.” These revelations, now that they’ve penetrated my consciousness, come as welcome disillusionment to me, not because I’m glad most people want to be deluded, but because I do not. I’d always believed that my own attitudes were fairly typical. Now that I know better, it not only dispels another useless illusion for me, it helps explain some aspects of human behavior that had always puzzled me.


    For years, I argued with Greyfox, insisting that he had to be in the minority, that no normal average citizen could actually prefer to be fed a line of patronizing pap over having the straight facts so that he could make informed decisions. What sane person, I asked, would rather face a threat or hazard armed with warm fuzzy falsehoods than be able to stand up to it armed with the truth? It seemed to me that political parties, priesthoods, and snake oil salesmen were pulling the wool over the eyes of an unknowing and unwilling public. He insisted that people wanted to be fooled, and he cited psychologist Erich Fromm’s 1941 work, Escape from Freedom to support his contentions.


    Fromm observed Hitler’s rise to power, concluding that freedom was too threatening for most people, and that to relieve the anxiety arising from their independence, they would raise up dictators and settle themselves under the dubious protection of totalitarian regimes. Fromm leaves plenty of clues that in his estimation this tendency is not healthy, and we all know (don’t we?) that our societal norms are in many cases quite sick. I guess it was my hard-headed optimism that kept me for so long from realizing how sadly dependent and insanely frightened of freedom my fellow Americans are.


    Now I’m freed of that illusion. My disillusionment started with September eleventh, when everyone seemed so surprised… surprised!? When Europe, Africa and Asia have been plagued by terrorism for decades, and even after the bombing of one of the twin towers in 1993, America as a whole was caught by surprise. How else but through self-delusion could one fail to have expected a continued escalation of Jihad?


    At last I am convinced that Erich Fromm and Greyfox were right all along.   I’d had some dawning suspicions already, as I watched Prez Shrub’s three ring media circus distract all but a few of us from the hijacked election.  What finally tipped the scales for me was the reaction to–or the lack of reaction to–the suppression of the student protest at Ohio State University last week. It makes me wonder how far we are from a repetition of the killings at Kent State in 1970, or our own version of the massacre at Tienanmen Square.


    Now I see that most of my fellow Americans are content to trade their very real constitutionally guaranteed freedoms for the lies that give them the illusion of security. It is an illusion, you know. Just as the locks on your front doors will keep out your honest law-abiding neighbors but not protect you from a skilled burglar or determined home invader, these erosions of our freedom will not protect you from fanatically committed terrorists.


    Not every person who is conspiring to rob us of freedom is a villain or potential dictator, although a few of them are. Some are simply well-intentioned idiots, while others are just doing their jobs, covering their asses, trying to hang onto their sources of income.   It is not such a different situation from that which Fromm observed in Germany sixty-some years ago.


    If you are one who is closing your eyes to the scary facts and swallowing the reassuring bullshit the administration is handing out, then you are a co-conspirator. If you want to be safe, then don’t let the liars lull you into the illusion of security. Don’t lie to yourself.We might have a chance if we all open our eyes and stand up for the Constitution of the United States of America. Otherwise, the terrorists will have won an easy victory. Let us at the very least make them take our freedom from us. Don’t give it away to a bunch of cowardly domestic flimflam artists.

  • Today I’ve been fixing broken links and updating my awards (Cosmiverse Site of the Month again–this makes a year and a half) at my shamanic website.   When I’m through here, I’m going to search through my genealogical files to help a distant cousin fill in some of her blanks, so I don’t expect to get around to all my SIR list today.  But, before I go, I want to share something else with you.


    FBI at Xanga?


    U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft has authorized and ordered the FBI to increase their in-country spying activities.  The FBI’s spokesperson has said they will be attending religious meetings and hanging out at online venues such as chatrooms and message boards.  Just in case they show up at Xanga, I want to pass along a few ways you might recognize them:


    They comment on a blog about proselytization by counseling women that “it may seem like a solution now but eventually their pimp will abuse them”


    They blog about “Seeking Islamic Fundamentalists planning terrorism.”

    They address other Xangans as “Sir” and “Ma’am”.


    They pick a site name such as IamnotanFBIagent.


    They start a “Spies and Moles” blogring.


    They don’t seem to know how to use email or HTML.


    They write blogs nitpicking about inaccuracies in The X-Files.


    They get into flame wars with the Xangans who are CIA agents.


  • Alaska, No Longer So Frigid, Starts to Crack, Burn and Sag


    Things are changing here, and they’ve even noticed in NYC.  Right now, our valley is in day two of the second killing heatwave of the year, and it’s not even summer yet.  The kid’s on the floor with a cold cloth on his head, and I’m going to shut this heat-radiating machine down and find a cooler spot.  Mañana, y’all.

  • Shut City Hall! – The Supreme Court concludes that most government agencies should be out of business. By Steven E. Landsburg


    This sounds like an excellent idea to me.  Now, where do we start eliminating government agencies?

  • Turn Your Back On Bush


    Richard A. Hollingsworth,  Associate Vice President of Student Affairs for Ohio State University, threatened students who participated in a non-violent protest at President Bush’s commencement address with arrest and expulsion.  If you’d like to express your support or outrage,  his email addy is hollingsworth.1@osu.edu and his office number is 614-292-0307. 


    Personally, I’d like nothing better than to turn away, stuff my ears, hold my nose and ignore Dubya, but I just don’t trust the man enough to turn my back on him.

  • This started as a comment on some of your comments.  Then I found two typos and decided to bring it out here.  One way I can tell I’ve hit a hot topic is when nearly every comment contains the phrase, “I believe.”  In the recent past, I held strong beliefs in this area and made cogent arguments for them.  I’ve been asked a few times during this series of blogs, “Do you believe…?”  It challenges me to sort what I know now from what I have believed.


    I’m with LuckyStars’s daughter in my willingness to get my feet wet if necessary to solve the mysteries surrounding how and why people die.  When Greyfox goes to rotten.com and finds a particularly interesting accident or autopsy photo, I come and look over his shoulder with interest and without emotion.  Sometimes I wish I could get a better angle or closer view.  I’m interested in morbidity, and I’m hip enough to psychological realities and the complexities of my own mind, that I won’t try to claim that it is NOT a morbid interest.


    My youth was largely a struggle to stay alive, to forestall my premature death.  Now that I am mature, quality of life has taken precedence over survival.  I don’t view my own death with dread.  If the kid and the old fart were to die both at once, material survival would be a struggle again, and I’d be doing a lot more venting and intimate schmoozing with my neighbors and online friends to take up the slack in their absence. 


    I would grieve.  Even many animals besides humans show grief when another being close to them is suddenly lifeless.  But I would not mourn their deaths.  I would have no cause to regret saying things I didn’t mean, or neglecting to tell them how I love and appreciate them.  I hope nobody mourns my death when I’m gone.  After having created a legacy of healing and teaching, and a line of interesting descendants, I’d love to just slip from this world and leave hardly a ripple in passing.  If a few people will be glad to see me gone, so much the better, eh?

  • some blood and the tiniest bit of tastefully presented incest

    “Adult themes” this time

    When a topic such as past lives comes up it’s a safe
    bet it will be controversial.  The mere mention of death is enough
    to push some people’s buttons.  If you’re in the majority for whom
    the idea of death is scary, then you’re probably uneasy in the presence
    of human remains and wouldn’t enjoy every aspect of a career as a
    physical anthropologist or forensic pathologist.

    To others death is an obsession, not scary but
    fascinating and morbidly attractive.  I think this is the group to
    which my soulmate Greyfox belonged when I met him.  He has a
    collection of death memorabilia:  memorial plaques, promotional
    materials for funeral homes, and various objects decorated with skulls
    and bones.  He hasn’t added to the collection in years now,
    and only a few useful items from it are on display around the
    house.  Whether that change came about through his recalling his
    own past lives and deaths, or whether it came as the influence of his
    walk-in’s personality, or a little of both, I don’t know.

    Greyfox’s new more casual attitude toward death
    could also have come from his shamanic work.  As soon as we had
    started working together, while still on our honeymoon, we were called
    on to do some entity releases for people living in two haunted
    houses.  In the first of them, the phenomena were more or less the
    ordinary things one finds in hauntings:  cold spots, odd noises,
    and one strange apparition.  The homeowners would sometimes see a
    couple in nineteenth century formal clothing dancing a few feet above
    their floor.  The heads of the couple were never seen, because
    they were above the level of the house’s ceiling.

    For that family, I did my talk thing to calm the wife
    and subtly try to convince her that she might find better things to
    keep as marks of distinction than having a haunted house.  She was
    waffling between fear and fascination, and her husband was firmly on
    the side of making these things go away so he and the kids could sleep
    undisturbed.

    Meanwhile Greyfox smudged and prepared himself and
    went into trance.  In the journey state he talked to the spectral
    couple who had lived in a house that had once stood on that land, a big
    old Victorian pile whose ground floor had been near the ceiling level
    of our clients’ new ranch-style. 

    It had been an older man just married to a pretty
    young woman when a snake startled their horse, the carriage overturned
    and his lovely young wife died instantly.   Gravely injured,
    he died a while later, but didn’t want to let go.  He still didn’t
    want to go when Greyfox confronted him.  The shaman’s first ghost
    was used to giving orders and getting his way.  After some
    argument, Greyfox called his grandmother to come over and guide the
    two.  Nana easily led the man’s wife across, and he followed her.

    Our second job came about as soon as the word got
    around about the first one.  It was different.  This was a
    big double-wide mobile home in a mid-town trailer park.  The owner
    was embroiled in legal action trying to get the seller to take it back
    and refund her purchase price.  Since she had moved in there, she
    had become depressed, disturbed, and desperate to find a
    solution. 

    We found only one entity there, a young male murder
    victim who was happy to pass on over into the Light.  But we also
    found psychic imprints of blood, murder and mayhem that, while
    validating to the woman who had seen some of this herself, only
    confirmed her in her desire to obtain legal redress from the ones who
    had sold her the trailer.  Counseling and purification with salt
    and smoke were all that the two of us could think of to do for her.

    We didn’t find out the eventual disposition of her
    legal case, but we did learn more about that trailer.  It had been
    a known crime scene, part of an investigation of a ring of “coyotes”
    who were paid to guide illegal immigrants over from Mexico. 
    Apparently the ringleader found it expedient to leave some of his
    clients to die in the desert and to kill some others, as well as at
    least one of his co-conspirators.  The trailer’s seller, who had
    the blood cleaned up, the rooms repainted, and the trailer moved
    about forty miles, failed to mention the history to his prospective
    buyers.

    If those two little vignettes brought to you no
    chills or odd sensations in the pit of your gut, then you might be a
    hardened skeptic or a member of a third group of people to whom
    death has no more significance than punctuation:  a period
    with which to neatly end a sentence.  Then comes a little space,
    followed by a whole new sentence.  Thus one can see, perhaps, how
    a belief in reincarnation could be vastly comforting to one who was
    trained to fear death.  As I have said, my own beliefs went
    through several phases before I decided to stop believing in things
    where the truth of the matter is unclear.

    What follows is one more vignette from what Greyfox and I recall of our history together:

    We were Randy and Catherine. The folk at home on the bayou
    pronounced it cah-TREEN. Boy and girl twins we were. The time , I
    think, though I cannot be sure, was early in the twentieth
    century.

    Mama was a young woman, Papa’s second wife. We had older brothers
    still at home who helped Papa with the trapping and hunting and fishing
    that supported the family. Sisters, aunts, cousins and all the big
    extended Cajun family came together for weddings, christenings and
    funerals, but when parties were over we scattered into the bayous and
    for weeks or months might not see anyone but our own household.

    My mama missed her own mama and papa. When our papa was home, Mama
    tended his needs and stayed silent and out of his way. When he and the
    older boys were away from the house, she would sit rocking back and
    forth on the porch or in her room, weeping and wringing her skirt in
    her hands.

    Randy and I grew up there wild, constant companions to one another.
    Was he beautiful to me because of his own delicate lips and deep eyes,
    or because I saw myself reflected there? I know only that we clung
    together and he was my joy and consolation.

    We explored our world side by side and together we explored the
    world of each other’s bodies. Brother and sister, children of one womb,
    together from conception, as we grew to be man and woman, we became
    one. To us, we had always been one, one heart and soul in two bodies
    made to fit together for the pleasure of each other.

    One hot afternoon we lay together in a pirogue tied to the dock. At
    first we felt the gentle rock-rocking of the current, and then we felt
    nothing but each other as the pirogue rocked to our motion.

    That was when one of our brothers discovered us and turned my world
    upside down and took all the joy from it. My Randy was dragged off of
    me and up from the dock to the shanty. I pulled my clothing together
    and ran behind. My burly older brother was slapping him and screaming
    that he had ruined his own sister, that God would have His judgment on
    Randy’s poor soul.

    Papa was mad, wild screaming furious. He was blaming Mama, yelling
    at her that she’d neglected her children and left us to our damnation.
    She only cried, cringing back into a corner, shrinking as though
    willing herself to vanish away.

    The boys and Papa made a plan. Randy would be sent away, to town in
    New Orleans, outcast from the family. As a ruined virgin, there was no
    life left for me but to keep house for my brothers and Papa and look
    after Mama and wear black all my days.

    For one endless winter I pined away, apart from my heart, my soul
    ripped in two. Then I stole away and floated and ran. I found New
    Orleans and along the way found trouble aplenty, but always the thought
    of my Randy, his lips and his eyes tender upon me, led me on.

    No one in the city knew my Randy. Someone said there had
    been a boy, one whose face looked like mine, found dead on the street
    one cold winter dawn. He’d gone where the dead go, Cemetaire Saint
    Louis, and that, I decided, was where I would go, too.

    I slept on the graves, I sheltered under the eaves of crypts. I
    begged food for a while out of habit more than hunger, I suppose.
     No bread could feed my craving.  Nowhere in this world was
    that other half of my heart and soul.  I sat in the cemetery and
    waited, and died.

    **In Greyfox’s collection of memorabilia is an old hand-colored
    picture postcard of Cemetaire Saint Louis in New Orleans. I found it
    there after he had moved here to live with me, long after I’d first
    told this story to the reporter in New Mexico who first published it.**

  • Anyone who has read very many of my blogs knows that I came to Xanga for the insight commonly believed to be accessible through journaling:  recording and then looking back over one’s own thoughts and behavior.


    This comment goes to a different form, or a higher octave, of that:



    …I’ve never done any past life work and would not know how to begin.  My good friend has done some and it has given her many clues to why her personality is the way it is now and also as to what some of her patterns are and why.  I’ve read that we can use past life work to assist in healing our “today.” Do you have any thoughts on that?








    Posted 6/13/2002 at 8:36 am by soul_survivor


    Recalling my past lives has worked that way for me.  As a child I was programmed not to believe in reincarnation.  But many of my dreams concerned times past, and they were scenes I’d never found in books or movies.  In fact, one movie set in Ireland showed me places I immediately recognized from dreams.  It was all a mystery to me then, and much remains mysterious now.  I don’t believe in reincarnation, but neither do I believe in any other theory that contradicts it.  All I know is that I remember living and dying before this life, and some of the people who are here in this life with me now remember being in some of those other lives with me, too.


    Some of my relationships make no sense at all until explained from the reincarnational perspective.  Then everything falls into place.  Edgar Cayce said that we belong to “soul families” and members of a soul family often are born into the same genetic family and/or a series of their lives will be associated with a common theme.  Adoption is such a theme for me and my soul family, and my earthly family as well.  The martial arts and what some call “warrior karma” is another such theme throughout many of the lives I recall, as are percussion music and dance.  I’ve gotten used to walking down front at a concert to dance, and looking up to lock gazes with the drummer and see the same spark of recognition there that I was feeling.


    One of my favorite fellow old souls, Dick Sutphen, says another term for old soul is slow learner.  His belief system says that we keep coming back until we get it right.  Maybe so; I can’t refute that.  It seems to me, rather, that I keep coming back to see what happens next.  But I’ve never had a very long life that I recall, and I’ve had many many brief lifespans, some never making it out of childhood.  I’m still exploring my past, making connections, finding the patterns.  I’m getting help with it, too, especially from my own precious kid and Xanga’s own pet oOMisFitOo, who have each been around with me more than once before. 


    Dick Sutphen also advocates verifying our memories, if it means going and finding our gravestones, looking up descendants and all that.  That’s one of the ways I spend time online and with books from Inter-Library Loan.  I don’t expect to convince any non-believers with the validation I’ve found.  I don’t care about that.  Some people don’t have any past lives to remember, so what difference does it make to them?  I get a lot out of remembering something and then finding the historical or archaeological evidence for it.  I’ll give one example here.  Greyfox was first to recall when he was Coiler and I was Storm, in the Mimbres branch of the Mogollon culture.  Those memories came to him on our honeymoon when we ended up in the Mimbres Valley as the result of some map dowsing.  A bit later in a museum, I saw a bowl that Storm had painted, and that brought memories flooding back to me.


    In trance, Greyfox saw scenes that didn’t conform to any of the popular theories of how our culture then died off or evolved away from the obvious archaelogical markers of pottery style and pueblos, etc.  My own recall was consistent with his, and none of what I read in the interpretive signs at ruins or in museum displays quite fit in terms of timing.  After the honeymoon, I kept studying Southwestern archaeology, and in the past four years have found several archaeologists whose conclusions from their work conform to our memories, and their new theories are gaining more popularity in the profession now, too.


    For most of my life, all my past life recall came in dreams.  I went through a lot of strange incidents when I’d meet someone for the first time and stare… and stare, and finally say, “Don’t I know you from somewhere?”  A few of those times, they’d look at me and say, “Yes, I knew you in a past life.”  Then one of my clients sent me, in trade for a reading, one of Dick Sutphen’s audiotape sets.  It had canned hypnosis sessions designed to regress me to my first earthly life, the one with the highest level of spiritual growth, one with my current partner or associate, and another one with the flexibility to take a person to the life of one’s choice.  I got so much out of them that I ordered his catalog and sent off for a tape that jumped off the page at me:  Teotihuacán:  the Reincarnation of the 25,000.


    It blew me away, and the memories I recovered from there got me a place in Dick’s book Earthly Purpose.  For a year or two after that, dreams and hypnotic regression tapes were the only sources for me of past-life recall.  Then I started corresponding with Greyfox and got into shamanism through his influence.  Our making contact triggered a new level of awareness for me, and suddenly I was spontaneously recalling past lives as easily as I recall childhood events or things that happened last week (not always easy, in any of those cases, for the Secretary of Space).