Carol Chapman

Author Archives: Carol Chapman

The 40-Day Manifestation Prayer can be a different kind of New Year’s Resolution

I don’t know about you, but when I start a New Year’s Resolution, I begin with all kinds of purposeful intent and high hopes of making a change for the better in my life. Usually, after a week or so–sometimes only after a couple of days–my resolve dissipates and I’m back to my old habits again.

The 40-day prayers are different. They work with your subconscious mind. You keep the same thought by praying the 40-Day Manifestation Prayer for 40 consecutive days without missing a day. At the end of the time period–by day 39 or 40 or sometimes 41 or 42, you will have what you want, have a resolution to a dilemma, or have an insight to what needs to be done.

Unlike the typical New Year’s Resolution, which works through your conscious mind, the 40-Day Manifestation Prayer creates results for you through your subconscious mind, which is running your life anyway.

Copy 2012 07 Jul 23 Hearts CovRGB96dpiGive it a try. The 40-Day Manifestation Prayer is in my new book, Have Your Heart’s Desire. The Kindle version of the book is presently free on Amazon–until Sunday, January 3rd.

If you don’t have a Kindle tablet, don’t worry. You can download an app onto your computer, iphone, ipad, smartphone, PC, or Mac. It’s easy. Here’s the link:

http://www.amazon.com/gp/feature.html?ie=UTF8&docId=1000493771

 

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The 40-Day Manifestation Prayer can bring you your heart’s desire

Copy 2012 07 Jul 23 Hearts CovRGB96dpiI’m doing a 40-Day Manifestation Prayer right now. It’s going well, although I missed day 11 when I first started. You have to start all over again if you miss a day. So, I started again, and now I’m on day 15.

Are you doing a 40-day prayer now? The prayers are in Have Your Heart’s Desire. The Kindle ebook of “Hearts” is presently free on Amazon. Have you ever done a 40-Day Manifestation or Forgiveness Prayer?

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False beliefs of the Mayan prophecy end of the world not entirely a grassroots movement

Long count calendar date corresponding to the mythical Mayan creation date of August 11, 3114 BC. This image is in the public domain, because its copyright has expired.

Long count calendar date corresponding to the mythical Mayan creation date of August 11, 3114 BC. This image is in the public domain, because its copyright has expired.

Lorenzo DiTommaso, professor of religion at Concordia University in Montreal, says that because of the grassroots nature of the Mayan apocalypse predictions, believers in the world’s end on December 21, 2012, will not have a leader to express their dissatisfaction that what they were told did not come to pass.

An online article by LiveScience says that:

Rationalizing and attempting to explain away failure is common among failed doomsday groups, said Lorenzo DiTommaso, a professor of religion at Concordia University in Montreal. In some cases, groups even claim that their prayers saved the world.

The Mayan apocalypse is likely to be different, if only because the Internet is bursting with dozens of contradictory prophecies about the day, DiTommaso told LiveScience.

After Mayan Apolacalypse Failure, Believers May Suffer

In my humble opinion, the belief in the end of the world was not only a grassroots movement fanned by contradictory Internet prophecies but was also touted by the conventional media. One of the reasons I wrote the End of the World 2012 EBook and Book, and made the End of the World 2012 Movie was because of a very convincing public television documentary on the 2012 Mayan prophecy that had upset a friend of mine. I set out to find the truth.

In addition, there were many, many books written by, for the most part, “new age” authors that appeared to be full of “scientific evidence,” when, in fact, if a person was to actually research the  Mayan calendar online in blogs by expert epigraphers or read books by Mayan experts, one would discover that many of the books had holes in their scientific evidence.

Perhaps those disgruntled believers actually do have leaders to show dissatisfaction with in these authors that wrote about fanciful events that were not the actual 2012 Mayan prophecies.

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The dread hole in the magnetosphere does not portend a 2012 doomsday

Artist's rendition of Earth's magnetosphere. NASA photo in the public domain.

Artist’s rendition of Earth’s magnetosphere. NASA photo in the public domain.

This is an article published online on December 16, 2008, almost four years ago. Yet, when I viewed the sensationalist videos about the terrible hole in the magnetosphere, the videos sounded as if the huge hole was letting in damage from the sun that was going to annihilate all life on earth at any moment. Well, it’s been four years since this “hole” was discovered. At that time, it was not the first hole discovered. The main difference with previous holes in the magnetosphere was the way this one acted.

Dec. 16, 2008: NASA’s five THEMIS spacecraft have discovered a breach in Earth’s magnetic field ten times larger than anything previously thought to exist. Solar wind can flow in through the opening to “load up” the magnetosphere for powerful geomagnetic storms. But the breach itself is not the biggest surprise. Researchers are even more amazed at the strange and unexpected way it forms, overturning long-held ideas of space physics. . . .

Space physicists have long believed that holes in Earth’s magnetosphere open only in response to solar magnetic fields that point south. The great breach of June 2007, however, opened in response to a solar magnetic field that pointed north.

Giant Breach in Earth’s Magnetic Field Discovered

That doesn’t mean something terrible and new is happening. It only means that scientists are learning new things about the earth, sun and solar system and this is something new they have discovered due to these new sophisticated instruments on the THEMIS spacecraft.

Carol Chapman, author of the End of the World 2012 Book and EBook, and the director/producer of the End of the World 2012 Movie

 

 

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Electrical blackouts could be rampant with solar flare destruction on December 21 2012

The flare and so called after-flare Solar Prominence.The solar disk was blocked in PS for a better visual effect.

The flare and so called after-flare Solar Prominence.The solar disk was blocked in PS for a better visual effect.

Some people are spreading fearful projections that since the sun will be experiencing a solar maximum soon, IF there is a huge solar flares, as there were in 1859, the result could be the paralysis of our world. There are YouTube movies of predictions made a couple of years ago saying that on December 21, 2012, this projected solar maximum could cause the end of the world as we know it. In 1859, a solar flare caused telegram wires to melt. And, another solar flare of similar intensity could cause much greater havoc in the modern-day world in which we need electricity for just about everything.

However, I was in the Great Northwest Blackout of 1965 and lived through it.  In 1965, I was quite young–a small-town girl in the big city. At the time, I was in downtown Toronto about to take a night class at Ryerson. I was walking down the college’s halls when the lights went out. There were a couple of young men at their lockers. I’ll always remember the sound of my heels on the hard-polished floor of the college hallway as soon as it became black. The only lights we could see were the headlights of a cars turning out of the parking lot outside.

I’ll also always remember that the first thing one of the young men said as soon as the lights went out was, “Are you OK?” He was thinking of me. It meant so much to me to know that a young man’s first thought would be the safety of someone else.

On the other hand, the scariest part of the 1965 blackout was people smashing the big plate-glass windows of downtown stores for looting. I wandered out of the college onto Yonge St., downtown Toronto’s main street. Outside, it was crazy. In the dark, I saw a man furtively running out of a discount clothing store clutching four sweaters to his chest. One man almost smashed into me. Fortunately, a policeman had been watching. He caught my eye, his gaze gleaming in the beam of the headlights on Yonge Street. I could see his concern for me, a young woman unaccustomed to the mania of crazy people under stress. I backed away just in time to miss being hit by the crazy thief.

I decided to get on a Dundas Street streetcar and stay put out of the way of flying glass shards and darting thieves. The streetcars had supplemental power of some sort so they had some light on the inside, but they weren’t moving. I remember thinking how strange it was that a person’s first thought as soon as the electricity went out was to steal something. And, to steal four sweaters. Really? He had to steal four sweaters? They couldn’t have been very expensive.

So, in one night, I experienced the best and the worst of human nature.

In any case, we are less than two weeks away from that fateful date, December 21, 2012, and I am not seeing news items about increased solar flares. In fact, the date for the solar maximum has been revised to be sometime in 2013.

If you’ve seen some of these scary movies with a scientist or scientists talking about increased solar activity causing the end of the world as we know it on December 21, 2012, in my humble opinion, it’s time to take a breath and relax. It doesn’t appear to be happening.

Carol Chapman, author of the End of the World 2012 Book, EBook, and Movie

 

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