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Writing a Daily Blog helps with daily writing of a book

I look forward to giving my Everyone Has a Book in Them all-day event in Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada, on April 14th at 10 a.m., sponsored by the Nanaimo Metaphysical Network. As I prepare for it, I think back to the time when I was just starting to write my first book, The Golden Ones: From Atlantis to a New World. At the time, I found it so difficult to get down to writing.

When I look back, I can see that writing this almost daily blog has really helped with the writing process. Now that I have to sit down and write something most days for this blog, I find that sitting down and writing my next book, marketing material for the book, or working on my latest movie is relatively easy. My creativity flows much easier. Hopefully, I can help others to make their writing process easier.

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“Everyone Has a Book in Them” honors the creativity inherent in your soul

Today, I’m preparing for my one-day talk in Nanaimo, British Columbia, on Saturday, April 14th, 2012, sponsored by the Nanaimo Metaphysical Network. I will be speaking on Everyone Has a Book in Them, one of my favorite topics, because it is much more than a seminar on writing your book and getting it published. It is also about honoring your innate creativity, an attribute of your soul.

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Expressing creativity brings a person closer to the Divine

In preparing for my Everyone Has a Book in Them all-day event in Nanaimo, British Columbia, Canada, next month (April 2012), I am reminded of Edgar Cayce’s reading extolling the virtues of following impulses from the Creative Forces:

“For whatever urge arises in the experience of an entity that is of a creative nature, is following closer to the Divine.”

Edgar Cayce reading 2398-2

 

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Antarctica coastline on the Piri Reis map

I am continuing to work on the 2012 End of the World Movie. I’m just at the part where I talk about previous end of the world scenarios and I mention the Piri Reis map, which, according to Charles Hapgood, illustrates some of the Antarctica Continent, with details of the landmass under the ice such as flowing rivers. The following excerpt is from Wikipedia.

Hapgood suggests that the Antarctic section of the map was copied at an incorrect scale to the rest of the map and resulted in the distortion and enlargement of the continent on several ancient maps. This would explain why there is no waterway between South America and Antarctica. He suggests several points of continuity between the Piri Reis Map and modern maps of the continent below the ice sheets. Since the Antarctic continent was not officially sighted until 1820 and its full coastline was not known until much later; this claim, if true, would require major revisions to the history of exploration, settlement, evolution, and technological advancements of the time.

Piri Reis Map

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Dramatic lava flows and the demise of Lemuria bring to mind 2012 and the end of the world

Yesterday’s post with that amazingly dramatic photograph of lava spewing out of the side of a cliff into the Pacific Ocean in Hawaii brings to mind not only the sinking of Lemuria Mu, but also the recent speculation about the 2012 prophecies and the end of the world. Could the world end on December 21, 2012 from dramatic volcanic activity?

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Dramatic lava flows in Hawaii bring to mind the sinking of Lemuria Mu

Lava flows from Kilauea volcano in Hawaii. Credit: AP Photo/David Jordan
Lava flows from Kilauea volcano in Hawaii. Credit: AP Photo/David Jordan

Check out this amazing photograph of a lava flow from the Kilauea volcano in Hawaii National Park. Credit: AP Photo/David Jordan

The lava is plummeting and sizzling into the Pacific Ocean and has created over 500 acres of new land at the coastline.
 
The Hawaiian islands are  supposed to some of the remants of the lost continent of Lemuria Mu. Lava flows like this one bring to mind the kinds of forces that could have destroyed Lemuria Mu hundreds of thousands of years ago.
 
For me, this photos shows something that is downright scary.
 
One of my friends has seen an eruption of this volcano on Hawaii’s Big Island. She said that when she and other tourists stood in the viewing area at a distance from the volcano, even at a “safe” distance, the heat was almost unbearable. She had to keep turning around to cool first one side of her body and then the other.
 
I can see how a person could be fascinated by volcanoes, but I can’t see how a vulcanologist would want to put themselves in danger just to study them. For more amazing photographs of this volcano and many others, take a look at these Live Science images.
 
 

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Could lost islands discovered in present-day Pacific be Lemuria Mu?

Map of the Panthalassa Ocean about 200 million years ago.
Map of the Panthalassa Ocean about 200 million years ago. The white ovals show the reconstructed locations of volcanic arcs known from continental rocks.

Another map, this time, of the Panthalassa Ocean during the time of the megacontinent Pangaea. This article at Ars Technica describes how geophysicists “analyzed seismic velocity data from the mantle beneath the Pacific” and found that the Panthalassa Ocean was not as featureless as previously theorized. They concluded that:

 
In addition to working out the location of these volcanic arcs, the study will also help researchers reconstruct the history of the Pacific plate. “[F]or any future model of the Panthalassa Ocean, the presence of the Telkhinia subduction zone needs to be taken into account,” wrote van der Meer. “Previous models simply extrapolated the spreading ridges until they [encountered] a continent. We have now proven that it was not that simple, and the tectonic history was complicated.”
 
 
As I have before, when I read of scientists finding evidence for ancient  lost islands in what became the present-day Pacific Ocean, I wonder if these landmasses could have been Lemuria Mu.

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Could the ancient ‘Lost’ continent Gondwana have sheltered Lemuria Mu?

On November 18 and 21, 2011, I wrote about the megacontinent Gondwana in this blog. In those posts, I wondered if Lemuria Mu could have been a part of Gondwana. Well, in these maps of the earth, posted as illustrations of the U.K. The Telegraph‘s online article ‘Lost” continent Gondwana sheds light on formation of world today,” there does not appear to be any room for the lost continent of Lemuria. All the present-day landmasses of Antarctica, Australia, and India, which today are separated by the Indian Ocean, were at one time scrunched together to form the megacontinent. Although, I must admit, it is difficult to sort out the land masses from the present-day coastlines of continents. What do you think? Can you see a place, in the ancient maps, where a lost continent could have been located?

Graphic shows how Gondwana broke into present-day Australia, Antarctica and India between 80 and 130 million years ago

Graphic shows how Gondwana broke into present-day Australia, Antarctica and India between 80 and 130 million years ago

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And yet another location for Atlantis: Bolivia

The following quote comes from what appears to be a new WordPress blog site devoted to Atlantis, OnlineAtlantic.com. It refers to a possible location of the lost city of Atlantis as being in Bolivia. Never heard of that one before, but it definitely piques my interest. In the first post I read that:

British Royal Air Force photo interpreter J.M. Allen thinks that Atlantis is in Altiplano, Bolivia, near the Andes Mountains. 

Atlantis World

 

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