I just got my rear end out of bed, hit my favorite chair and of course turned on the idiot box (that’s the television for you of milder dispositions). I know what I’m about to say may seem unrelated, but it’s not. I had left it tuned to HDnet channel last night. This morning they have on their movie preview show. And again there’s another UFO invasion movie coming out in March. Holy Cow! How many more of these things???? Last night I watched the second season premiere of “V”. I believe UFO stories/movies are only second to “superhero” movies. What does all this say about us as a people? Is the fact that we love superhero movies just a deep desire to be something more than plain? Or is it a deep psychological deficit, all of us feeling inadequate in a culture that prizes competition above all else? Win at all odds, or be just a nothing loser? Whew! Heavy pressure here in the land of Uncle Sam!
Yet we spend millions on fantasizing about either being a powerful super being, or else being shredded by an invading alien force. what the Hell? The archetypes are clearly defined by our subconscious in the wide open for everyone to see, but we are somehow too fearful to see them. But as John Mellencamp says, “Ain’t that America, home of the free!”. I’ll follow that line by saying, “No one wants to see!”.
In this case, what “we don’t want to see”, is that there are signs all around us, showing us that our world is changing.
Read The Entire Article
If you read this website with any regularity (not that the posts are regular!), you are probably well aware of the fact that Richard Dolan has a new book coming out. He has co-wrote the book with Bryce Zabel, a famous television writer in his own right. Dolan’s previous books were very good and I really think everyone should read them if they have any interest in this field at all. Unfortunately their website looks more like one of those “info commercials” than an appeal for understanding or learning about this subject. And unfortunately the book, after reading the introduction, seems full of more questions and guesses than answers.
Read The Entire Article
A recent comment on one of my good friend Ray Ward’s reports, has encouraged me to communicate with you these following words:
In a recent book, and a film, called The Other Side of Heaven, John H. Groberg tells the story of an elderly Tongan sailor.
It reads: “In Tongan the word hala means road or path, but is incomplete by itself and needs to have a modifier, such as hala uta (path on land) or hala tali (path on sea). I became convinced that many of those old captains were as sure where they were on their sea paths as we are on our land paths. The ocean is home to them and they develop a feel that is hard for us to comprehend. Let me give an example: I remember returning home from a long voyage in very contrary weather with heavy seas, strong winds, and a cloudy, rainy sky. We were out of sight of land all afternoon, all night and into the next morning. I became a little concerned and asked the captain if he knew for sure where we were.
Read The Entire Article