Growing in gigantic ways BETWEEN lives — great video

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A comrade sent me this: Good morning, John.

What a GREAT website you found at the-formula.org!!!!

 

The information also correlates well with Neale Donald Walsch’s writings.

***JdN

And with comrade Michael Winkler’ Die spirituelle Welt (“The Spiritual World”) in German, which I have mostly translated but found somehow too cold to affect most people.

 

***

I’m watching the video on this page right now.

https://the-formula.org/resources/what-near-death-experiences-teach-us/

There’s an interesting segment about the life review video.  Get this!

Not only do you watch your life over, but you experience it again, FROM ALL SIDES!

The story related is one of a guy who dies during a traffic accident and watches his life-review video.  During the video, he gets to review an incident where earlier in his life, he almost hit a pedestrian, jumped out of his truck, and was so enraged he beat the snot out of that person and left them on the side of the road!

Here’s the however.  Not only is he watching this experience over, like he’s hovering over the fight in a drone.

But he gets to experience it from the point of view of his victim.  He felt all the blows.  Felt the pain of that individual’s teeth breaking and tasted the blood in his mouth. And got to experience the emotions of his victim.

I can only imagine what it must have been like for David Rockefeller at his life review video.

Have a great day, John.

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…..Between-life growth

One of the biggest causes of progress is dying, seeing that life-review video, going OMG and being moved to make radical changes.

 

You MUST reincarnate…

You must have the experiences you need. No pain, no gain.

Unless you dig your heels in and deny any and all responsibility, the vivid confrontation with what you did or for failed to do, and how those sins of commission or omission made others feel, good or bad, can be a soul-transforming experience.

So an Adolf Hitler would NOT come back either looking or acting exactly the same, and especially not having that dorky mustache.

He would be similar, of course, in his physical and emotional makeup, but NOT the same.

Same goes for Napoleon, Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar, George Patton (who now is Trump)…..

But people can be stubborn, even in the afterlife.

Some atheists, when they die, refuse to accept they are dead, and that they have a soul, they insist to themselves pitifully that they are still alive, and hang out as ghosts in their own old house and do so stubbornly for days, weeks, months or years, rather than go do useful things under the tutelage of their angels (spiritual case workers) to improve themselves and face their flaws.

An Adolf Hitler would be a master of mass psychology as in his last life but bored by it all. Been there and done that!

What we need now is to radically embrace the truth about everything — about us, our dire situation, and how WE let the Jews conquer us —  not blame the jews or blacks, ultimately, for anything.

As Jouhandeau said:

 

OUR baseness, cowardice and incompetence!

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The Aryan must first reconquer himself! THEN we become invincible. THEN we can do the Reconquista of our lands!

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2 Comments

  1. Never give up in the fight for the aryan Race – Inspiration from history:

    Joe Simpson

    This British explorer was attempting to scale Siula Grande in the Peruvian Andes when he fell and broke his leg. In order to descend back down the peak a bit faster during a blizzard, Joe’s climbing partner, Simon Yates, hooked himself onto a rock and slowly lowered him down the majority of the mountain, until Joe slipped down an overhanging ice face – almost pulling Simon down with him. Unsure whether his climbing partner was alive or dead, Simon eventually decided to cut the rope after deliberating for an hour. Joe fell into a gaping crevice below and onto an ice bridge, suffering severe injuries. Despite his injuries, plus dehydration and hypothermia, Joe managed to crawl back to base camp, where he found Simon and their other traveling partner moments before they were due to leave.

    Alexander Selkirk

    This Scottish castaway was left on an uninhabited island in the South Pacific Ocean in 1704 due to his trouble making on an expedition ship. Left alone with just a musket, gunpowder, carpenter’s tools, a knife, a Bible and some clothing, Alexander lasted four years and four months in complete solitude – apart from some domesticated wildcats. After hiding from two Spanish ships that arrived and departed the island due to fear of capture, Selkirk was eventually discovered and befriended by an English ship in 1709.

    Harrison Okene

    Early one morning in 2013, Harrison Okene, a 29-year-old cook working on a tugboat 12 miles off the Nigerian coast, was sitting comfortably on the toilet, getting ready for the day. But that morning was like no other and the tugboat was hit by a series of sudden heavy swells. In the blink of an eye, the boat capsized and eleven other crew members died in the chaos. Okene was scrambling to get out of the bathroom and reach an emergency exit, only to be swept back in by the gushing water and into another toilet as the boat began to sink roughly 100 feet below the waves. Miraculously, he managed to survive by reaching an air pocket no larger than four square feet.

    Two and a half days later, a South African diver team reached the scene for a body-recovery operation. As the divers began swimming in and out of the capsized tugboat on the bottom of the ocean, Okene, who had been trapped inside for over 60 hours at this point, still had the clarity of mind not to swim outside of the air pocket, startling the divers who would have probably mistaken him for a shark and used a knife on him. Anyway, once located, he was strapped into diving gear and led by a diving bell to the surface, where he spent two days in a decompression chamber. The doctors were amazed that he was able to survive for so long, given that a normal dive at those depths lasts for only 20 minutes at a time.

    Aron Ralston

    One great survival tip is to always let someone know when and where you’re going a hike. If by any chance you fail to return, that person can call the proper authorities to go looking for you. Aron Ralston did not follow this advice and went hiking alone in Blue John Canyon, Utah, back in 2003, despite being an experienced outdoorsman. After descending into a canyon, a huge, 800-pound boulder fell on him and trapped his right arm. Unable to move, he spent five days there, surviving on the provisions he brought with him, and hoping that someone would stumble upon him, or would hear his cries for help. But because the location was so remote, this didn’t happen and Ralston had to resort to the unthinkable.

    Using a multi-tool he had on him, he amputated his own arm, cutting straight through the bone. After he freed himself, he somehow managed to climb out of the canyon and made the seven-mile-long trek back to his truck. Probably because of dehydration, he didn’t bleed out and managed to reach safety. If this story sounds familiar to you, it’s probably because it was the inspiration for the 2010 movie called 127 Hours.

    Hiroo Onoda

    Hiroo Onoda, an Imperial Japanese Army officer who remained at his jungle post on an island in the Philippines for 29 years and kept fighting the enemy.

    It happened with a simple command. As he related in a memoir after he went home, Lieutenant Onoda’s last order in early 1945 was to stay and fight. Loyal to a military code that taught that death was preferable to surrender, he remained behind on Lubang Island, 93 miles southwest of Manila, when Japanese forces withdrew in the face of an American invasion.

    After Japan surrendered, that September, thousands of Japanese soldiers were scattered across China, Southeast Asia and the Western Pacific. Many stragglers were captured or went home, while hundreds went into hiding rather than surrender or commit suicide. Many died of starvation or sickness. A few survivors refused to believe the dropped leaflets and radio announcements saying the war had been lost.

    Lieutenant Onoda, an intelligence officer trained in guerrilla tactics, and three enlisted men with him found leaflets proclaiming the war’s end, but believed they were enemy propaganda.

    Hannibal Barca

    Hannibal invaded the mighty Roman Empire through the Alps with war elephants. He defeated the Romans in a series of battles at Trebia, Trasimene and Cannae. Never personally losing on the battlefield to the Romans, he maintained his Carthaginian army in Italy for more than a decade after the Second Punic War. He is considered one of the greatest military strategists ever, his Roman enemies even adopted some of his tactics for their own use.

    He is quoted with: “Either we find a way, or we make one”

    Skanderberg

    Born under the name George Kastrioti in the tiny kingdom of Albania to a local ruler, Skanderbeg was taken as a hostage by the mighty Ottoman Sultan as a bargaining chip to tame his father’s desire to rebel. Growing up under Ottoman tutelage he rose to be one their greatest generals, earning the title Skanderbeg, meaning Lord Alexander, equating his heroics with those of Alexander The Great. This of course did not deter Skanderbeg from deserting the Ottoman cause to go back to his homeland and start the rebellion his father never could. By doing so he earned the wrath of the entire Ottoman Empire, sending invading armies for 25 years to crush him…without success.

    With his forces never numbering above 20,000 and going up against ten times as many enemy troops, Skanderbeg was able through a potent mix of guerrilla tactics, his direct insiders knowledge of the enemy and direct attacks to humiliate the Ottomans

    Jan Zizka

    Jan Zizka was a talented and successful military tactician as well as a statesman without equal. He led the Hussites in the turbulent 14th century while remaining grounded with the moral principles that supplied his motivation and guidance.

    Zizka never lost a battle during his entire leadership of the Hussite Revolution, a feat that is even more impressive when one takes into account the disparity in forces between the untrained Hussite peasant militias he led and the professional armies of armored German knights that he faced.

    Zizka was a general during something known as the “Hussite Wars” which, in a nutshell, was an uprising by protestant dissenters against the Catholic Church.

    Before his death though, Zizka requested that his skin be flayed from his body and used to make a drum. Why? So that his men could beat the drum as they marched into battle; so that even in death, he could lead them on!

    An unknown portuguese soldier in the war against the muslims:

    A Dutch priest, Philippus Baldaeus tells a most interesting story (“A Description of ye East India Coasts of Malabar and Coromandel” chapter X, page 533 of the English translation.) :

    During the first Siege of Diu, a Portuguese soldier who was manning one of the bastions of the fortress that was being attacked by theTurks, found himself as the only survivor, having used all bullets but still having some gun powder for one more shot, and finding nothing else to charge his firearm with, decided to extract one of his own tooth and armed the weapon with it, firing against the enemy that was considering he was out of ammunitions.

    • Thank you! Fascinating stories of heroism!

      And when you think about it, all these men would have tasted death anyway. No one alive from AD 1410, like Jan Zizka, could possibly be alive today. 😉

      But while they lived, they really LIVED!

      But the others, they merely exist. and are forgettable, medioocre, selfish nobodies, shlumps who are justifiably forgotten. “Looking out for Number One” makes you part of the vast horde of the Forgettables who waste entire incarnations, learning almost nothing.

      I keep going back to what Achilles said to the timorous servant-boy before he rides off to battle Boagrius (at 1:54-2:18):

      You only really live if you have something great to die for.
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