Found Zoma writings…

I was looking through my laptop for some photos when I stumbled upon this channeled writing session I don’t remember. I re-read it and found it interesting. Although the questions I asked aren’t all that – the answers go into much more detail about the interrelatedness of things. There are a lot of run-on sentences and strange grammar, but here it is as it was written:

3-15-2013

Q: What will happen to the Publishing Industry?

A: It will continue to thrive for many years to come but not as it had in the past. There will always be (to some extent) hard copies, books, magazines that are physical objects but more and more the main source of knowledge will be through digital learning and reading of e-books, websites and all media contained on the platform of the web. Publishing companies will over time learn to bend their traditions to accommodate these new trends, unlike the record industry and many other industries they will learn from the mistakes of those who resisted the wave of technology. Blogs, e-books and websites will become very important for young authors in proving their commercial viability. Once they have proven their commercial viability these old, bigger institutions will step in to take authors to bigger multi=national audiences and to help sell their rights to other platforms such as web series, TV and Film. They will like the record industry try to take monies for monies made through other means but in their case it will not be all companies and eventually this will fall by the wayside as other more inventive ways to make money for these corporations will arise with a new generation of leaders to come.

 

Q: What will happen to the film and TV industry?

Well, you are starting to see its disintegration now. Films will take the place of theater in many ways – not entirely – as money becomes ever more scarce or should I say resources. Therefore films will have to be made for less money and get smaller in scope over the course of the next ten years. The economy will not be in the state it was during the 1950s or anytime from that period on. Instead the economy will be more equivalent to the roller coaster it was before the industrial revolution as the confluence of climate change, increase in population and scarcity of resources such as food and even clothing, basic necessities such as medicine and healthcare, all will lead to a reduction in the overall human population on earth. However this will happen over the course of the next forty years or more and as the constant shifting of ecology, economy and its trends along with the increase in human tragedies, natural disasters and political, major political changes erupt, there will be no steady ground for the people to plant their roots in. Instead it will be like a constant quivering an on going earthquake with no end that the young people will adapt to it will be those who are older who will find this new way very disconcerting and difficult to deal with. It will also be your generation and the next two after your that suffer the most as a result as they will be forced to rethink their paradigm countless times. The young generations now will have an ever shifting model imprinted in their minds and therefore will not have the same expectations and will develop new philosophies and ways of living that will be adapted to this new world – this new Aeon which will eventually bring with it the end of patriarchy and eventually a thrust toward science and gender neutrality. It will not be a matriarchy although that will be one step to offset the imbalance now, it will be ultimately a period of two thousand years in which humans will join with their brother and sisters in the multiverse and shift consciousness toward the heavens and the navigation of time/space/multidimensional travel and starship travel. Your race will first try to colonize mars to terra form it and then, having learned its many lessons will go on to roam the multiverse meaning your race will discover travel between time, travel between star systems and travel between dimensions but all this will happen over the grand arch of the Aquarian age. Your people will also live forever, meaning you will learn how to rid yourselves of the death gene and while you will be able to die and will die of various causes, old age will no longer be a killer. Your kind will have to die of disease or accident, murder or malfunction of the body although much will be learned in this regard as well and while not many will be born anymore, those who are will stay alive for thousands of years on average. This will result in problems of fertility and reproduction, as the natural genetic cycle will be removed. Eventually this will come to crisis but for many thousands of years this will be seen as a boon to your kind and not a problem as other methods will be used to artificially grow life until eventually this will no longer wok due to the lack of diversity within the genetic pool. The embryos will not survive until new genetics are infused this is part of what is happening right now with the people who are referred to as Grays. They have run into this problem. They are ancient ancestors who have in a sense come back in time to cultivate new DNA strands to introduce into their population to keep their species alive. They are, in a sense, your creators, they are part of a time loop, to say they are your kind is not entirely true but they are one of the ancestor races that went too far in one direction and found themselves facing extinction. They lost their ability to feel and their individuality, as they are primarily a form of clone. They are attempting to re-seed their kind with those who are in their genetic line and even those who are not; they are having trouble with the emotional nature of these hybrid beings both here and in their colony. Originally they had thought to keep them amongst only themselves but realized that these new beings were very different than themselves and required different interactions than they were capable of giving. They then began to seed earth with them in order to collect them later and reintroduce them into the colony to help teach those hybrids among them how to deal with their feelings. It is a complicated problem that they are still trying to figure out. They are finding that the hybrids are doing and behaving in ways that completely confound them and in some cases they have decided to allow those who they feel could never fit into their culture to remain as humans in hopes that they will someday be able to reconnect in a positive way and utilize these beings once more understanding is given and known so that they may find peace within their group while maintaining their health and vitality as a race. They also as a side effect feel that their genetic experiments will elevate the human race to a more intellectual and less aggressive group as this coming age will bring human beings in contact with many different types of ETs and many races are afraid that humans are too emotional and aggressive to be trusted at this point.

Found Zoma writings…

Finally!!!

Well, it’s been a long drawn out process. The novel is finally coming out and is available now on Amazon. I’m going to set-up a free period for anyone who wants to read it. So look for that post coming up.

I just wanted to say that this novel has an interesting and odd genesis. I came up with the idea in 1998 and started writing it toward the end of 1999. The first draft was finished in 2000. While I was reading it to my writers’ group I had the distinct feeling that despite it being the best thing I had written it would take a very long time to come to publication. At the time my fellow writer’s made comments like, “Wow, this is so imaginative!” or “How do you think this stuff up?” Truth is it was more like a series of visions and logical extensions. Many of the things from inventions (like the ipad or tablet which was originally called an enotebook came out about 10 years later) to the further corruption of our democracy, the widening of the rich with the rest of us, the environmental impacts of climate change – all will read to you as if I wrote them in the past year or so. The book also deals with religious extremism.

Never has there been a time when this book could have been more prescient then it is now.

When I first wrote it I tried to put it aside. In fact I did for many years. It seemed too far ahead. The ideas ungraspable and maybe even more than a little dangerous. I was actually afraid of putting this book out – especially during the years just following 9/11 when it felt like we closed ranks and no longer wanted to look in the mirror at our own culture but rather find an enemy to annihilate.

It was at the writers’ groups insistence that I continue to polish the book – continue to write it. For years I set it aside and worked on other things – always with a push from the four lovely women who came weekly to critic, support and aid one another. As the years turned they started to call me and leave messages like, “I can’t stop thinking about your book. It’s as if it’s all coming true.” This would light a fire under me to edit again – fix some funky transitions, etc.

In 2007 I took it to the SDSU Writers’ Conference. I submitted part of it to an editor for evaluation and won an award for the book. The speech given that day was about how everyone who had won this award was on their way to being published and to huge publishing success. I knew I would be the exception. Maybe someday but not anytime soon.

This book asks us to question everything we take for granted. It calls upon our deepest western mythologies, looks at the spiderwebs lurking inside our broken democracy, our broken paradigms and lays out a dark road for those of us who do not want to see this forthcoming future. But it does also offer hope and solutions and a new paradigm as an alternative. This book is more layered then a Jackson Pollock painting and some of those layers are for the reader to explore and not the author to lay out.

Despite all the seriousness that is at the heart of this book I also wanted it to be enjoyable. So far I have yet to have someone read it who didn’t find it engaging. My editor (who is not easy to please) told me she “loved it,” and couldn’t wait for the next one. I don’t know if there is a next one, but OK. And those of you who read it here before it’s final edit were very kind.

It’s always felt like the book I was born to write. And like everything else about me it was our of synch with time until now.

My best to all of you!

The book is called, “Trees for the Forest” I will put a link up soon when it’s free on Amazon!

Finally!!!

Premonition about Hurricane’s in New York

Here is a science fiction book that I published for a while on this site. I took it down because a publishing company is interested in putting it out. It needs some editing but it has won several small literary prizes. I wrote it back in 1999. It took a few years of editing and rebuilding the middle section to make it work the way I wanted it to. However the vision I had of New York being hit by a hurricane is in it. In actuality the entire novel came from visions I had of the future. I have taken an excerpt from the novel and am publishing it here. In the book the only two cities still left (in terms of major cities functioning as such) are New York and Washington, D.C. The main character Psyche and her boyfriend Ira live in Washington D.C. she is unknowingly working on a secret black op project for the government through a private company. Her discovery of this comes after this part of the book. It takes place approximately 30 years in the future:

I scooped Chi up and sat next to Ira to watch the news.

“New York City has been devastated by this unforeseen monster. Shouldn’t the NWFS have warned of this killer hurricane?” the anchorman and actor, Bill Surnow, queried. Shaky video footage from surveillance cameras around the city ran behind him. Buildings swayed from high winds and water suddenly crashed through the streets, the camera went blue. “More after we take a break,” a disembodied voice said.

I grabbed the cordless phone and dialed my mother, simultaneously asking Ira, “What’s going on?”

“Didn’t anyone tell you?”

I shook my head. “There’s a busy signal.”

“Yeah, I’ve been trying all day. They say the lines are down from North Carolina to Maine.”

I dialed my mother’s cell and waited as it endlessly rang.

Ira’s voice cracked. “I’ve already tried that number, too.”

The heroic New York, having survived terrorist attacks, plagues, and earthquakes, was now being washed to sea. The images were gruesome and horrifying. I couldn’t stop thinking about my mother’s short white hair. Her hunched feeble body and the familiar smell of her sandalwood oil, drowning.

The fear mom had to have experienced, seeing the ocean pitched like a tray of water – the sound of breaking bricks and mortar splintering, and glass shattering – people screaming.

Mom alone. Trapped in the brownstone.

Warren Street bursting with salt water, busting down the cobbled street, exploding two hundred year old row houses into broken brick walls with rocking chairs and baby’s cribs, sofas and teddy bears pouring out of holes – everything taken by the water — people struggling to grab anything floating by to keep themselves steady in the raging flood. The water infested with rats and trash, the tide crashing hard against each new building it sought to destroy.

My home.

My mother.

I was outside myself.

It wasn’t like me to cry even now the hot tightening in the deep of my throat felt like a far away tunnel. I was frozen. Emotionally paralyzed. “I spoke to her yesterday. She’s all right. Right? She’s okay, isn’t she?”

Ira moved gently across the sparse room and caught my hand in his. Its warmth momentarily penetrating my numbness.

The commercial break ended. A grim Bill Surnow stood at the anchor desk to announce, “Early estimates for Hurricane Xavier are thought to include hundreds of thousands dead and many more missing. One source reported most of Brooklyn and Long Island shore entirely decimated. There is little hope the area will ever recover.”

Bill Surnow cut to a local reporter who was standing in the middle of an ER in Queens. “The hospitals are inundated with the injured. In Manhattan F5 winds cracked and shattered windows, glass chards sharp as daggers hurtled in every direction. The scene more gruesome than words could describe.”

I dialed my mother, Miriam’s home again. Again, no use – Mom’s cell phone message in a feminine dulcet voice, sang “All circuits are busy.”

The University where she worked, recited in an ancient automated voice, “You’re call can not go through. Please hang up and dial again.” I went through lists of friends and relatives, but to no avail.

I bottled up the urge to throw the phone across the room and instead demanded of Ira, “When?”

“Around noon the Weather Service started to see signs of a hurricane gathering…”

“But how?” I asked him.

“The conditions were just right off the coast of North Carolina…”

“But why? Nothing…” I stopped myself because my voice was starting to quiver. It was as if my cranium had cracked like a polar ice cap and it was melting so fast the water was drowning me. I raised my voice at Ira, “It’s impossible.”

Ira, who had arrived at my side to give comfort, retreated. “Take it easy, Psyche everything is going to be OK.” He said this with all the skill and assurance of a man who had never had to utter such words.

“Don’t tell me to take it easy. And it’s not going to be OK. My mother is missing. She’s probably dead and you have no answers. No one has answers.” I grabbed my coat and headed toward the front door. Ira followed me.

“Where are you going?”

“I need to think.”

“You can’t go out, it’s dark and late.”

But I darted past him and left. The storm that had hit New York was coming into town and it was cool and misty out. Ira busted out the front door and ran after me. “It’s dangerous.”

“I need to be by myself.” He tried to grab me, but I shook him off. “Please. Just leave me alone.”

“When will you be back?” He pleaded. He looked concerned and confounded. In eight years I had never raised my voice or shed the smallest tear in front of him.

It was starting to drizzle and I wiped a gathered tear of rain from his cheek and said, “As soon as I can.” A moment later I broke into a run and headed into a dark alley.

I felt a drop of water run down my face and I wasn’t sure if it was me, or the rain. But it didn’t matter. I roamed the streets dotted with city lanterns and sickly trees. The cold moon followed as if mocking my pain with a twisted snarl on her face. The rain halos around the street lamps tainted with memories of Brooklyn – things I tried to hold back but couldn’t – waving good-bye to my mom from the car as she stood on the stoop, never thinking it would be the last time I saw her.

That image I couldn’t shake no matter how long or far I walked.

I hadn’t noticed time slipping by or the pound of my footsteps or the chill or the rain soaking through me until I hit the Potomac and I stared at the obstacle it posed on my quest to loose myself. I had walked at least five miles and I knew I had to get back before Ira started a vain attempt to find me. It felt like the edge of the earth and the edge of time, I was crashing and splintering like a fine piece of porcelain hitting concrete.

And then I saw them. A woman about my age, in her early thirties, holding a small limp girl in her arms and struggling to walk the rain slicked stairs.

Logic told me not to, they could have been afflicted with a plague or a crime may have been taking place, but I ran toward them. Something compelled me. And for the first time I can remember, I discarded logic and apathy.

By the time I got to them the mother was struggling to put her dying child in the car. She was about to lay the girl on the sidewalk to open the door when I took her from the woman’s hands. She looked at me as if I had always been there like some sort of guardian angel. We said nothing. She opened the door and I slid the girl into the backseat. Seconds later the woman was backing out of the driveway, barely getting the driver’s side door fully closed as she sped down the street.

On the way home I wondered about them, whether the mother had gotten the girl to a hospital in time, if the girl would survive. Helping them had for a moment made me feel a little less helpless. And through my personal darkness I treasured that feeling like an heirloom.

Ira was fully dressed and ready to start his search when I let myself in. It looked like he had been crying. The flat screen was a cacophony of devastation behind him.

“If I wasn’t so happy to see you I’d strangle you right now,” he said grabbing me.

“I’m not a child.”

“And what? You didn’t think I’d be worried? Why are you punishing me like this?”

“This isn’t about you, Ira.”

“Yes it is. It’s about you not letting me in. I want to help you, but you make it impossible.”

I nodded. He put his arms around me and held me until I couldn’t be held any longer without breaking down again. “I’m sorry,” I said.

There was a repeat of an earlier news broadcast. It was a press conference with none other then my boss Paul Lamont. I sat down to watch it.

Lamont looked too put together, in a suit that would have cost an average person a year’s wages. He was unnaturally relaxed for the circumstances. “There has been a rush to judgment by the scientific community about the Atlantic’s rise in temperature and global warming. For years I’ve poured over countless studies, reviewed thousands of reports and culled through all the supposed proof. I’ve never found a correlation. The evidence is overwhelming for a natural shift in the Earth’s climate. This has occurred many times before human history. It’s unfortunate that we happen to be living during one of these intense global changes.”

I yelled at the screen, “Fucking asshole! Those studies were done by oil companies – they have no credibility. They’ve been discredited by every independent survey done by the scientific community.”

Paul then took a question from Bill Surnow. “What about the ozone hole?”

Paul responded, “Another natural phenomena caused by radiation emitted during solar storms. We’ve seen evidence of holes before in layers of igneous rock. And it’s been repairing itself over the past forty years.”

“Bullshit,” I said.

Ira cautioned me, “Just hold on a minute,”

Bill Surnow asked his follow up, “Are you suggesting all the horrible tragedies that have occurred over the past forty years, are simply a result of natural earth changes?”

“Absolutely,” Lamont said. He waived away any further questions and left the podium.

Ira sat down beside me. “I saw it this afternoon, but I don’t get why they’re still trying to cover up the global warming thing when it’s been proven countless times.”

I hit the rewind button and replayed Lamont’s speech, freezing a medium shot of him and examining it carefully. “There’s something strange about this. I was taken in to see him this morning at work.”

A curious Ira walked back in. He asked, “You were?”

“Strauch was there, too.”

“The President was at Digibio?”

I continued to stare at the screen trying to determine what exactly was different about Paul Lamont. Was his hair a little longer? I went through the catalogue of images fresh in my mind from the boardroom meeting. Yes. But without a physical picture, I couldn’t be sure. His clothes were obviously different. The suit most patently not something he would wear to work. Of course he must have changed. Then I noted something that confirmed my suspicion.

“This was prerecorded,” I said.

“What makes you think that?”

“When I saw him this morning he had a cut on chin.” I paused the image and zoomed closer, pointing to his chin. “There’s nothing there.”

Ira squinted. “They knew this would happen.”

“Yeah, and they didn’t give us any warning.”

“But why?” he asked.

I shook my head. “I can’t think about it right now.”

 

Think about this when you decide how to vote. Is this the world you want for your children? One in which science is disregarded and we have slick politicians ready to lie to you in order to save only themselves?

Best wishes and good luck,

Denise

 

Chapter 2 – Sleepless Night

(2044, January through June)

 

 

 

Gale force winds and thunder, garbage cans crashing over, objects slamming into walls and fences, and Ira slept through all of it like a kitten cuddling at his mother’s breast – but not me. My mind and heart were on fire.

Chi followed me, meowing for treats. It was cold downstairs. The angry wind forced its way between door and window cracks. I grabbed Ira’s ratty old sweater. The first present I had given him. It was the only thing left from that period of his life, perhaps a small reminder of how far he’d come since the penitentiary. I barely knew him then. We had dated about a year. He told me he worked for an Internet research corporation, a consumer watchdog group that kept an eye on the defense department – it had some crazy name I forcibly forgot.

There was never any question. I was instantly in love and hopelessly naive about human nature. Turned out he was part of a watchdog group of hackers who stole classified information and sold it to reporters for a premium. To him it was noble, the people had a right to know and he had a right to make a living. Really, it was closest to intellectual prostitution although he saw himself as a twenty first century Robyn Hood. He could have been building something great instead of hunting down and exploiting government weakness. But who was I to judge? I knew his heart was good and his intentions were pure. And I loved him. He loved me. So I waited.

We avoided talking about it. And if we had to refer to that period there was a code – words that lessened the pain or importance for both of us. Anything to make it less real than it was. Usually if I referred to it, I said, “When you lived in the country.” He usually said, “During that time.”

When I was hired at Digibio, they ran a background check. Nothing came up in the preliminary. A month later they revoked access to anything but the chlorophyll research lab and the cafeteria. But it didn’t really bother me.

The teakettle was singing. Only one bag of Chamomile left, hopefully it would help put me in a coma. And I could wake tomorrow discovering it had all been just a horrible nightmare.

The lights browned. The drawer had only three emergency candles left from the previous storm, which had ended two weeks prior. It had lasted thirty-five days straight and the power had consistently gone out during peak hours. According to the weatherman another hurricane was due to hit North Carolina. But other than historic value there was nothing left there. Both Carolinas were dead states. Neither state had money for scrims and except for folklore about people surviving off the land in the forest – there wasn’t a soul within a hundred miles of New York or D.C. And now all that was left was D.C. There were reports of a smattering of survivors in Seattle but the numbers were low.

I walked to the sofa and stared out the window, drinking tea. Chi sat on my lap. The rain was fierce and reminded me of New York, in my mother’s old brownstone. There had been a very bad storm when I was ten. We had both woken for different reasons. The thunder and lightening had cast shadows of monsters on the wall scaring me out of the room – while Mom contended with a real beast. She was setting out buckets all over the living room to catch the water oozing out of the fissures and cracks in the ceiling. Later I found out she had been afraid the whole damn roof was going to cave in on us, but at the time she pretended it was a game – a fun thing to do together. She had me searching for bowls, buckets, and hats – until each little fissure was represented by a counterpart on the worn hardwood floor – and when a bucket would fill, she would grab one of the mongrel cups or bowls from my loot while pouring the buckets contents into the kitchen sink and then dutifully replace them.

But even though she presented a calm rational exterior I knew something was very wrong. And I remember admiring her. She was fearless, capable and godlike. Nothing could harm me with her protection. She was able to keep the world away with her brilliant mind and convert anyone in her circle of influence to her point of view.

But that night I saw panic when she didn’t know I was watching. It was complicated seeing it and not wanting to see it. So I chose to believe the buckets were a game, knowing it was a protective lie – a lie affirming her love for me.

The streetlights flickered in the rain. Some UV scrims down the block looked as if a colossal box cutter had sliced them – they flapped in the wind like serpent shaped kites.

D.C. was tolerable. It was cleaner than New York and had a much more reliable and quick acting body pick up service unlike the Corner Hut Drop Off Centers of New York, which were always teeming with mutant flies and reeked of decaying flesh no matter how often the workers cleaned them out. It was an ineffectual system and a health hazard. But you hardly ever saw the dead on the streets like you did here in D.C., even if they didn’t stay long on the walkways you were still confronted with them daily.

Maybe it was a bit healthier here but I preferred New York. It felt more like an old city, with people doing all different sorts of things besides just working for the government or on some government related project. More than anything it was my connection to a personal history I missed – even if New York barely resembled the one of my youth and even if it never snowed anymore and the winters felt like warm fall days from childhood. I knew it. Somewhere under its fading, wilting petals the stem was the same.

And despite the elaborate scrim maze providing the best UV protection in the world (or so we were told by our government) I had preferred shabby New York. If only I could have gotten my mother to move. But that was like asking lead to turn into gold. And even though it got tiresome always wearing a protection suit or carry a UV umbrella or coating my skin with titanium dioxide which made me and my mom break out like hormonal teenagers if we so much as looked at the stuff, she would hear nothing of the virtues of my new city. She desperately loved all that was left of New York.

On the steps of the apartment building across the street a black shape moved. It was big enough to be a person but could have been a box or a piece of furniture left out for trash pick-up which had caught in the gale force wind, but most likely it was one of the infected. A crack of lightening lit the street clearly and I saw the woman. Skeleton Plague. Aptly named for the visual state it left its victims in – their skin and fat tissues were literally cannibalized by their bodies immune system and the results were a horrifying sight – skin turned paper white, taught and veiny, held up by the jagged tent poles of their bones.

The government said Skeleton Plague was communicable, but it was an autoimmune disease. The scientific community was still debating its genesis and treat-ability, but that was it. We knew something was turning white blood cells into cannibalistic machines, whether it was UV-B, UV-A rays or some other solar radiation mixed with pollution we weren’t certain. There was always a new outbreak during solar flares and there had never been any evidence of it being contagious, but people were afraid and the CDC had decided early on it was best to treat it like all the other plagues that had come down the pike and keep its victims quarantined. Those that got it generally spent a lot of time outside and didn’t alter their behavior during solar flare warnings or relied only on the city scrims to protect them. The woman had probably escaped from quarantine in a vein attempt to see her family one last time, but they wouldn’t open the door for her.

In the next crack of lightening I saw her convulsing. She was in the last throws of life. I called the health department and a few minutes later I saw a Hazmat team take her body away. No fanfare, no ceremony. Life reduced to inconvenient garbage. It hadn’t always been like that. I could almost remember a different time. Mom told me crazy stories about her childhood and what seemed like an Edenic period at the turn of the century. I never really believed her until I was in college and studied history.

…..

Blessings to all – our thoughts and prayers are with all of you on the east coast,

Denise

Premonition about Hurricane’s in New York

Howdy all…

I’ve been thinking about and feeling guilty and horrible that I haven’t had a chance to blog or follow-up on checking all the e-mails that have come into this blog. I am in the middle of cleaning up the novel Americhrist which I have decided to publish via ibook rather than through a traditional publisher, despite talks with one company – there are too many changes they want me to make and this book is as much a work of fiction as it is a vision of the future of this country. I believe all the best sci-fi/fantasy writers (like Philip K. Dick, H.G. Wells, Margaret Atwood, just to name a very few) were not just writers but visionaries who saw patterns and perhaps in some cases had the gift of precognition.

While I’ve been re-reading this book – I have to say it kind of freaks me out. The first draft was written in 1999. So many of the things predicted have already started to come to pass – which I’ve had to change in the book because when I wrote it, “Junk DNA” was the name for what is  now called “non-coding DNA” or “dark matter DNA.” At the time it was thought to literally be junk, doing nothing. But since 2008 it has been proven that there is pertinent info in this “Junk DNA” hence the name change. Science now realizes that Junk DNA also known as RNA does have a purpose, much of it still unknown.

I also read in Discover magazine that one of the solutions to a drought in the book is actually in development right now. So there you go. That’s not some of the much bigger things which I won’t blow here.

For all those interested in getting readings I am working on a podcast. I’ve been doing research and will probably have that together in the next 6 weeks or so. Once I have everything figured out and all the technology in place I will ask those of you who are interested in getting a free reading in exchange for using your voice on the podcast to let me know through this site or via an e-mail address I’ll set up when the time comes. I’ll then have people call in during a time frame and do it live and then broadcast it later.

I have also put together a small class which will start soon. I’m going to tape these and put them up as podcasts as well. The purpose of these will be learning the basics of all sorts of divination – astrology being very complicated will only be touched on lastly. The main function of the lessons will be how to learn to be your own psychic, use simple tools like a pendulum, how to see or feel auras, hot to tell if your dream is psychological or psychic, how to do psychic protection, channeling or communicating with one’s spirit guides, numerology, tarot, perhaps the Kabbalah as it relates to the tarot and divination and again touch on the basics of astrology. Different people will find they relate to these tools differently and the one that speaks to them. Of course knowing all of these things is great but usually you really need to connect with one and use that to its fullest and that’s it.

One doesn’t need to be “psychic” to use these oracles. The oracles themselves pull from the ether and give the information you can use. However the information is more general if one isn’t psychic. For example getting a reading from someone who is an extraordinary psychic is very freaky for most people – the psychic will get names, see people in your life, may even know the layout of your home  and pieces of furniture you have (if you are asking about finding an item that’s lost). Most people who work as psychics are not necessarily psychic but rather trained in how to use oracles. So my point here is that you don’t need to be born able to read minds and seeing the future, auras, or dead people to ask the universe for guidance and actually get it.

I have mostly taught professional psychics how to get more precise information through channeling and trance work. In this case I have purposefully put together a group of people who will run the gamut of abilities none are professional psychics  however  they all have one thing in common is their honest desire to learn. I will give them exercises you can try yourself or start your own group and pair off with interested parties.

In the case of my group I know all of them in varying degrees however none of them know each other which will be important because I’m going to pair them together and give each other readings to help build confidence and try out the techniques. I would encourage people who are interested in learning how to use their abilities to work with people they don’t know at all or very well so they can be impressed by their own ability to get information out of the air. This builds confidence and ability to trust in ones intuition. Hopefully, these lesson podcasts will be helpful to those of you who want to expand into that arena and at least be useful for those questions that you need answers to quickly and help guide you on your journey.

For those of you who are interested in getting a reading from me on the other podcasts I’ll let you know when I’m almost there and you can contact me through an e-mail dedicated to that issue.

So sorry if I haven’t answered your e-mails. I haven’t checked anything but my personal e-mail on occasion. Once I get sorted I will start checking the e-mail for this blog and I will again put up an e-mail address for those interested in getting free readings through the podcast.

I read someone mentioning that they weren’t a psychic but they felt things were getting worse. I have to say that I have felt we as a whole have been lucky so far. I wasn’t surprised by this latest banking scandal in fact I wasn’t surprised either by the huge drought in the Mid-West. We (as a group) have continuously chosen the dark path and than every once in a while we’ve skipped over and decided to choose the light. The more generous, loving, kind, non-judgemental and considerate we are to one another the better our world will do. Unfortunately this isn’t the course that a great majority of people have chosen and in fact I feel our whole culture has moved from being psychologically normal to having a personality disorder. It seems every man for himself is just fine – instead of coming together as a whole and fighting to put the world back on the right path, we have a divisive and evil elite who are doing everything they can to subjugate humanity for their own personal feeling of superiority – in reality if the middle class is eliminated and the world is one big third world country and the one percent have 99,99% of all resources then science, art and culture will come to a grinding halt. And so I ask what will that .01% have? A world of crappy healthcare, where progress reverses and arts stop evolving. Who will be able to afford an education? Who will engineer buildings, cure cancer, paint beautiful paintings? If these sick freaks hoard all the world’s resources they are cutting their noses off to spite their neighbor’s face. What mental illness is this that encourages greed, selfishness, lack of compassion and judgmentalness – I think you guessed it, NARCISSISM. We live in a culture where people  just want to be famous to see their face on TV and other people watch them because they want to feel better about themselves – this voyeurism has broken down our culture more than anything besides the Reagan era’s love of greed and selfishness. There’s a reason every religion and all spiritual teachings speak of these qualities as being the road to darkness – THEY ARE.

It’s hard to resist being judgemental in a world that constantly judges. It’s hard to be kind when half a dozen people you meet a day, or more, are totally disrespectful and rude. But try to resist being caught up in the storm and do your best to show kindness and respect and love for your fellow-man – the results will be exponential. In essence we need to start really caring about one another not just about those in our immediate environment. Take the time to help someone out – a stranger – even if it’s just telling them their tire is flat or give directions or report gun shots in the middle of the night – whatever you can do to make a difference for the better – do it – nothing is too small to count.

Many blessings,

Denise

Howdy all…

Photobooth Function/Kirlian Photography Experiment

I’m not sure how many of you are familiar with kirlian photography but it is supposed to take a picture or an aura. I have been fascinated by this for many years. Anyway, to make a machine is very difficult and to buy one outrageously expensive. However for those of you who own macs and have the photobook function on it, try putting the effect “Glow” on and then get into a dark room and take a picture of yourself. Do that first and then try projecting different colors onto the image. I found that I was able to get the color I was thinking of to color the image of me. It was very interesting.

Try it and let me know what you find and e-mail me pictures. If you want them posted let me know and I will do so. If not then let me know that too. Please give it a shot. I think mac may have inadvertently given us a way to work with energy through the computer/camera. Let me know what your findings are.

Also I have been reading to excellent books that seem to compliment each other well. One is called How to Read the Akashic Records, the other is If You Want To Write. The writing book is actually a spiritual book disguised as a book about finding ones authentic creative voice. For anyone interested in being more creative in any aspect of their life and being in touch with the divine I highly recommend the book If You Want To Write. It is inspirational, plain spoken and encourages the connection between the self and the divine. Also How to Read the Akashic Records also fosters a personal connection to God/Goddess/Creator/Universe and gives some good ideas for people to follow on how to get in touch with ones own higher self and spiritual teachers (on the non material side) encouraging people to forage their own link between themselves and the truth that they are part of God. Both books do this in different ways. I highly recommend them especially in this turbulent time when the best thing that can come out of this for all of us is a greater understanding of ourselves.

Best to all and many blessings,
Denise

Photobooth Function/Kirlian Photography Experiment