Gifting trip to eastern Kenya
- August 22, 2006 04:17
I was supposed to go on a gifting
trip a couple of months ago to the east of Kenya where I was
informed the main voodoo activity is based. That got delayed
when my finances were interfered with. Georg's map of
underground bases actually shows that the place has a base -
something I'd suspected when I first went there.
Well, I decided to make the trip this Friday,
with much help from Don. Am on track so far. Do send me some
boosts if you can, because today my son saw a strange looking
dead dog dumped next to our house and got a negative energy from
it. I've also been doing battle with a personal attack on my
energy, and one of the boys who works for me is very ill today.
These tactics are not going to scare me. The
last time I visited this place, I got injured in a serious car
accident. There's a lot of work to do in Africa because the
sewer rats resort to voodoo here, which is a lot more potent
than their other miserable efforts.
Way to go, Judy! The main thing I have learnt
from my aborted Safari is that we must all work together to turn
Africa around. Before that humbling experience, I somehow
thought "I can do Africa" alone. I have that lonesome cowboy
thing in me, I guess, alone against he New World Odor.
I 'm so glad, the East African Orgone Network is taking off so
strongly.
Thank you so much Georg! I was to go with Shiro
and two male friends, Amendi and Wambani, both eager to see the
wonders of orgonite. Now Shiro can't make it for health
reason, leaving the two of them. Then Wambani has been injured
in a bus accident.
Last night we had to rush Patrick, (a young
man who's worked for me for more than 10 years) to hospital. He
was doubled over in agony and couldn't walk or talk. He's very
dear to me; more like a son than an employee, because he's with
us out of pure love.
A couple of nights ago, my son Maina witnessed an armed
robbery with shooting next to my house. I had many robberies in
this neighborhood when I started gifting to intimidate me, but
we soon stopped that during our sessions.
Judy, you've got things well in hand by now
and I'm hoping one of the psychics will show up tonite in the
chat so we can run some interference for your upcoming, crucial
gifting safari and also provide some healing for your fallen
comrades. We'll boost Amendi, too.
We measure our worth in this unorganized global network by
our earned reputations, not by any other standard. It's awfully
inspiring to us all that people like Judy, Dr K and Georg are
ever willing to take on large-scale challenges which involve
physical danger.
Humbling experiences are the best ones, Georg
and you & Alex
aced the challenge in Zimbabwe glorioiusly and rubbed Comrade
Mugabe's nose in his own World Odor excrement in the process
without even trying.
At the time, these initiations might be traumatic but they
tend to sharpen our focus and to still the ego's chatter,
allowing us to see ever grander opportunities to exploit for our
specie's and everyone else's benefit. The African continent is
well known to foster that sort of fast-initiation process--who
knows why? 'Kill or cure' is the order of the day, there.
Thanks for that Don. Sometimes I feel,
like Georg, that involving others can slow one down. Three
different people who agreed to take me shopping for the remote
place with let me down today. I needed them because I don't
have my own car and had to go to three opposite ends of town and
the shopping was going to be bulky. Our public transport is
nothing to write home about. Neither of them really turned me
down, they just kept dallying until I finally gave up I decided
to take my power back and get a taxi. That was the last resort
because of the expense. Guess where it came to a grinding halt
before getting anywhere useful, and after the driver lost his
way after taking a wrong turn? The British Embassy. Hahaha!
It couldn't start again, so I had to walk a few kilometers and
ended getting exhaused with nothing to show for it.
Well, there's still tomorrow. ;-) There's something I
thanked the operators for today - the feeling of calm and
serenity, through it all! And when I got a bit overwhelmed, I
remembered to ground myself with Dooney's technique. It works
wonders for me, as does boosting through the dodec chrystals.
Now I can take care of myself. Thank you Dooney!
Judy
john
No Subject - August 23, 2006
21:46
I have put a page up to African gifting
http://www.whale.to/b/gifting_africa.html with a
few maps, and I am sending some metal to Kenya (Nyanza
province Kisumu city), 5kg costs about 16 quid (lost my
pound sign!). Hopefully it may encourage more folk to
send money or stuff.
Anyone wanting stuff posted on whale.to let me know.
Don't know if I am more secure than these sort of
sites.
You are like me: You have that impatience and
you want to get things done quickly!
And it's great that we
are not alone although we sometimes think we can best and
quickest get things done alone.
But there are others who have the same spirit and get things
done also, like the Doc in Uganda and some others in East
Africa. So, sometimes we have to let go, relax, and allow others
a bit of space as well, heh?
That's not meant to slow you down of course, the opposite is
my intention.
John, that's such a great initiative and I thank
you for it. We are destined for great things and I hope we will
fill your pages with achievements.
I got delayed a little, but am still very much moving
forward. I've gathered some used clothes, food and stuff for
the family in the remote area, and today I made some more TB's.
Georg, balance has been a life-long lesson, especially
learning how to temper passion with patience.... hmm... still
learning. Sometimes in Africa, one has to strike while the rod
is hot, because if one doesn't, the money finds other more
urgent uses. I like what someone once posted here about things
happening slowly in Africa, but coming solid, lasting and
powerfully and I believe that is going to be the effect effect
of gifting here.