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Have you ever consumed sugar? Strongest drug.
originally posted by: boozo
Well, she must be hallucinating, ate the mushroom thing.
Eat the shroom, to feel something that never exist.
Never been in shrooms, or hallucinating drugs to support or escape reality.
a reply to: LaPourer
Thnx.
originally posted by: Direne
a reply to: LaPourer
Sure. Here:
Welcome to the machine
That's where he was.
originally posted by: LaPourer
Have you ever consumed sugar? Strongest drug.
originally posted by: boozo
Well, she must be hallucinating, ate the mushroom thing.
Eat the shroom, to feel something that never exist.
Never been in shrooms, or hallucinating drugs to support or escape reality.
a reply to: LaPourer
Considering drugs, those were/are used to comunicate with ETs. In rituals. Those who know how to comunicate with them, do not have a need for those to "speak" with them.
They have helped you, by/with no interference, so you would learn and grow. If it would be needed, depends on situation and on contract you signed before incarnation, it would be direct action.
originally posted by: boozo
a reply to: LaPourer
That never helps, the fact that I live with idiots.
You'd be surprised when the worst comes and you have to take matters into your own hands because no ETs, Gods, or Demons would help.
I guess Id have to do it myself again. This time, for the worst. Let see what happens. I'm sure they'd love it.
No more second chances (and to hell with them all)
Like with heroin adicted, pregnant women.
originally posted by: kirass
originally posted by: LaPourer
Have you ever consumed sugar? Strongest drug.
originally posted by: boozo
Well, she must be hallucinating, ate the mushroom thing.
Eat the shroom, to feel something that never exist.
Never been in shrooms, or hallucinating drugs to support or escape reality.
a reply to: LaPourer
Considering drugs, those were/are used to comunicate with ETs. In rituals. Those who know how to comunicate with them, do not have a need for those to "speak" with them.
Children are given a taste of "rapid" before birth. That's why they love sugar so much after birth.They remember the taste.
Greetings to all !
Hi Direne !
Walking dead? U r zombie?- joking
originally posted by: boozo
a reply to: LaPourer
That's okay. It's not your problem. Be happy, drink more sugar drug to ease the pain. Fck easy, deal with baby, too easy?
Huehue
Not my baby, but also my problem, but also me pain in the ass.
Haiyaa! Smart Gal you
Not my house but also my problem, haiyaaa!
What you prolly don't know. I am already lost my life long time ago. Half dead, barely a life. What gives you the right?
Here, little secrets for U; ark never existed and gnostics are wrong.
originally posted by: Direne
a reply to: kirass
Hi kirass.
Norea is a character appearing in the Nag Hammadi library (also known as the "Chenoboskion Manuscripts" and the "Gnostic Gospels"), which is a collection of early Christian and Gnostic texts discovered near the Upper Egyptian town of Nag Hammadi in December, 1945.
In the book bearing the title "The Hypostasis of the Archons" (The Reality of the Rulers), Norea is said to be the daughter of Eve and the younger sister of Seth, both of which are members of the pure race, according to the book.
In the book it is narrated that the archons decided to destroy the world with a deluge, but their leader, the Demiurge, warns Noah to build an ark, which Norea tries to board. Noah stops her, so Norea blows upon the ark and sets it ablaze. The story tells that the rulers tried to rape her, but she cries to the God of the Entirety for help. The angel Eleleth appears and frightens the rulers away. Norea and Eleleth had a long conversation in which, among other things, Eleleth explains Norea that she is a child of the spirit, and informs Norea about her true origin and the origin of the world.
Another Nag Hammadi text, titled "the Thought of Norea" (or Ode on Norea) is a first-person account of Norea's plea to God. There is yet another book titled "On the Origin of the World" which includes an account of Oraia, as well as a
book called "First Book of Noraia" and to which some refer to as "Book of Noria". The complete library contains an unknown number of books, not all of which have been found. Thirteen leather-bound papyrus codices buried in a sealed jar were found by a local farmer named Muhammed al-Samman who, together with another fellow, was involved in grave robbing. He confessed her mother burned some of the books as she thought the books were somehow haunted and was afraid the jar contained a jinn.
The recovered 13-volume library consists of Coptic texts and was hidden beneath a large boulder near the town of Nag Hammadi, about 70 miles north of Luxor, in upper Egypt. The area was plagued by villagers who dedicated themselves to robbing tombs to recover treasures and ancient objects that they then sold at flea markets. Several Coptic texts,
in addition to those of Nag Hammadi, were obtained in this way and were acquired by obscure intermediaries from the major museums and universities of Europe.
Perhaps the most interesting book, of which only incomplete texts remain scattered in various museums, is the one describing the encounter between Eleleth and Norea, in which Eleleth answers Norea's existential questions. What Norea asked, and what Eleleth answered, is not public knowledge. The complete text is said to be guarded by a Gnostic sect of women, called the Sisters of the Covenant. You must know that there were female anchorites in early Christian Egypt.
Others say that Mr. Alfred Lucas, a British chemist from the Royal College of Science who worked for the British Government as an assistant chemist, was sent to Egypt to gather all the texts he could. Officially, he was involved in
cleaning, consolidating, and conserving antiquities to good use when he was lent by the Antiquities Service to Mr. Carter during the excavation of the tomb of Tutankhamun. Anyway, the guy died in 1945, before the Nag Hammadi library discovery.
Only those humans who have all of the texts can read Eleleth's answers to Norea's questions. You can also visit the monastery of the Sisters of the Covenant, although I do not recommend it. You would die long before going near it, unless they take pity on you. That would be the first time they take pity on someone, though.