Years ago I used to have the hardest time coming up with titles for the pieces I wrote. Sometimes the pieces were as long as books, in more recent years they are the posts I put on my blogs. This particular piece was inspired by the throw up I found on the arm of my husband’s chair just a moment ago. I had heard one of the cats making throw up noises but by the time I got there I only saw two cats; Shelby was asleep in my chair and Molly was rounding the corner all in a tizzy to go outside. I figured I’d find it later on. And I did. So, not much, but putting the pieces together I realize now it was Molly. Had a piece of grass in it too, which means her tummy was bothering her.
With that grand lead in I will commence with two interesting channeling things that happened to me recently. Well, actually, three, but that third one is a doozy of a ghost buster story that I will post in the next blog post.
So, I guess it was maybe two weeks ago when I had just awakened. Now, that I am retired I am afforded the luxury of lying in bed for a few minutes before I get up. Sometimes I even go back to sleep. This particular morning, I muttered to myself, “I’ll get up at 7:00”. That’s when somebody in spirit said, “It is 7:00”. I turned on my side to get a look at the bedside clock and it said: 7:03. I thought that was pretty cool.
The other thing that happened was day before yesterday when I was watching a movie called, “White Crow”. It is about Rudolf Nureyev, the Russian ballet dancer who defected to the west in the 1960’s. You can see the trailer on YouTube here: https://youtu.be/BklqjGWxNMs The movie is great and shows how shut down folks were in Russia in those days and may yet still be. Early in the movie Rudolf has traveled to Paris with the Kirov Ballet Company to perform and during that time visited the Louvre. In the movie he stands in front of a painting and I missed the part about what the name was. I had just caught a glimpse of the painting and wanted to go see more information about it on Google. One of the guides (was it Rudolf himself? I don’t know), said, “Shipwreck”. So I went to Google images and put in shipwreck painting. As I moved through the images I saw the painting in question, clicked on it and learned it was called the The Raft of the Medusa by Theodore Gericault painted in 1918-1919. However, it was originally titled Scène de Naufrage (Shipwreck Scene)
So, two pretty specific pieces of channeling. I was pleased.
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