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| From | amdx <nojunk@knology.net> |
|---|---|
| Newsgroups | alt.healing.reiki, alt.meditation.qigong, alt.yoga, alt.chinese.fengshui, sci.physics.acoustics |
| Subject | Re: Orca Hot Foot |
| Date | 2019-07-17 14:57 -0500 |
| Organization | A noiseless patient Spider |
| Message-ID | <qgnuij$95q$1@dont-email.me> (permalink) |
| References | <0001HW.206DCE3B02335FAC70000ACB32CF@news.eternal-september.org> <0001HW.206DF446023C4A4D70000ACB32CF@news.eternal-september.org> |
Cross-posted to 5 groups.
On 3/29/2018 11:27 PM, David Dalton wrote:
> On Mar 29, 2018, David Dalton wrote
> (in article<0001HW.206DCE3B02335FAC70000ACB32CF@news.eternal-september.org>):
>
>> I just updated my Orca Hot Foot page, which is a subsubpage of my Salmon on
>> the Thorns page. Here are a couple of excerpts:
>>
>> The orca hot foot occurred in November of 1995, at the Vancouver aquarium
>> orca pool. I did a yoga mula-bandha (deep, rooted, raspy, my niece said many
>> years ago that mine sounds like the wind) breath near the orcas. I think the
>> female, Bjossa, was closest but am not sure; there were also one or two other
>> orcas (Finna, Hyack?) and I think one dolphin in the pool, and belugas in a
>> nearby pool. I got an extremely strong, almost electric shock on my right
>> foot, which I had to raise slightly.
>>
>> For those who have seen the Star Trek: Voyage Home movie (and others), the
>> hot foot may have been a sign of recognition/shamanic call for me but also a
>> warning/call for help from them and Gaia. If we do not heed this, well, in
>> 1996 I feared that quick Alzheimer's for the whole human species was
>> possible. Now I don't think so, but a nasty human-specific illness certainly
>> is possible, not from the cetaceans but Gaia (or systemic feedback, or divine
>> agent of your choice). But luckily WE humans are best able to quickly clean
>> up problems we have caused, and work towards heaven on earth.
>
> Someone suggested once that I may have had a pinched nerve, but
> that has never occurred on any other occasion. I’m wondering if
> one of the cetaceans may have hit me with a high frequency
> acoustic beam in response to my mula-bandha breath.
>
You might be very smart and good at what you do, but I have a feeling
I would stick you in the back room and let you do your work. :-)
Mikek
Back to sci.physics.acoustics | Previous | Next — Previous in thread | Find similar
Orca Hot Foot David Dalton <dalton@nfld.com> - 2018-03-29 23:15 -0230
Re: Orca Hot Foot David Dalton <dalton@nfld.com> - 2018-03-30 01:57 -0230
Re: Orca Hot Foot amdx <nojunk@knology.net> - 2019-07-17 14:57 -0500
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