By Zuerrnnovahh-Starr Livingstone
http://educate-yourself.org/zsl/zslthunderbirdsandrollingthunder01oct02.shtml
Oct. 1, 2002
In this crazy world, myth carries more truth than the six o'clock news.
Thunderbird: A supernatural creature prominent in Northwest Coast
Indian myths. Thunder and lightning are attributed to the thunderbird,
which produces thunder by flapping its wings and lightning by opening and
closing its eyes. The Thunderbird is said to hunt whales, using its wings
to shoot arrows. Among some Plains First Nations, thunderstorms are a contest
between the Thunderbird and a huge rattlesnake. Individuals who had been
struck by lightning and survived often became Shamans, for they had received
the power of the monster bird...written by: Rene R. Gadacz from: The
Canadian Encyclopedia, Year 2000 Edition, publisher: McClelland and
Stewart
The Thunderbirds in native "myth" are the large Sylphs whose heat signatures
in the infrared are measured in miles. The huge rattlesnake is the jetstream
in the stratosphere. Sylphs use the jetstream to move around quickly. They
also use energy from the jetstream in the creation of thunderstorms. There
is a huge orgone energy component running parallel above the physical jetstream.
Native shamans travelling out of the body see the orgone jetstream moving
like a sidewinder rattlesnake across the sky. In 1899 Tesla guessed that
there was a lot of energy in the high atmosphere.
As there are underwater Sylphs called Undines who frolic with
whales, I would guess that the arrows flying from the thunderbird would
be smaller Sylphs diving into the water to play with their cousins. I sincerely
doubt that thunderbirds would hurt whales. In the rare event of an actual
thunderstorm over a pod of whales, there is only an average of five days
each year of Pacific Coast thunderstorms, smaller Sylphs would warn the
whales away from the area where the lightning could strike.
Undines guide whale and fish migration. There is a remarkable video
of a school of herring attacked by sharks off the coast of South Africa.
The herring went into a defensive ball which confused the sharks. I could
see the outlines of the protective Undine guiding the herring.
The large Sylphs are extremely wise. They have techniques of avoiding
by creating destructive thunderstorms. Most thunderstorms are short lived,
six to ten hours. When the storm appears to be becoming too large, they
withdraw and the storm collapses. In some cases a piece of crystalized
orgone has become fixed over a town, a threat to the health of the region,
drastic measures are required to break it up. In a calculated move, the
Sylph brings as much wind, rain, lightning and thunder to disperse the
problem, as the area can bear. Often, it takes a repetition of thunderstorms.
Lightning and thunder shatters crystalizations, wind and rain scatters
and splatters the negative orgone.
This is an article from October 2002 Discover Magazine, page
13:
Rolling Thunder
Summer thunderstorms in the Midwest are confounding: They materialize
out of nowhere. "If you look at a radar screen, it looks like a storm happens
in one place, goes away, then a whole group of totally unrelated storms
grow up a few hundred miles away," says meteorologist Richard Carbone of
the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colorado. But
when Carbone and his colleagues analyzed 50,000 radar images of thunderstorms
that occurred between 1997 and 2000, they uncovered a previously undetected
pattern. "As systems die, they cause the birth of new groups of thunderstorms
in a very systematic way," he says. One storm triggers another and so on,
creating ripples of rain that move west to east from the eastern edge of
the Rockies to the Appalachian Mountains.
Carbone suspects that the ripple effect is driven by enormous atmospheric
waves resulting from differences in the buoyancy of air masses. "Once we
understand it, perhaps we'll be able to make the kind of precision predictions-say,
that there is a 90 percent chance of rain in a metropolitan area in 18
hours-that will impact business decisions and human welfare," Carbone says.
Just recognizing the pattern should improve forecasts: "We may not know
where the storms will start, but once they get going, the near future is
much more predictable." -Kathy A. Svitil
Sylphs are the master gardeners who know how to sprinkle properly
if they are allowed to do so.
Carbone should open up his higher senses and get his forecasts directly
from the Thunderbirds.
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the opinion of the author and is provided for educational purposes only.
It is not to be construed as medical advice. Only a licensed medical doctor
can legally offer medical advice in the United States. Consult the healer
of your choice for medical care and advice.