0.0.0.0: Would Our Legacy Survive? by Richard Graupner

0.0.0.0: Would Our Legacy Survive? by Richard Graupner

Author:Richard Graupner [Graupner, Richard]
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9781452555508
Google: C67mRx99tS8C
Amazon: 1452555494
Goodreads: 16388396
Publisher: Author Solutions Inc.
Published: 2012-07-28T05:00:00+00:00


Chapter 15

Noticing the group of eager faces standing at the door with their pebbles, it seemed to me that time had flown but paradoxically had also stood still. Looking at Angela, I realised that before I went any further – and to help her understand where we came from – I would have to go back in time with her and try to explain in a bit more depth what life had been like while I was growing up. That would have to wait for this evening, however.

‘How many do you have?’ I asked the group.

The answers ranged from ‘lots’ to actual numbers.

‘Let’s go fix those nasty old negative lines,’ I said, and headed off for the first of the points we had marked out in the morning.

On the first line, where it went under the perimeter wall, we placed a circle of sixteen of the larger pebbles, about one pace in diameter. With the smaller pebbles, I formed a shape my father had always felt comfortable with and knew to have a positive energy, placing it in such a way as to direct this positive energy along the line from the perimeter inwards.

‘What’s that?’ Angela asked.

‘An ankh, from ancient Egypt,’ I replied, ‘commonly understood to be a symbol of life.’ I explained that the number sixteen, energetically, produced a carrier wave, an energy wave if you will, that would carry and enhance anything attached to or within it. So I wanted the life energy of the ankh to be carried on this energy line into the earth energy line, helping to transmute it to the positive.

‘Bring the stones,’ I yelled, heading for the other end of the energy line, which was at the wall at the river bank. The kids took off, Angela and I following behind at a more leisurely pace. By the time we arrived, we had a duplicate circle, with an ankh in the middle.

‘Marvellous,’ I said. ‘Let’s check the line.’

Lining up, we all got ourselves ready and crossed the line slowly.

‘Look, look!’ said Marcus, ‘It’s going the other way!’ Of all of us, his reaction was the strongest.

‘Well done,’ I said. ‘Time now to do the other one. Why don’t you five do the one by the river, and the rest of you the other end?’ Angela followed the river group, and I followed the others.

‘How is it going?’ asked Gerry, one of the leaders of the community. At about forty, he was one of the oldest and currently was fit and healthy. I fervently hoped he would remain that way for many years to come. He was gentle, wise, and open to everything. Being a stable influence, which had been necessary more than once over the years, he had built up a solid reputation for his good decision-making. I had worked long and hard to convince him he was too valuable to go out hunting or scouting or undertake any other unnecessary dangerous function. It took others to take my part before we finally had him agree not to partake of those ventures anymore.



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