|
Post by jane on Aug 19, 2018 21:57:23 GMT -5
Native Americans were still populating the "New World" without the economic need to compete with other tribes as much as they were merely hunting animals so they had not major arms race. Bows and arrows and spears was all that was necessary. "Primitive" in more open territory is better as they don't need to be as militarized or tightly controlled by a select Druidic class like European civilizations and Western countries today. They did have shaman but all males were encouraged to go and receive a vision. Even when a man has it, can it be called a Feminine intuition? You and I must have read different history books. From what I've read, the American Indians were constantly fighting over land, hunting grounds and water sources and driving out other tribes. Bows, arrows and spears were all that the ancient Celts had and there has never been more warlike people.
Ancient Europeans and Asians used drugs to produce a trancelike state in order to predict the future and did a lot of the same things as the American Indians to produce visions.
Some people believe the similarities between European pagans and the American Indians is proof that at one time, the two hemispheres were connected.
|
|
|
Post by Isbeau on Aug 19, 2018 22:05:03 GMT -5
third eye in British noun the pineal gland, believed by some people to be the source of spiritual insight
From Collins Dictionary
The non-British says only 1. the pineal eye 2. intuition
Intuition is only one part, a small part, a passive part. Obviously a unicorn is a unicorn for a reason. It's not a uni-receptor. It's a uni-corn. The only difference is how men and women use it. Men will go unicorn versus receptor and maybe that's why they go in the woods. Men think they're breaking the veil which is logically an advantage to trying to receive messages through it. Men have succeeded and sometimes it's not because of the women behind them feeding them information. Although I think they draft off of women.
|
|
|
Post by kitty on Aug 20, 2018 11:55:37 GMT -5
third eye in British noun the pineal gland, believed by some people to be the source of spiritual insight From Collins Dictionary The non-British says only 1. the pineal eye 2. intuition Intuition is only one part, a small part, a passive part. Obviously a unicorn is a unicorn for a reason. It's not a uni-receptor. It's a uni-corn. The only difference is how men and women use it. Men will go unicorn versus receptor and maybe that's why they go in the woods. Men think they're breaking the veil which is logically an advantage to trying to receive messages through it. Men have succeeded and sometimes it's not because of the women behind them feeding them information. Although I think they draft off of women. I'm not trying to be difficult, but I know how to look up things in the dictionary. I'd like to read an article about the third eye by someone who knows what they're talking about. One site that I found said that the Third Eye is to sense and visually interpret energy around us. That's the same thing as intuition. But the site is one that sells something called Tao, so you can't really trust what it says.
|
|
|
Post by Isbeau on Sept 1, 2018 1:29:12 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by jason on Sept 6, 2018 20:35:00 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by Isbeau on Oct 4, 2018 20:45:57 GMT -5
Does it test the third eye or help the third eye? Maybe I’ll try it on my vacation.
|
|
|
Post by kitty on Oct 7, 2018 11:36:45 GMT -5
Does it test the third eye or help the third eye? Maybe I’ll try it on my vacation. How would trying to name a location help the third eye?
|
|
|
Post by Isbeau on Oct 7, 2018 19:46:49 GMT -5
The third eye sees what you can't see with your two eyes and it accesses your subconscious mind for things you buried there. I think that might include trivia that's been consciously forgotten.
Obviously, a clue like Durbar would suggest India and you immediately would guess Canada as it's British loyalist. But that's conscious not subconscious.
I could have read about the Old Asylum for Women at Queens Park. I did research into old asylums after my friend to me he broke into one so I might have read about it but I didn't remember it. The Third eye could have unlocked that memory if it was there.
Sometimes you might think it's a divine revelation when it's just the third eye accessing your mind like a search engine. It happened to me. Later I remembered the memories. It's still third eye though.
|
|
|
Post by madeline on Oct 7, 2018 21:33:36 GMT -5
The third eye sees what you can't see with your two eyes and it accesses your subconscious mind for things you buried there. I think that might include trivia that's been consciously forgotten. Obviously, a clue like Durbar would suggest India and you immediately would guess Canada as it's British loyalist. But that's conscious not subconscious. I could have read about the Old Asylum for Women at Queens Park. I did research into old asylums after my friend to me he broke into one so I might have read about it but I didn't remember it. The Third eye could have unlocked that memory if it was there. Sometimes you might think it's a divine revelation when it's just the third eye accessing your mind like a search engine. It happened to me. Later I remembered the memories. It's still third eye though. This week's Mystery Location has been posted. Why don't you try to name it using the third eye?
|
|
|
Post by Isbeau on Oct 8, 2018 0:16:10 GMT -5
You mean the third eye and Google Search.
I think I already have it. Street address and all using Google Maps Street view.
P.S. The only third eye input I got was that there is probably a different use of the word holy than I would use in this context. It could just be meant as a clue but I think there's a difference of opinion on what exactly is a worse crime. Or a more "unholy" crime. That's just using a third eye to read the clue maker.
I add the P.S. to show I got the right one before the first clue if I am right.
|
|
|
Post by jason on Oct 8, 2018 4:23:41 GMT -5
You mean the third eye and Google Search. I think I already have it. Street address and all using Google Maps Street view. P.S. The only third eye input I got was that there is probably a different use of the word holy than I would use in this context. It could just be meant as a clue but I think there's a difference of opinion on what exactly is a worse crime. Or a more "unholy" crime. That's just using a third eye to read the clue maker. I add the P.S. to show I got the right one before the first clue if I am right.
Does that mean you're going to name it, or just that you're going to say you were right after someone else names it?
|
|
|
Post by Isbeau on Oct 8, 2018 12:19:25 GMT -5
At least I learned 64 degrees is the favorite average temperature for criminals.
Maybe April 25 is a Miss Congeniality reference to the best date. Not too hot not too cold. Just need a light jacket.
|
|
|
Post by steve on Oct 8, 2018 16:24:11 GMT -5
At least I learned 64 degrees is the favorite average temperature for criminals. Maybe April 25 is a Miss Congeniality reference to the best date. Not too hot not too cold. Just need a light jacket.
I'm no good at naming these places, even though I'm the assistant every 3rd week, but I doubt that 64 degrees means that it's the favorite temperature for criminals or that April 25 is the best date for something. Crime spikes in the summer, not in April.
|
|
|
Post by kitty on Oct 8, 2018 16:55:02 GMT -5
At least I learned 64 degrees is the favorite average temperature for criminals. Maybe April 25 is a Miss Congeniality reference to the best date. Not too hot not too cold. Just need a light jacket. What is a Miss Congeniality reference?
|
|
|
Post by Isbeau on Oct 9, 2018 14:18:45 GMT -5
A contestant in the movie was asked what’s the best date and she said April 25. You only need a light jacket.
|
|