Saturday, August 23, 2025

ALTer FLUGhafen H.drk@The Queen Code

"The wise do not chase peace.
They run to it."
--M.B.
The Queen Code
by MoLesEy BriDgeTTe

p.s.
hardware: WOZiFan intel NOTEbook
sofware: ms windows 11 ohne ALLES

:::: :::: von 100,- auf 70,- EURO reduziert :::: ::::

Halli+Hallo Leute & Menschen

ich verkaufe heute meine
neuwertige SCHoeFFeL Jacke 
)(mint condition/orange colour)(
Quelle: Spende@Podbieskistr.102 Cafe MenSch in H.
+
ASiCS geL sonoma 7 (GOREtex/99,-€/2025)@SportScheck in H.
)(size CM 30/EU 47/BLACK+yeLLow stripes:colour)(
+
BEIDES WIE NEU UND FRISCH MIT
LENOR GEWASCHEN mmmm :)
& so gut wie nie getragen.



:::: :::: :::: V.H.Srb = Visit Hannover S. :::: :::: ::::
i )(srbski/srpski/serbisch/serbian)( =+= and )(englisch)(
STAN )(SErbiscH)( =+= WOHNUNG )(DEutscH)(
Srb is ancient ProtoSLAVic ROOTword
And IT meanS: KINSman and/or ALLY
RECHTS is RIGHT U.N.D. KAPitAL fliesst von LinkS+
very oLD V.H.S. tapes in the
new L.A.N.D. caLLed "ENTSCHEIDiSTAN"
The Nature of Personal Reality
Part 2: Chapter 22: Session 677
July 11, 1973, by Jane Robert      
Seth on seeking advice from others
Session 677:
"...there is certainly
nothing wrong in asking for help from others
when you think that you need it,
and sometimes there is
much to be gained."

"There are those who make a practice of seeking aid from others, however, using this as a means of avoiding responsibility. In specific physical problems, help should be sought in areas in which you have little knowledge. But many people look to those outside themselves — psychics, doctors, psychiatrists, priests, ministers, friends — for the answers to overall life situations, and in so doing they deny their own abilities of self-understanding and growth."

"When you affirm your own rightness in the universe, then you cooperate with others easily and automatically as a part of your own nature. You, being yourself, help others be themselves. You are not jealous of talents you do not possess, and so you can openheartedly encourage them in others. Because you recognize your own uniqueness you will not need to dominate others, nor cringe before them."

"Do not place the words of gurus, ministers, priests, scientists, psychologists, friends — or my words — higher than the feelings of your own being. You can learn much from others, but the deepest knowledge must come from within yourself. Your own consciousness is embarked upon a reality that basically can be experienced by no other, that is unique and untranslatable, with its own meaning, following its own paths of becoming."

"You share an existence with others who are experiencing their own journeys in their own ways, and you have journeying in common, then. Be kind to yourself and to your companions."

"I am also journeying. What information and knowledge I have I try to give to you through Ruburt and Joseph (pause), who are parts of me in your space and time. But they are themselves as I am myself."

"(Pause at 11:00.) Trust no person who tells you that you are evil or guilty by reason of your nature or your physical existence, or any such dogma. Trust no one who leads you away from the reality of yourself. (Long pause, eyes closed.) Do not follow those who tell you that you must do penance, in whatever form. Trust instead the spontaneity of your own being and the life that is your own. If you do not like where you are, then examine those beliefs that you have. Bring them out into the open. There is nothing within yourself to fear."

"I close by saying, as I have said before: You are given the gift of the gods; you create your reality according to your beliefs; yours is the creative energy that makes your world; there are no limitations to the self except those you believe in."

"You create your life through the inner power of your being (pause), whose source is within you and yet beyond the selves that you know. Use those creative abilities with understanding abandon. Honor yourselves and move through the godliness of your being."

— "The Nature of Personal Reality"
Part Two: Chapter 22: Session 677
July 11, 1973, by Jane Roberts