Garden Healing Church

Grateful for Healing in Nature – for all of us mind control subjects


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Last Vision Quest

by Jean Eisenhower

I’m not looking forward to dying, but when I go, I’d prefer it be by mountain lion.


Death should be a last experience of life, not one more of technology, whether fast as in a car crash, or slow as in needles and tubes, monitors beeping and motors keeping organs alive for years.


No, I can think of no better way to go than knowing I am at that very moment sustaining the life of another living being, especially one as beautiful as a mountain lion.


Too many in my family have died of Alzheimer’s Disease.  My grandmother I watched go for a full fifteen years, the last ten of which she seemed to have no recognition of sound or movement or her very own life, much less recognition of her family and our caring for her.  None in my family want this to be our fate, yet we wonder:  How do we help another dodge the law to achieve our lbreak from a mindless “life”?


I have notified my family that if the time comes I am like my grandmother, or otherwise unable to respond to others and care for myself, I want to go on a “vision quest.”  I may not have that understanding then, but they may tell the authorities with conviction that that is indeed what I demanded.


They are to take me deep into whatever mountain range is convenient and help me to the highest possible place, far off the trail, within the mountain lion’s seasonal habitat.  There we may have a ceremony.  They may hug me, wish me a good journey, and go away.  Leave me no food, no shoes.  I do want a good sleeping bag, since at this moment I cannot imagine tolerating the cold (allow me this idiosyncrasy as another last request), but leave me no tent.

If you want, you may return in two weeks or so to gather my remains, or simply verify that I am gone.  But you are not to come back sooner or try to change my course.


I may die of cold or starvation or even a fall, should I be ambulatory and try to move around.  But the most glorious way to die, if I am lucky, will be by major predator – such as the mountain lion.


Few of us have had the pleasure of seeing a mountain lion in the wild, even though the animal used to have the largest range of any native mammal in the western hemisphere.  Also known as cougars, it is the second largest cat in North America, second only slightly to the jaguar.  Despite its size and weight, it moves with rolling grace, with hardly a sound. Stalking its prey, it often approaches very close before charging swiftly to make a kill.  The attack is made toward the head, to break the animal’s neck.


Mountain lions do not usually attack human beings, especially if deer, their favorite food, is available.  But if a human being were an easy target, such as myself, then there is no reason to believe the mountain lion would not take advantage, as most predators are also opportunists by nature.


If I had any awareness of myself and my surroundings, I believe the pain of the attack would be easily outweighed by the thrill.  Perhaps I would be surprised as, in a flash, a lion would be at my neck.  Or maybe, despite failing faculties, my senses would come alive in the solitude and silence of the wilderness, and I would smell and hear as sensitively as wild things.


Sitting or lying quietly, I might hear the cat from a distance pause, then slowly approach, pads settling softly on the forest duff, its breathing intermixed with the breeze.


Then the charge.  In the silent blink of an eye, the huge body would be at mine.   One-hundred fifty pounds of warm fur, perfect muscle, not breath and bounding hunger.  If I am lucky, I will see its eyes, intent, without malice, about the deed it must do for every meal.  It has been a killer since its fluffy spotted babyhood.


The house cat I tried as a child to cuddle, too aloof, resisting, would be upon me now with a vengeance. Soft fur, and warmth, its weight would surprise me. And its teeth would sink with perfection, consummating our exchange.

Before the warm rush of blood which would make me cold if I could feel another minute, I would perhaps inhale the big cat’s breath. In adrenalized alarm, I would gasp as the big cat, in exertion, exhaled its hot breath – sweet, rich, but not with the oxygen I would otherwise need.


Before it broke my neck, perhaps a low sound would emerge from deep in the cat to my ear, anticipating its satiation.  Fur on my neck, like a lover, almost purring.  Claws embracing.  Its stomach even then churning chemicals to make me part of it.

Its heart would beat calmly then, after mine had ceased, slow and steady, sixty beats per minute, as the owner licked its paws and cleaned its face and departed to nap, as it has for thousands of years.


Art copyright Asante Riverwind 1987
Text copyright Jean Eisenhower 1987


Asante and I produced our art and writing in 1987, though we wouldn’t know each other or begin our collaborations until 2002.


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Meditation Amazement

I recently began practicing meditation again, hoping to be successful and dedicated for the first time.

Of course, maybe I’ve always been meditating, and I’m just stuck on some rigid idea of what it is.

In any case, I began again sitting with a series of meditation recordings a few days ago.

I didn’t in particular like any of them. But one of them grabbed my attention the next day – the one about relaxing every part of your body.

I used to do that in high school, when I studied dream interpretation, and wrote my senior research paper on dreams.

(It seems I was so relaxed than. But of course, I had few responsibilities other than schoolwork, which I loved. I enjoyed quiet privacy in my room for hours every afternoon. I practiced drawing and studied whatever caught my attention. I danced many hours a week. Nice memory.)

The other evening, instead of relaxing, my body, I paid attention to each part. They each felt nicely in the middle.) I felt skin tension, musculature, bones, blood flow, imagining lymph flow – and moving on to the next part of me.

I loved every toe. And the exercise felt so informative. Not boring at all.

Then my brain began generating essays that felt like a gift from my spiritual helpers, and off we went….

I did wonder whether I should reject those gifts in favor of the meditation practice, but I decided this is simply meditation in process.

As an experienceer, writer, documentarian, and activist, I recognize this is one form of Buddhist meditation I happened to read about recently: to be aware in whatever is your daily life.

My most recent teacher said to not get hung up on any particular expectation, because sometimes our helpers want something else for us. I agree.


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Government Documentation on Implants in Mind Control Research

screen-shot-2017-01-07-at-10-19-59-pm“The records on Subproject 94, part of Project MKULTRA, dated 22 November 1961, describe the purpose:

“‘Miniaturized stimulating electrode implants in specific brain center areas will be utilized. The feasibility of remote control of activities in several species of animals has been demonstrated.

“The present investigations are directed toward improvement of techniques and will provide precise mapping of the useful brain centers.

“The ultimate objective of this research is to provide an understanding of the mechanisms involved in the directional control of animals and to provide practical systems suitable for (deleted – ‘human’?) application.’ P. 149”

For more, visit this excellent, fully-documented site:

http://www.wanttoknow.info/mindcontrollers10pg#psychic

 


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Help with Rage


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Two Videos I Recommend

If you are healing from any intense form of mind control, these might be of interest to you:

This first video is an interview with my friend, Niara Isley, which whom I have similar experiences.  She does an excellent job explaining it all:

Niara's video.png

http://www.theeventchronicle.com/media/documentary/military-whistleblower-niara-isley-ufos-real/

And this next is an interview with Elisa E. another very good presenter, who also has experiences similar to mine, only I haven’t had deep deprogramming, and so haven’t had the depth of memory that she’s had.

I’m not familiar with some of the more esoteric and occult things she has experienced – at least I’m not familiar consciously – and so cannot personally vouch for them, but there’s still a deep resonance.

For all our healing.

elisa e's video.pnghttp://radio.offplanetmedia.net/2016/07/28/offplanet-tv-07-27-16-elisa-e-deep-ultra-futurenow-mind-control/


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Another Excellent Overview Recording

This “video” is for subjects of MKULTRA-type mind control who feel they need some gaps filled in in their understanding of this situation.

It’s actually an audio recording with text and photos as visuals – something to listen to while, perhaps, doing some other task – if you’re a busy person like me.

Very worthwhile overview!  Thank you, Fiona.  And thank you, Follower, who wrote with this link.


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Music to heal a low mood

Ever since he 1980s, I’ve had one song that can bring me out of a low mood.  Sometimes I listen to it over and over, because that’s what I need, and it always eventually works.

th-1.jpgThis morning I purchased it as an mp3 for my portable music:  Chris Williamson’s “Waterfall.”

It starts out soft and slow, so as not to offend my wounded senses when I’m down, and slowly builds with tempo, joy, and some pretty good ideas.

Once I listened to it over and over again for close to an hour.  Never offended even my grouchiest, most cynical selves.

Maybe you’ll like it too:  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-NWV9UMsACc


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Telling on Others

A letter to friend:

Just wanted to thank you for letting me tell a story I’ve told only to myself and not even on paper (!) until I told you yesterday.  It was a great relief to tell of that experience.

I’m so aware that it’s a violation of the social credo – to tell something shocking about another person – but the event rocked my world, especially those moments when we looked at each other afterward.

Somehow, it seems more real, more able to integrate, to have someone else hear it and not find it impossible or unlikely, but totally understandable, and maybe only a shock and tragedy in the social context, of which I’m a part!

So, I conclude, as I think I did yesterday:  Compassion all around.  No blame to others.  Just realize what I need to realize.  Adapt, and continue to bloom.