Amber Dust
2.2K posts


@OunkaOnX I don't think the Israeli public is killing people
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Ace of Base - The Sign
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@GuntherEagleman Thought it was Ronald Reagan? reducing Medicaid expenditures by over 18% and cutting the Department of Health and Human Services budget by 25% yea he dude that...
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People say that some things are impossible.
I have a different experience:
I've cured diseases the docs said were incurable.
I've died and come back. Twice.
I've bent spoons.
I've levitated in front of others.
I've heard conversations when I was totally knocked out with severe concussions and knew what they were saying and doing. I saw it all.
I healed melanoma in less than 24 hours.
I talk to dead people (They are still here) and they give me specific messages for their loved ones that cause their loved ones to feel connected to them again.
I've had the ability to see places in my mind years before I got there and then knew my way around as if I'd been there forever.
I've had connections with a wild moose who let me touch him and he gave me downloads of love and wisdom.
I've been walking in the woods when a wild dog came racing toward me, and as soon as he got close to me, he relaxed and walked alongside me.
To me, NOTHING is impossible -unless you believe it is- then you stop yourself from the magic that is all around you and in you.
Everything you want is possible.

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When I went to India in the 90s, they sprayed the cabin with insecticide about 45 minutes before landing. It was awful. I did have a cloth and covered my mouth and nose, but I had never experienced that before. I hope to never experience that again. There is no real need to do this. NONE.
Wide Awake Media@wideawake_media
Air passengers begin to experience painful throats and breathing difficulties shortly after flight attendants spray the cabin with WHO-mandated insecticide. "We have the right to know what they are spraying on us."
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As I drifted toward sleep last night, a radiant symphony of twinkling lights swirled around me, their joyful dance filling the air with celebration. I sank into slumber wrapped in their splendor.
The vision stirred memories of a night sailing to Hawaii, alone with my companion on a vast, inky ocean stretching fifteen hundred miles in every direction. No clouds, no moon—just the two of us. We doused the boat’s lights, save for a single red glow to warn any unseen vessels.
Above, the Milky Way blazed, a breathtaking cascade of sparkling cream poured across the heavens, so vivid and near it felt within reach.
I gasped, spellbound by its endless allure. A meteor shower joined the spectacle, golden streaks raining down like blissful rockets.
As we glided forward, phosphorescent waters awakened, tiny bioluminescent creatures igniting the sea around us. The boat’s wake and sides glowed, a radiant parade trailing our path.
Then, flying fish—creatures I hadn’t known existed—leapt across the stern, trailing drips of light on our thighs as they flew over us.
We stayed up all night, enraptured by the universe’s magnificent display, until dawn’s first light crept over the horizon.
Moments like these, when the cosmos unleashes its full splendor, leave me feeling cherished, awed, and alive.
The universe never ceases to surprise with its thrills—buckle up and savor the ride!
I adore you!
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