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The Myth

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The Myth
By: D.R. on 7/22/2002; 8:15 PM

THE MYTH is what we all wonder about, the hidden thoughts of the Seers, the Dreamers. Check it out.

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Enclosures: The Myth.rtfinal.rtf (54K)

RE: The Myth
By: Mark Morgan on 7/22/2002; 11:31 PM

Hi, DR. Mark Morgan, publisher, here. I have no idea what .rtf means, but it's a format that Opera certainly can't read. Is there any chance you'll cut and paste your essay into the submit form so it'll display normally?

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RE: The Myth
By: ScottN on 7/23/2002; 1:07 AM

RTF is 'Rich Text Format' -- a semiportable MS Office format. D.R., take your file, and save as HTML (or just plain text) to cut and paste.

having looked at the file...

Try single spacing (except for paragraph breaks), and don't bother inserting your own hard returns at the end of lines (browsers and Word will wrap for you). If you use HTML, use the default font, the large font makes the document longer, and reduces the likelihood that someone will read all of it.

Seriously, though, save it to HTML, if you're going to do it as an attachment. If you're cutting and pasting, I'd recommend several posts (see Richard's posts for an example).

Good luck and welcome to VoU!

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RE: The Myth
By: Richard Davidson on 7/23/2002; 7:15 PM







The Myth

Secrets of the Metacode: Book II









By D.R.















The Myth. Copyright © 2001 Don Ray Jr.

Myth: A tall tale, a story of fiction; a lie, more lies mixed with the truth.

Contents

I.

II. The Truth Will Set You Free, But Won’t Make Many Friends

III. Good, Evil, and Everything In Between

IV. Several Systems and Numbers

V. Involvement of Other Galaxies In Our Evolution

VI. Chapter Six – Ergot, Mescaline, and Wormwood

VII. Chapter Seven – The Godhead

VIII. Chapter Eight – Levitation

IX. Programmed Reality



















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RE: The Myth
By: Richard Davidson on 7/23/2002; 7:16 PM

I.





This book is about letting everything you’ve been taught from childhood

disappear. You might read things you never knew—or always have.

The cosmos (or God) has provided us with a door to Heaven.

We can access this door anytime with our state of mind—our imagination.

The myth has always fascinated us with bedtime stories like Little Red

Riding Hood, or The Big Bad Wolf and the Three Little Pigs.

Other stories from philosophers like Socrates and Aristotle are

the birth of the myth—the epitome of ancient Greek mythology, which I will

discuss later.

Throughout our lives, we hear and read many myths of ancient folklore.

Perhaps, some of them are true!

Just imagine for a short moment—the life you have right now is just a

myth. It is like a dream or a nightmare that will only end when you die.

Then,

in death, you finally discover the true meaning of your life. Everything you

ever wanted to know—you find in death. Then, only in death are you truly

knowledgeable. Let me explain this a bit further.

Our subconscious mind holds the key to some of life’s doors.

Dreams are a way to receive information about what is troubling us.

There are things that we experience in a conscious state that we do not fully

understand, like the death of a loved one or getting fired from a job.

Our dreams are a way for our minds to receive information that can help us

deal with certain situations that otherwise, we wouldn’t know how.

Memories from childhood are especially important when dealing with the

subconscious. These memories are the main reasons that adults act in

childish ways. Every living human has the spirit of a child in them,

mischievous or innocent. Throughout life, we develop certain characteristics

that define our personalities. We learn from what we feel, hear, and see—not

much different from all other animals. But with humans especially, we like

to bring meaning to meaningless things—things that really have no eternal

value, like possessions and money. One of our biggest faults is trying to

make existence actually meaningful. We seem to think that we are somehow

different from the earth’s other creations. This is reason to believe that we

have a ‘soul’ or a spirit within us. For many, this soul is a connection with

what is called ‘God’. There are many forms of ‘God’. We see throughout

religion that all races and cultures have their own version of ‘God’—

Buddha, Mohamed, Jesus, Gandhi, Rev. Sun Moon, etc.

This results from the natural human need to find power in something other

than the self. Doubt and insecurity in one’s own self causes him/her to seek

leadership from an authority figure or group of other humans.

This is a cause for deception and death.

The Guyana Tragedy, which consisted of Jim Jones and his followers

whose mass suicide gained worldwide coverage—is just one example of

how humans can let themselves be deceived by others. Another is Timothy

Leary, an acid guru who claimed to have knowledge from the heavens, led

several people to their deaths by the same technique—drug suicide.

There are several other examples of this, but it would take a multitude of

books to discuss them all. It is evident to any person with independent

thought, that blindly following any religious or cultic order can lead to

devastating results.

This is why it’s important to have self-confidence and faith from within.

When Jesus walked the earth, he laid his hands on many and they were

healed of their diseases. He told them, “It is your faith that makes you well.”

Eastern religions concentrate on this power from within as the main source

of all power in the universe. If every living creature used the natural inner

strength, there would be no sickness or pain, and no death, but even Jesus

led people to their death by martyrdom. Our main fault is that we seek

power from outside sources. We look for strength in anything but ourselves

and seek pleasure from material things that pass away.

The flesh rots because of the way we have adapted to our fast paced and

stressful societies—go, go, go, hurry, fast, catch-up. Then we wonder why

we have wrinkles and time lines on our skin—‘war wounds’ I call them.

We act surprised when a fifty year old man who ate only fats and sweets

suddenly dies from a stroke.

All religions have fallacies because religion is man made. There is no

one true religion and one ‘all wrong’ religion. There are several aspect s of

one religion that coincide with another religion. This is because not all of us

hold the secrets to the universe at the same time. If we did, life would cease

to exist and all time would stop! Mystery and wonder is what keeps us

going—a will to progress and succeed. Without it—we would die.



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RE: The Myth
By: Richard Davidson on 7/23/2002; 7:18 PM

The Myth. Copyright © 2001 Don Ray Jr.

OK, I was just cutting and pasting a couple to show you how to do it. I don't have time to do the whole book.

Haven't actually read it yet.



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RE: The Myth
By: Richard Davidson on 7/23/2002; 7:18 PM

The Myth. Copyright © 2001 Don Ray Jr.

OK, I was just cutting and pasting a couple to show you how to do it. I don't have time to do the whole book.

Haven't actually read it yet.



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RE: The Myth
By: ScottN on 7/23/2002; 7:28 PM

Richard, that's why I suggested he remove the spurious linebreaks...

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