Temple of the Oracle – Telegram
Temple of the Oracle
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"labyrinth of audacious insights"
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Dolores Cannon a hypnotherapist, shares her clients' past lives and their encounters, plus messages for humanity.
Forwarded from IMPERIVM
"Never lose an opportunity of seeing anything that is beautiful;
for beauty is God’s handwriting—a wayside sacrament.
Welcome it in every fair face, in every fair sky, in every fair flower,
and thank God for it as a cup of blessing."

~Ralph Waldo Emerson


IMPERIVM
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“Everything today has become needlessly complex, those who make it all the more complex only doing so in order to sell some new “expertise” that isn’t really required for a life of value.

What, then, is required for a life of value, to be a man of worth, to become ennobled?

One thing, and one thing only:

The attainment of honor.

A man can think and do many other things with his life, but the fact remains that it is only this that need concern him when answering the question: does my life have value?

If he is in the steady and earnest pursuit of honor at all times, regardless of shortcomings that can and will occur along the way, his answer will be a resounding yes.”

- from “The Gauntlet” by Paul Waggener
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Manuel Pérez-Sanjulián Clemente - Walkyria
Forwarded from Lance's Legion
“I shall seize fate by the throat.”
— Beethoven
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Forwarded from IMPERIVM
“It is the simple things of life that make living worthwhile, the sweet fundamental things such as love and duty, work and rest, and living close to nature.”

~Laura Ingalls Wilder


IMPERIVM
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The Tuatha Dé Danann, meaning "the folk of the goddess Danu"), also known by the earlier name Tuath Dé ("tribe of the gods"), are a supernatural race in Irish mythology.
The Dagda is one of the most interesting Celtic Gods. In the 11th century ‘Lebor Gabála Érenn’, the Dagda is described as ‘the great good God’.

He was a member of the Tuatha Dé Danann and was ‘eighty years in the kingship of Ireland’. The Dagda is described as a father-figure and it’s said that he can control the weather and the seasons.
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Few Celtic deities spark interest like the Morrigan. First mentioned in a side note in ancient Latin manunoscripts, the Morrigan is the Celtic Goddess of war and fate.

Appearing in both the the Ulster and the Mythological Cycles of Irish mythology, the Morrigan is a shape-shifter that takes the form of a monstrous woman, an eel and most notably a crow.
Perun, the Slavic god of thunder, is often depicted with the head of an eagle or a raven
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King Alfred''s Longships, Newly Built for the Defence of the Realm, Attack Vessels of the Danish Inv - Colin Unwin Gill (1927)
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You are capable of so much more than you know.
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