“It's time we speak about our natural psi abilities as easily as we discuss the weather -”
Source: Children Who Know How to Know: A resource guide for helping children develop and utilize their powerful intuitive abilities
“Psychic abilities aren’t reserved for a gifted few—they are natural states of awareness we can all remember and reclaim.”
Source: Unlocking Psychic Potential: A Beginner’s Guide to Channeling, Remote Viewing, and More
“Rather than collecting certifications, focus on deepening your connection, refining your perception, and trusting your own experience.”
Source: Unlocking Psychic Potential: A Beginner’s Guide to Channeling, Remote Viewing, and More
“Clairintuitive psychic perception is way beyond the everyday gut feeling. It is not merely developed inner guidance or honed intuition, but instead a metaphysical gift of prophetic proportions. It is intuition on supernatural steroids.”
Source: The Sensible Psychic: A Leading-Edge Guide To True Psychic Perception
“Trumpai tariant, tai vyras, kurio stiprybė ir drąsa puikiai tinka bet kokiam sumanymui įgyvendinti. Jis išdrįsta ir išdrįstų padaryti bet ką pasaulyje arba už jo ribų, žemėje ar po žeme, jūroje ar ore, nebijodamas nieko materialaus ar neregėto: nei žmogaus ar vaiduoklio, nei Dievo, nei Velnio.”
Source: The Lady of the Shroud
“Love without jealousy is one that doesn’t attain even the lowest level of chastity.”
“A sincere and warmly-expressed apology can produce the same effects as morphine on a suffering soul.”
Source: Making Wishes: Quotes, Thoughts, & a Little Poetry for Every Day of the Year
“I got up the next morning with morphine hangover. I poured myself a large glass of cold milk, which is an antidote for morphine.”
Source: And the Hippos Were Boiled in Their Tanks
“A book is open in front of me and this is what it has to
say about the symptoms of morphine withdrawal:
'... morbid anxiety, a nervous depressed condition,
irritability, weakening of the memory, occasional
hallucinations and a mild impairment of consciousness
...'
I have not experienced any hallucinations, but I can
only say that the rest of this description is dull, pedestrian
and totally inadequate.
'Depressed condition' indeed!
Having suffered from this appalling malady, I hereby enjoin
all doctors to be more compassionate toward their
patients. What overtakes the addict deprived of morphine
for a mere hour or two is not a 'depressed condition': it is
slow death. Air is insubstantial, gulping it down is useless
... there is not a cell in one's body that does not crave
... but crave what? This is something which defies analysis
and explanation. In short, the individual ceases to exist:
he is eliminated. The body which moves, agonises and
suffers is a corpse. It wants nothing, can think of nothing
but morphine. To die of thirst is a heavenly, blissful death
compared with the craving for morphine. The feeling must
be something like that of a man buried alive, clawing at the
skin on his chest in the effort to catch the last tiny bubbles
of air in his coffin, or of a heretic at the stake, groaning and
writhing as the first tongues of flame lick at his feet.
Death. A dry, slow death. That is what lurks behind
that clinical, academic phrase 'a depressed condition'.”
Source: Morphine
“A hammock is like a steady drip of morphine, without the danger of renal failure.”