maximus otter
Recovering policeman
- Joined
- Aug 9, 2001
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On the first new moon in February, not long after Pluto had entered Aquarius, Shima Moore stood like a priestess in flowing white robes behind a podium in the Los Angeles Ballroom at the LAX Hilton. She was there to officially open the 22nd Conscious Life Expo with a 12th dimensional stargate meditation.
Sedona, Arizona resident Carol Chappell sits inside a pyramid adorned with tensor rings known as a multidimensional healing chamber at the Conscious Life Expo. © Provided by LA Times
"When we’re in the 12th dimension, we’re more receptive so the angels and ascended masters, nature spirits and our own higher selves can come to us,” she said in a deep, resonant voice as celestial music played softly in the background. A crowd of 220 attendees nodded appreciatively.
Moore shared the stage with Asil Toksal, a former advertising executive-turned-channeler, and Viviane Chauvet, a Phoenix-based woman who claims to be a member of an ancient alien race sent to Earth to share her civilization’s wisdom.
“I know I look a lot like a human, but that’s the idea,” Chauvet said as members of the audience chuckled. “This was the best way to be a conduit.”
Even an open-minded resident of this most open-minded of cities might balk at these far-out proclamations, but fringe beliefs are business as usual at the annual L.A. convention, which took place Feb. 9-12.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/ar-BB1ivKn2
maximus otter
Sedona, Arizona resident Carol Chappell sits inside a pyramid adorned with tensor rings known as a multidimensional healing chamber at the Conscious Life Expo. © Provided by LA Times
"When we’re in the 12th dimension, we’re more receptive so the angels and ascended masters, nature spirits and our own higher selves can come to us,” she said in a deep, resonant voice as celestial music played softly in the background. A crowd of 220 attendees nodded appreciatively.
Moore shared the stage with Asil Toksal, a former advertising executive-turned-channeler, and Viviane Chauvet, a Phoenix-based woman who claims to be a member of an ancient alien race sent to Earth to share her civilization’s wisdom.
“I know I look a lot like a human, but that’s the idea,” Chauvet said as members of the audience chuckled. “This was the best way to be a conduit.”
Even an open-minded resident of this most open-minded of cities might balk at these far-out proclamations, but fringe beliefs are business as usual at the annual L.A. convention, which took place Feb. 9-12.
https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/ar-BB1ivKn2
maximus otter