Music of the Ancient Celtics – In our Time— Is it all True Series #424

Music can be a powerful magic and because of this, I believe frequency arranging waves can truly change the masses. It’s been long since it has happened to me. But a lady from Tottenham England has turned the music world upside down. But I would not be writing about this on this Weblog if there was not a little paranormal connection.

The people of the Sidhe — the fairy lore of the British Isles, carried a powerful magic. These tall thin almost transparent beings with their music and their song would draw the humans from miles away. The story goes, listen to just one song and you would be changed forever. Listen to more than one song and you would never leave their realm and you would be their slaves forever. The Sidhe had voices and lyrics that would rip at the core of your soul. For the ones who got away from the Sidhe, this unique sound would never leave them, it was embedded into the fabric of the mind.

I believe there are people today in the UK, including Ireland who carry still this music Magic, and they have the ability to belt it out. Today its control over humans is a bit mellower, but still a beautiful powerful sound, one person said it this way “it was like being in a wind tunnel the voice just hitting me, it was truly incredible”.

The Singer I am speaking of is “Adele” winner of 6 Grammy Awards on Feb.12th 2012. Listen to the magic, the music of the Glen and of the Sidhe.

Adele I truly believe is a distance product of the Sidhe, and for some reason they (the Sidhe) have left our realm, but they left something wonderful behind. And now another amazing album called 21 by Adelle continues way of the ancient mystical Celts and their understanding of raising and lower vibrations as it resynchs and realigns the mind core.

Sleep tight- as you will dream — “Rolling in the Deep”
MWiz

Little People from the Stars–Is it all True Series # 311

magical universeI love to write about little people, the small beings many Indian tribes speak of. These tribes are world-wide in nearly every country of the world, and they all have their little people stories. Most researchers believe these beings are from other planets, but I firmly believe they are inter-dimensional and move through portals. I thought about writing this blog because I was looking at recent vortex photography that I and my partner took on Sandia Mountain. We caught a little person climbing a tree. You can check out other vortex pictures on this site by searching “vortex”.

I would like to share more recent research I have done with you here. First many researchers are starting to believe that the burial mounds in the Midwest US are really underground homes for the little people and not Native American burial grounds. This is based on two facts: few or no bodies of American Indians have been found in the mounds, and the tiny tunnels that go throughout the mounds are too small for the average Indian in the area at that time. Also, it has been strongly rumored that small adults’ bodies have been found in the mounds.
The Cherokees of the East talk about the Moon People/ Blue People, with blue skin and black eyes. When the Cherokee first came to the Eastern US, they found perfectly tended gardens, but no one was seen farming them until moon-lighted nights. The little people were seen tending their gardens in the light of the moon and taking the produce underground where they lived. The Cherokee also talked about another little people group, who were of dark complexion with dark hair and strange red whiskers. The Cherokee elders claimed their native ancestors killed the red whiskered ones; it seemed they didn’t like the way they looked or maybe it was a treaty with the blue-skinned ones.

Ok, the bottom line here is that I believe there are little people that existed in the past and exist now.
I have heard dozens of similar stories from other American Indians around the country.

Sleep tight, the little ones are waiting in a woods near you.
MWiz

Elfs for ever…. From Epoch Times

magical universeIf you ask an Icelander whether elves exist or not, chances are he or she will say it is quite possible.

Many polls over the years have shown the majority of Icelanders believe in elves to some degree. Late last year, a judge even halted the building of a road in Iceland because it may disturb elves living in the area.

Myth often has fact as its foundation.

In 2004, the fossils of small humanoid beings were found on the remote Indonesian island of Flores. The being, named Homo floresiensis but better known as the “hobbit,” stood about three feet tall. The journal Nature explains that bones from several individuals were uncovered, showing that it was a society of people this size and not an anomaly.

So are elves more like the tall, lithe, and strong Legolas of “Lord of the Rings,” or more like Santa’s helpers who look like small children? Here are some accounts of elf encounters.

1. ‘Little People’ Legends, Mummy Found

A mummy found in the Pedro Mountains in 1932, thought to be possible evidence of the Nin’ am-bea little people of whom the local Shoshone natives spoke. (Wikimedia Commons)

The Cherokee native Americans spoke of Yunwi-Tsunsdi, which literally means “little people.” The Yunwi-Tsunsdi were described as kind and helpful, barely reaching the height of a man’s knee. The natives of Hawaii spoke of the Menehune, a plentiful race of little people who built cities, fished, and farmed. The Shoshone natives of Wyoming also spoke of little people, the Nin’ am-bea, whom they feared offending. The Nin’ am-bea were known to shoot people with arrows if offended.

In 1932, a mummy was found in the Pedro Mountains, close to where the Shoshone lived. It was examined by the anthropology department at Harvard University and at the American Museum of Natural History. It was originally identified as belonging to a 65-year-old man, though it is just over a foot tall.

The mummy was lost after one of its owners died. Dr. George Gill of the University of Kansas examined x-ray photographs decades later; he said the mummy was likely an infant with a birth defect that caused it to have an adult-sized skull, but remained open to other explanations.

Other people in the Pedro Mountains region have told stories of finding similar tiny mummies, as documented in books about local folklore.

2. Little People’s Burial Site in Ohio
The American Journal of Science published an account in 1837 of a strange discovery in Coshocton, Ohio: “From some remains of wood still apparent in the earth around the bones, the bodies seem all to have been deposited in coffins; and what is still more curious, is the fact that the bodies buried here were generally not more than from three to four and a half feet in length. They are very numerous, and must have been tenants of a considerable city or their numbers could not have been so great. A large number of graves have been opened, the inmates of which are all of this pigmy race. … Similar burial grounds have been found in Tennessee, and near St. Louis in Missouri.”

3. Bulldozing Operation Inexplicably Halted in Suspected Elf Habitat
In 1996, an attempt to bulldoze a hill in Kopavogur, Iceland inexplicably failed. The hill, which was to be cleared for a graveyard, was believed to be occupied by elves. During the operation, two bulldozers inexplicably malfunctioned. Television cameras malfunctioned, unable to focus on the hill.

Elf communicators were called in and apparently were able to reach an agreement with the elves. The elves decided to leave, the communicators said, and the machinery began to work again. The event was reported on by the New York Times.

Hildur Hakonardottir told the New York Times in 2005: “My daughter once asked me, ‘How do you know where elves live?’ … I told her you just know. It’s just a feeling.”

Another Icelander, Vigdís Kristín Steinthórsdóttir, expressed a similar idea in 2011 when a mining operation near her home was believed to be sabotaged by elves.

“I had been [in the mountain] before with other people who sensed the natural beings weren’t content with the disturbances to the ground and they hadn’t been asked to move. We sensed they were sad about it. I wanted for us to apologize,” she told IcelandReview.

4. Elvish Gathering in Mangrove Swamps

A file photo of a green mangrove forest in Africa (Shutterstock)

Stephen Wagner has been investigating the paranormal for 30 years and has written books on the subject, including “Touched By a Miracle: True Stories of Ordinary People and Extraordinary Experiences.” In an About.com article, he tells of multiple accounts of elf encounters, including that of Paul in South Africa.

In 1986, Paul was hiking near the Mangrove Swamps Nature Reserve with a group of friends. At around 6 p.m., they came across an open space with rock formations. Paul told Wagner: “We looked around and witnessed little people sitting on the illuminated rock formations and others who were interacting with each other.”

The experience lasted about 10 seconds, and he estimated there had been 20 to 30 of these little people. Startled, Paul and his friends ran back to the car. They later returned to the same spot and found the lights and rock formations, along with the little people, were gone.

5. A Shimmery Little Person Behind a Tree
Wagner recounts another story, this one from Greenburg, Penn. In 2003, a woman whose name is only given as K.T. was walking in the woods at dusk. The area around her appeared unusually “shimmery,” as she described it.

As she rounded a bend, she came face-to-face with a little elf. It was peeking at her from behind a tree. K.T. described it: “It was almost a stereotypical elf: long, pointy ears, long funny-shaped nose, very long fingers and pointy cap. It was wearing red clothes and hat, and its skin appeared to be a very light lavender color.”

When she made an exclamation of surprise, it jerked back and disappeared.

6. An Elf Neighbor Borrowed Scissors
Let’s return to Iceland for our final account. Iceland is home to the only Elf School. Located in the capital of Iceland, Reykjavik, the Elf School is a good place to learn all the elf-related stories. The headmaster, Magnus Skarphedinsson, has spent 30 years talking to thousands of people who claim they have encountered the hidden people.

One of the stories he tells is of Elly Erlingsdottir, the head of the Hafnarfjordur town council’s planning committee. She said some elves had simply borrowed her kitchen scissors and returned them a week later. She was completely confident that this really happened, and a local mystic was often invited to communicate with elves to get their opinions before the committee made decisions.

Andri Snaer Magnason, a well-known environmentalist, spoke to the Huffington Post about the Icelandic belief in elves in relation to development decisions.

When elf advocates were saying the construction of a road from Reykjavik to the Alftanes peninsula would disturb the little people, Magnason’s major concern was that the road would destroy bird nesting sites and have other environmental impacts.

He’s a bit skeptical about elves, but he said: “I got married in a church with a God just as invisible as the elves.”

Numerous accounts beyond those recorded here have been given of encounters with little people, whether with the leprechauns of Ireland or those with other names and slightly varying forms.

Video: From the documentary “The Fairy Faith,” directed by John Walker.

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Faeries of the Good and the Bad: Let’s Look at the Bad- Is it all True Series # 296

spriggansIf you follow my Weblog you know I do Vortex photography and some of the photos I get are of Faeries. You can see some of these photos by doing a search on this site by putting in “Vortex” in the upper right corner search bar.
Faeries come in many shapes and forms. Some of the beings would not be considered by some to be faeries, such as dwarfs and goblins. The Faerie Realm covers a great deal of ground of the small and tiny beings that inhabit nature.

I have chosen to discuss in a series of blogs the bad guys in the Faerie world.
First the Spriggans, they are quite small but have the ability to inflate themselves into large and dangerous creatures. The Spriggans are an infamous group of villains, thieves that will steal your money, your house and even your children. They can cause whirlwinds that can destroy crops. If they kidnap your child they will leave one of their ugly ones behind.

A general comment here on Faeries, they tend to be spiteful and mischievous, so dealing with them should be done with great caution. Respect is the key when approaching group members or their property; they will defend both to the death. And remember they have abilities that humans do not, and they will use them to their advantage.

Next the Bogles are generally evil-natured Goblins although they seem to do harm to liars and murderers. The RedCap is one of the most evil Goblins, living in old towers. He enjoys killing men to re-dye his cap in human blood. So there are many more types of faeries, many good and many bad. But the truth is they are real, so very real, you must only perceive them.

Sleep Tight, Reality is not what it seems, the strangeness is waiting for you.

MWiz