Originally Posted by TraineeHuman
Obviously, there are Greys and then there are other Greys. And according to 14Chakras’ post, most of our individual contact with them occurs without our consciously knowing. The only Greys I claim to have consciously had contact with, telepathically, are Greys from Zeta Reticuli. They’ve been there for a few million years or more. But as far as I can tell, there are hardly any left now. The reason for that is that they’ve progressed spiritually to a point where they simply leave the physical world behind forever. Let’s hope the entire human race will be like that a few million years from now too!
I guess it does make sense that some humans – maybe ones who “don’t make the grade” in spiritual evolution – might in the future be re-settled in Zeta Reticuli. After all, it’s about the second closest galaxy to us, and those habitable planets are now all but empty of the Greys that lived there.
One thing that does worry me, though, is humans’ apparent predilection to invent or spin stories that “prove” that different means bad. And hence that alien means very, very, very bad. For instance, there are all the stories that the Greys from Zeta Reticuli are dying off as a species, and have corrupted genitalia, etc. No, The truth is, they are “disappearing” because they are all transforming into divine beings. And maybe those beings don’t have a “hive mind,” but simply consciousness so highly developed that it’s obvious to them that everything and everybody is interconnected. Far beyond most people’s wildest dreams. Certainly far beyond their thinking of humans as a distinct race from what they may consider as “we”.
Of course, there are also other Greys – er, ummm, don’t you mean “humans,” with whom the ZR Greys have perhaps compassionately intermingled some of their own DNA – haven’t they? --, in the expectation that humans would then be less aggressive?
Somebody may have seen that very old Humphrey Bogart film that was set in Africa. (I’ve forgotten the title.) At one point, Bogart is asked if it’s appropriate to do anything for the native Africans living on the plantation where Bogart is staying. Bogart’s reply is that “some of them have only just come down from the trees”. The implication is that they’re too primitive to bother paying any attention to. Back in the thirties, white humans considered such racism to be perfectly OK. These days, I can’t help but suspect, there’s a temptation to replace racism with “alienism”.
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