|
|
Archived Threads - Read Only For threads not posted in for 30 days |
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
09-20-2008, 08:23 PM | #26 |
Avalon Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Not S-4
Posts: 306
|
Re: buying gold/ moving to ecuador not likely for me. Options for the modest of means
|
09-20-2008, 08:31 PM | #27 | |
Avalon Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 99
|
Re: buying gold/ moving to ecuador not likely for me. Options for the modest of means
Quote:
Ok.........I have been giving this a lot of thought. Yes it is wise to plan ahead sometimes, especially for these possible "events." The thing I have the most problem with is that if WE do co-create our future then why are we running around buying up gold/silver and property that most of us cannot afford to do at the moment and that very land is not guaranteed to be there in the 'possible' event of a global catastrophe. I still believe we should be channeling our efforts towards the antithesis of these tragic problematic forecasts. Who is George Green or David Wilcock for that matter? I love both gentlemen and they both have admirable, yet opposing positions in regards to the coming days toward 2012. I'm supposed to buy gold and property in Equador & on top of that buy their videos and books. NOTE: I am not bashing these gentlemen - I LOVE them both. However, I think we need to be very happy and grateful that we do have the ability RIGHT NOW to have a hand in the NEW heaven and NEW earth. It is thought best to stay IN THE MOMENT. Enjoy what we have NOW. A chance to make things so wonderful that they parallel our very desires on this planet at this moment and beyond. Why make it such a fearful experience? I thought that love raised vibrational energies necessary toward evolution of spirit or ascension or any of that? Anyhing other than that will lead us into a place we don't want to go whether inevitable or not - nuclear war, RFID chips, marshall law, coronal mass injections, holographic tech, Nibirus gravitational pull resulting in pole shifts, draconian alien take-overs.....ad nauseum. ALL of this is irrelevant to our collective power as a united planet. All you need is hope the size of a mustard seed. LOVE |
|
09-20-2008, 08:40 PM | #28 | |
Banned
Join Date: Sep 2008
Posts: 696
|
Re: buying gold/ moving to ecuador not likely for me. Options for the modest of means
Quote:
Start by forgetting what you think you need and determine what is absolutely necessary for survival. Then, think about how you can obtain or keep those things. Let go of everything else. Hyperinflation is our concern. We don't think we're going back to the stone age anytime soon. We're concerned about lack of income and $50 bread. We have downsized into a house that is inexpensive. We purchased it with a large down payment and small monthly payment so that we could avoid rental expense. In my mind, this is necessary as rents will rise with potential hyperinflation. Learn to cook! Learn to make nutritious wholesome meals from basic ingredients. Basic ingredients are still relatively inexpensive and will usually not spoil. Thinks like dried beans, pastas, flour, canned items etc. Keep food items simple and healthy. Stock up on what you can and eliminate wasteful comfort foods from your diet now. Each gallon of ice cream you eat now could be converted into 10 pounds of rice to eat later. If you're not in the countryside, you may be out of luck on meat. I am learning to hunt deer. We have a garden that provides us with vegetables year round. Grow one if you can. Be prepared to do whatever is necessary to survive - keeping in line with your own moral compass. Start to live that austere lifestyle now so that it won't be such a shock when it comes. Take your austerity dividends and invest in items you will need but may not be able to afford later. For us, we have determined that the only things we have to have is shelter, food and (hopefully) electricity. We hope to keep cable TV for entertainment but we're willing to give that up if it becomes necessary. If we're wrong and we are blown back to the stone age - then all bets are off anyway. If you had a 3 year supply of food, power generation and other necessities you'd have to spend all of your time fighting the angry hordes who want what you have. |
|
|
|