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View Full Version : Alien Disclosure Here & Now - A story about an ancient alien and his leaf collection (a little wisdom for all of us)



Bright Garlick
4th December 2013, 06:48
I am very close to a woman who worked for a specific government with Earth based ET's. My friend has a very close relationship with an alien I will call Dude. Dude has been involved in many important high level negotiations on the international stage and played a key role in steering certain aspects of the government-et relationship. He also helped her to cultivate many of the psychic abilities that she has.

Dude is a remarkable person and has the most wicked sense of humour of anyone I have ever known.

Just recently Dude overheard me talking about some work I was doing on desires and how I was trying to re-evaluate healthy and unhealthy desires in some of my collecting interests. I collect seeds, leaves and plant specimens and a range of other natural things, music and books. It's long been an issue in my mind that some of these desires have served their purpose and it is time to let them go. Dude overheard my conversation and popped in to share a story, that has to some degree shifted my perspective on desire.

So here's the nuts and bolts of that story.

Dude is very old and his people don't die unless they choose too. Some of them are what we would call immortal. He has the ability to travel in time and space and taught my friend how to bi-locate and see across time and space - a skill which was sought after by her employers.

Dude likes to collect things. He began his first plant collection on his home world when he was very young. He has since collected plants from many planets. He has been on Earth for a long time. 55 years ago Dude began collecting leaves of All THE PLANT SPECIES on Earth - taking a single leaf at a time. Dude says he did it that way because he is a very solitary kind of character and it reflects his personality. At one point he collected flowers but then thought that perhaps he was doing too much damage to the plants and so only took a petal. He ended up with a collection like pot pourri and so gave up. He said that flowers are always much harder. Dude organises his plants into tall, short and fluffy. He writes down the human scientific term for them but he doesn't care to use our classification system to organise his plants. He can discern differences in his leaves just by their feeling. Dude says that on January 1st, 2014, he is going to begin collecting the second leaf of every plant species in the world. This time he will seek out different individual plants and is interested in collecting different sized and colour leaves to the originals. He says that plants change a lot across the seasons. Dude looks forward to finding new plants he did not know about or could not find the first time. Dude finds different plants (whether its actually different species I am not sure or perhaps something else) by holding his hand out in front of him and discerning the FEEL of plants in a given locality. He can expand his awareness of the feeling to cover a great area (perhaps as large as the Earth itself). Sometimes he walks around in his true form and sometimes as a human. He happily walks among us all the time. Dude says that sometimes he carries what we would recognise as a back pack and collects his plants that way and sometimes he sends them back to where he stores them as soon as he picks them.

Dude says that finding each leaf creates a journey and gives him so much joy. These journeys help him to explore and experience Earth in a way that he can't do on his home world or in his craft or by interfacing with any technology. During his journeys, he meets people, animals, places, things and interacts with our world. He feels the warmth of our sun, hears children’s voices and laughter, talks with and plays with children (that is how Rachel met him in a forest), shares things with children and adults, feels and hears the wind, experiences plants, animals, rain and experiences things that he can't plan.

Dude doesn't think of his collecting as a product of his desires. He says he deserves what he gets. He strongly disagreed with how I saw my own desires. Dude says that he is unusual among most alien peoples. He says that most of them would willingly give away their collections but while he will let others appreciate his collection, he won't give it away. He says this is his collection. He has an emotional attachment to every single leaf.

Dude's collection has taken him everywhere on Earth, from the highest peaks to the lowest valleys. In Antarctica, he picked a leaf from a moss 40 feet under the permafrost. Three quarters of the way up the summit of Mt Everest, he picked a leaf from a windblown shrub with black berries and white flowers, that looked like a dried twig. In Mexico, he picked a leaf from an orchid that grew on the edge of a tall waterfall. In Australia, while picking a leaf from a Blackberry, he turned around and walked into Stinging Nettles but he thought an insect had stung him on the butt and for hours was unable to treat the pain, until he went back into the event and saw that nettles had grabbed him. In a town in upstate New York , he was talking to an elderly lady while picking a leaf from a daisy like plant. He gave her the first leaf he picked and while bending down to pick the second leaf for himself, a fancy dog dressed in jewellery and doggy shoes peed on his hand and the leaf. He was forced to keep the leaf because he has a rule that whatever he picks he keeps. If a leaf gets broken, he keeps it, if a leaf gets wrinkled, he keeps it, if a leaf is ugly or covered in insect scales, he keeps it or if it's covered in a snooty dogs piss, he keeps it. Once while he was in human form, he was taking a crap in the bush and while he had his pants down a leaf from a plant he wanted fell in his pants and he had to keep that leaf.

64 years ago dude also began collecting seeds from ALL THE PLANTS on Earth. He estimates that he has somewhere between 95-98 % of all plant species. His seed collecting continues and I suspect when he finally finishes, he will begin again.
Dude's plant collecting has brought immeasurable wealth to his life. If he treated it as a desire and an attachment to get rid of, he would have missed out on millennia of experiences with dozens of worlds. His plant collecting has given him the opportunity to experience each world intimately, interacting with people, plants and animals in every possible environment – whether it's on top of a mountain, on the surface at ground level, under permafrost, in someone's garden, in a botanical garden, under the ocean or in a cave. Sometimes Dude has got so distracted by other unplanned things that unfold when he sets out to collect a specimen, that he's forgotten to get it and has to go back on a new journey.

Oh, and Dude was very offended when I said that his collection was like a museum collection. He reminded me that his specimens don't get locked in dark draws, cupboards or rooms or get forgotten. And he feels a connection to all of them.

So, if you think aliens are Reptilians that organise terrorist training in supermarket car parks or Reptilians that steal peoples babies or get into fights with military personnel or grays that do anal probes or any of the countless stupid things that pass as alien disclosure, think again. Dude is the real deal and he is more like us than we can possibly imagine ! Just funnier, smarter and a little more compassionate ! Oh and his race dies by choice when they are ready.

I know what I'll be doing on January 1st, 2014.



http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KdHUQtnJsyQ

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bgWSEuzJyw8

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_7-2PB4jj2o

Becky
4th December 2013, 08:33
I would love to be Dude's travel companion. A botanists dream come true! I'd love to see how he collects specimens from the most far-reaching places. Please let us know if you hear from Dude again as I'm a fan of his already - seriously.
Thanks, Becky x

meeradas
4th December 2013, 09:10
This so calls for

NbLhHtaVIO4

golden lady
4th December 2013, 10:02
Thanks Bright.
I too would love to hear more about Dude.

I understand the emotional attachment. There is a very old oak I go past whilst walking my dogs, we have struck up quite a bond!!
So sad for us Humans though to have such a short life span. How very different I think things would be if we too lived
" forever"

aranuk
4th December 2013, 12:57
Hi Bright Garlic. What does Dude look like when not in human form? What race is he and where is his home planet? What does he look like in human form? Sorry for these questions but I'm curious that's all.

Stan

ulli
4th December 2013, 13:17
Thanks, Bright.
That was very inspiring.
I'll be thinking about Dude all day now...

Forevernyt
4th December 2013, 15:51
The Dude abides.

https://scontent-a-iad.xx.fbcdn.net/hphotos-ash3/s526x296/1424446_10151794043496762_1515500018_n.jpg

Delight
4th December 2013, 16:23
I enjoyed reading this story as much as anything I ever read. It hit the spot! Maggie

Robin
4th December 2013, 20:46
This is fantastic.

I am an entomologist...so I choose to collect insects! It really is a wonderful and rewarding hobby...and research endeavor.

Citizen science is a great way to not only learn more about science, but to connect with others across the planet. There are many sites where you can go to determine what plant you found, or even post a plant you found for others to see and learn about. This way everyone can get a world-wide database of what species are where. Here are a couple examples:

Plant identification (http://plants.usda.gov/java/)
Insect identification (http://bugguide.net/node/view/15740)

This is the future of society, in my opinion. Even if everybody is not trained to be scientists, they can still particpate in the wonders of nature! It's kind of like Poke'mon for adults. :)

etheric underground
4th December 2013, 22:41
Reading about DUDE has put me in an awesome mood….. cheers bro!!

Dtravis
5th December 2013, 00:28
When I think about alien i do not see little green men, I believe that the intelligence is there because they have been here for so long without true recognition, gaining info and training some,. It stands to reason that there is a superior entity here on earth with us, there is just to great a gap between John q public and the scientific public. I would love to be one of the chosen few to be with them. Sure would like to meet Dude

mosquito
5th December 2013, 01:19
Wonderful. And there's a lesson in there for those who haven't spotted it.

As often as not, our desires are a reflection of our true selves, a reflection of why we are here. So while it is a good thing to practise non-attachment to our desires, we ought to evaluate each desire and ascertain why it's there.

Thanks

Bright Garlick
6th December 2013, 05:46
PS. An update to this story.

On the 1st January 2014, when Dude begins his second leaf collection, he will be wearing a Grumpy Cat shirt in honour of his good friend Rachel !
He sure ain't no Love and Light alien !!!!

24039

Frederick Jackson
7th December 2013, 05:57
Fifty years or more of alien abductions usually by the grays and involving reproductive issues a fantasy alien disclosure? For how many millions of people? Huh? That not all aliens might not be so insensitive I can appreciate, but what is with this statement Garlick? We all seem to split into they are mostly bad guys or they are mostly good guys camps when it comes to the alien/extra-dimensional phenomenon.

Frederick Jackson
7th December 2013, 06:01
Oops sorry Bright, took your last name as first, meant no disrespect by saying "Garlick"

gripreaper
7th December 2013, 06:25
Wonderful. And there's a lesson in there for those who haven't spotted it.

As often as not, our desires are a reflection of our true selves, a reflection of why we are here. So while it is a good thing to practise non-attachment to our desires, we ought to evaluate each desire and ascertain why it's there.

Thanks

And this is the essence of how we carve the body vessel to hold the full spectrum of light without exploding.

I once was in a very dark place in my life, and a very wise mentor told me, why don't you just kill yourself... To which I replied, I don't know if I can. She said, your attachment to the pain keeps you in misery because you don't choose to either live or die, so whatever you choose, to either live or to die, choose to be in the experience to the fullest and fully choose it. It is "NOT" choosing that is causing you such misery. Go all the way into it, fully embrace it, be fully "in it", no matter which you choose cause there is no judgment, only experience. You have to really, really, really want it. Once you have experienced the fullness of what it feels like to fully want to kill yourself, then you can fully live.

So I fully chose to kill myself. I spent hours researching online the many different ways to do it, all the implications, collateral damage, people who would be hurt by it, etc. I chose to gas myself with carbon monoxide. I went out and spent my last 40 bucks on a metal flex pipe which I hooked up to the tailpipe of my pickup and into the cab, and drank a bottle of hard liquor, left a note, said my goodbyes, and climbed in, started up the truck, turned on my favorite tune on the stereo, and embraced the moment. Just as I was about to expire, the alcohol I had drank began to come up and I reflexively grabbed for the door handle, fell out onto the lawn (or was pushed out?) and hurled all over the lawn gasping for air. I had made it.

I heard the sound of voices cheering from the many dimensions, and I cursed those who have never been in a body exclaiming that they had no right to cheer as they have no idea what it is like to be in a body. We TELL THEM what the truth is and what our desires are and what we will choose going forward... I came out of my funk and misery and have been on a path of increased energy and consciousness ever since. I have fully chosen to live.

We need to fully embrace whatever it is we desire, for denying this only exacerbates it's longing. Just ask any child, when you tell them not to touch something, what does it do to them? It makes them want to touch it all the more. Once we have fully played the game, fully experienced everything there is to experience, fully fulfilled all of our desires, then we can be fully in our bodies and fully able and ready to accept full consciousness and be full of all light.

Starryeyed
7th December 2013, 19:12
Wonderful. And there's a lesson in there for those who haven't spotted it.

As often as not, our desires are a reflection of our true selves, a reflection of why we are here. So while it is a good thing to practise non-attachment to our desires, we ought to evaluate each desire and ascertain why it's there.

Thanks


And this is the essence of how we carve the body vessel to hold the full spectrum of light without exploding.

I once was in a very dark place in my life, and a very wise mentor told me, why don't you just kill yourself... To which I replied, I don't know if I can. She said, your attachment to the pain keeps you in misery because you don't choose to either live or die, so whatever you choose, to either live or to die, choose to be in the experience to the fullest and fully choose it. It is "NOT" choosing that is causing you such misery. Go all the way into it, fully embrace it, be fully "in it", no matter which you choose cause there is no judgment, only experience. You have to really, really, really want it. Once you have experienced the fullness of what it feels like to fully want to kill yourself, then you can fully live.

So I fully chose to kill myself. I spent hours researching online the many different ways to do it, all the implications, collateral damage, people who would be hurt by it, etc. I chose to gas myself with carbon monoxide. I went out and spent my last 40 bucks on a metal flex pipe which I hooked up to the tailpipe of my pickup and into the cab, and drank a bottle of hard liquor, left a note, said my goodbyes, and climbed in, started up the truck, turned on my favorite tune on the stereo, and embraced the moment. Just as I was about to expire, the alcohol I had drank began to come up and I reflexively grabbed for the door handle, fell out onto the lawn (or was pushed out?) and hurled all over the lawn gasping for air. I had made it.

I heard the sound of voices cheering from the many dimensions, and I cursed those who have never been in a body exclaiming that they had no right to cheer as they have no idea what it is like to be in a body. We TELL THEM what the truth is and what our desires are and what we will choose going forward... I came out of my funk and misery and have been on a path of increased energy and consciousness ever since. I have fully chosen to live.

We need to fully embrace whatever it is we desire, for denying this only exacerbates it's longing. Just ask any child, when you tell them not to touch something, what does it do to them? It makes them want to touch it all the more. Once we have fully played the game, fully experienced everything there is to experience, fully fulfilled all of our desires, then we can be fully in our bodies and fully able and ready to accept full consciousness and be full of all light.


What you have said, totally resonates with me :)

Crystine
10th December 2013, 08:54
Oops sorry Bright, took your last name as first, meant no disrespect by saying "Garlick"

There has to be some type of pun in there, somewhere! Smile.