View Full Version : Support and Prayer for Bright Garlick
markpierre
17th January 2014, 11:32
This is unsolicited by Bright, but I get his You Tube channel and he and family have had
to leave home to escape a massive bushfire down in Victoria.
I haven't met a truer warrior here, I think he'd value us being there with him.
Brights channel; http://www.youtube.com/user/BrightGarlick?feature=g-subs-u
Last posting left with a lot of uncertainty. They're safe, but may be homeless.
He may check in here or not, but he'll know we're with him, if we get with him.
Marianne
17th January 2014, 11:49
Thank you, markpierre, for bringing this to our attention.
I am standing in spirit with Bright and his family.
Sunny-side-up
17th January 2014, 11:55
Yes thank you markpierre
Thinking of Bright Garlick and his family, sending Love and Golden Energies
Mike Gorman
17th January 2014, 12:29
A fellow Aussie, and an interesting chap indeed-i wish his family the best of good fortune.
WhiteFeather
17th January 2014, 14:09
My thoughts and energys are with Bright, his family and Victoria Envisioning a great outcome for all. Thanks for posting.
With all my heart.....
W.f.
Atlantean Avatar
17th January 2014, 14:09
I think bushfires are the worst part of loving in Australia. I am in South Australia we currently have in excess of 40 fires burning here. There is a massive lightning storm raging outside and high winds. I have a farm in the Barossa, the fire in Eden Valley is less than 10km away. I think this year I will be designing a house and barn underground. I can resign the loss of the buildings I have up there and my "material things" but worrying about my horses and cow is really distressing. The roads are closed up there so the only thing to do is stay positive and pray. It will be a very long night listening to the radio.
Marianne
17th January 2014, 14:12
Praying with you, Atlantean Avatar.
Atlantean Avatar
17th January 2014, 14:26
There are over 100 people and their pets sheltering at the Angaston Oval. They are in good spirits. The Eden Valley fire has now burnt out more than 30,000 hectares. It is erratic and fast moving. I will be spending the night BELIEVING the storm produces enough rain to put out all the fires.
chocolate
17th January 2014, 14:36
Yesterday I was thinking of Bright Garlick wondering where have his wise words been these days.
Now I know. Thank you markpierre.
I will be sending waves of rain and taming of the winds...
edit: okay, done. expect some rain in 15 minutes or so ;)
Atlantean Avatar
17th January 2014, 14:50
Perhaps if Avalon members in the northern hemisphere could visualize sending some of their cold weather and rain down to Vic, NSW and SA it may cool and wet things down enough to save homes and lives. Hearing the thunder, hoping the clouds are full of rain.
Terra
17th January 2014, 14:54
Best wishes to you and your family Bright Garlick. Hope you all get back up on your feet as soon as possible.
Lifebringer
17th January 2014, 17:03
A wall of wind reversal or stagnant low winds, to aid them in putting the fire out as well as a good soaking. Be careful of small streams becoming larger as the rains fall to put the fires out, then recede safely down the creeks and streams. May God's winds of change head your way.
Atlantean Avatar
17th January 2014, 18:23
Thanks for your intent Lifebringer and other Avalonians. The closest fire to my farm is now out thanks to the CFS and the beautiful rain. Just need to concentrated rain on the Eden Valley fire now.
sheme
17th January 2014, 18:28
The Gods are moving the people- Prayers for least damage possible, refreshing rain, new growth, new beginnings, all is well.
heretogrow
17th January 2014, 18:32
Many prayers going out for Bright Garlic, Atlantean, and all others affected, animals too, to be kept out of harms way. Much love to you!
Julia
Shezbeth
17th January 2014, 18:39
Ha! BG doesn't need prayers, that dude is a wellspring! We should be sending prayers to the fire!
All kidding aside, I see him and those affected - Avalonians and non - coming together and surpassing this challenge. And I will continue to. Until it is manifest.
ghostrider
17th January 2014, 18:43
I watched one of his video's and man , what a gentle human being , speaking his truth as he sees it ... the world needs more like him ...Bright sending some love GR style ...
Ammit
17th January 2014, 18:50
Take care BG be safe my friend..
markpierre
17th January 2014, 20:19
It's sweet to see this participation.
BG is one of those extraordinary beings that have taken on extraordinary challenges, and feels compelled to
generalize his experiences enough to transfer their value to us. You feel the humility and sincerity in the efforts.
He is everyman in the act of becoming. He's up to it or he wouldn't be here on this plane. Neither would we.
Sometimes I think 'why isn't everyone hearing these lessons?' because the 'audience' seems so small.
It isn't 'small', it's exclusive. And it doesn't limit the reach of the lessons learned. Not everyone has to suffer loss,
to understand what loss reveals, and this is how we do it. Some of us elect to lose, to learn, then share.
We learn, we share. We learn, we share.
There was a promise made; that you can never be given more to deal with than you can handle.
Finding the ability to look first inside and search out that which 'knows' that 'this is for me, not against me'
and learn to operate from there is probably the most precious tool that you can develop. You might get glimpses of excitement.
That doesn't exclude the experience of terror, of trauma, of grief, of meeting again and again the frailty of the things we
build around ourselves that we think will keep us safe. Nothing 'here' can keep you safe from the mandate to grow beyond this.
When a door gets closed behind you, it must be because you've passed through it.
'So what has happened in me that passed me though another door?'
Don't worry about it. Look for the newness of what's next. More opportunity and more open doors.
BG's not alone in what he's viewing. There are a lot of people there that he'll touch, and you can almost taste the outcome.
If we call it 'tragic', and that it shouldn't be, we've diminished it's purpose, hence it's value.
I like to hear these stories. Every painful beautiful expanding bit of them.
Ellisa
17th January 2014, 22:14
At last it's cool this morning-- though last night was oppressive. The wind change arrived, but without any rain, which was disappointing. The fires are still burning but are now mostly under control. The firefighters have done an amazing job as usual, and stopped the damage being worse. There is still one big fire burning, in the Grampians, which is an outcrop of beautiful rock pinnacles and steep valleys. It is a national park and surrounded by farmland which is alight at the moment. I hope BG is safe. So far there has been one person killed, which is a tribute to the work of the CFA--- But any death is too many in these circumstances. We do not yet know how many have been adversely affected by the heat itself, though last night's news reported an increase in heart and breathing incidents in the hospital emergency rooms. It ended up being over 40c for 5 days, while the nights were near 30c. It's awful!!
Fires are part of living here I guess, as blizzards and snow are part of life in the northern Hemisphere-- you can prepare, but I doubt you can get used to it.
Hazel
17th January 2014, 22:33
for what its worth...
something tells me BG, his loved ones and property are fine...
in my minds eye, I see his good natured smile and soothing way bringing relief to those he's with.
No doubt he will chronicle the tale for us all upon his return :nod:
Selene
17th January 2014, 23:45
Wow, Avalonians all: Do you realize what you’ve just done?
Your collective intentions and visualizations may very well have contained this fire disaster.
I am perfectly dead serious here.
You did this. You sent your hearts and minds here with good intent. And collectively, it worked.
You have saved lives.
I’ll take on anybody who wants to say: no data proof by invoking the real-time record/thread of the outcome here above. Avalonians of good will did indeed shift/alter this fire. ‘Coincidence’ explains nothing. I’ll defend that against the sceptics and trolls anywhere.
As I laughingly say to some persistent sceptics who object Q: But you haven’t explained this... A: We can’t really explain electricity or gravity either. But we still depend on it every day, don’t we?
All it does is work. That’s the ultimate argument.
Cheers,
Selene
Ellisa
18th January 2014, 04:27
Well if that's what has done it keep going because it's actually not over yet. The Grampians fire is still going and another situation has come up in Gippsland in the east of Victoria. There 22 smaller fires that look to be going to join up making one big blaze. Meanwhile there is still a large fire in South Australia where a number of houses were burned yesterday. But it could have been worse.
I read to-day that there is a fire near Los Angeles. Is this so? And if so--- how freaky is it that there are fires at the same time as the rest of the country is snowed under? Weird weather everywhere I think.
Tesla_WTC_Solution
18th January 2014, 06:55
Dear Bright Garlick, I hope you are okay, you and your friends and family.
We have had our disagreements in the past, but I and others do wish you well and hope that humanitarian aid is living up to its name in Australia.
I can't imagine what that would be like in such a harsh environment (maybe kind of an adventure?).
If you read this thread, I want you to do me a favor -- consider your experience while homeless and re-evaluate your beliefs on population control.
What's going on in Australia right now is very sad and serious -- it's starting to happen in California as well (bad drought going on).
But these disasters happen all the time, every year, with or without humankind to start the fires or to see them.
I hope that someone over there values individual humanity enough to provide adequate help to you and yours.
A couple months back, a friend and I watched a film called "Quigley Down Under", which showed the treatment of innocent Aboriginal peoples at the hands of whites, who also happen to push the eugenics and population control agendas...
Time to think, I believe.
Fire cleanses the heart.
:(
kirolak
18th January 2014, 07:01
Sending cool healing breeze to the best of my ability. . . .
markoid
18th January 2014, 12:07
Intending calm air and rain and the very best outcome for you, your family and your area Bright.
chocolate
18th January 2014, 13:34
I will do my next 'putting fire out' session the moment I stop writing.
Bright is okay, I think.
I am not so much concerned about his physical well being, since I know part of his story, but in any case I'll send him some non physical support, it is never too much.
RunningDeer
19th January 2014, 01:52
Update on Bright Garlick
You continue to be in my thoughts and prayers, BG. Happy to hear all is well. Thanks for the update.
Escaping the fire - Home safe
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Escaping the fire 4 - Checking home
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Escaping the fire 5 - the main fire
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Carmen
19th January 2014, 02:48
My heart goes out to all affected by firestorms in Australia. Our thoughts are with you guys. Good on you atlantian Avatar for planning to build something underground! I have long puzzled over the lack of the Australians building underground shelters for protection from fires. Seems really sensible to me. Every year hundreds of properties it seems, are threatened or destroyed by fire.
When I started holistically managing my farm, one of the criticisms were that leaving the grass to grow longer would be in danger in hot dry weather. I myself wondered about this. In actual fact when the grass is left longer, the base stays moister and very dense. We had quite a serious drought last summer but we did not run out of feed for our cattle and moisture was retained. There was no danger of it burning. This is a normally very dry area in summer, but it still does not compare with the big dry of Australia, where drought seems to be getting worse year after year. When land is set stocked (meaning animals are grazed continually on the same land) even if it's at a very low rate of animals per acre, pasture is eaten out with no recovery time. This produces bare land or long dry grass with the moister bottom eaten out. This is great fuel for fires, dry grass and plenty of oxygen!
Bright Garlick
19th January 2014, 06:55
Thanks Mark - alive, exhausted and still have a home. But threat still here.
Gotta go - fire meeting !!
Blessings to all.
Hot Bright.
It's sweet to see this participation.
BG is one of those extraordinary beings that have taken on extraordinary challenges, and feels compelled to
generalize his experiences enough to transfer their value to us. You feel the humility and sincerity in the efforts.
He is everyman in the act of becoming. He's up to it or he wouldn't be here on this plane. Neither would we.
Sometimes I think 'why isn't everyone hearing these lessons?' because the 'audience' seems so small.
It isn't 'small', it's exclusive. And it doesn't limit the reach of the lessons learned. Not everyone has to suffer loss,
to understand what loss reveals, and this is how we do it. Some of us elect to lose, to learn, then share.
We learn, we share. We learn, we share.
There was a promise made; that you can never be given more to deal with than you can handle.
Finding the ability to look first inside and search out that which 'knows' that 'this is for me, not against me'
and learn to operate from there is probably the most precious tool that you can develop. You might get glimpses of excitement.
That doesn't exclude the experience of terror, of trauma, of grief, of meeting again and again the frailty of the things we
build around ourselves that we think will keep us safe. Nothing 'here' can keep you safe from the mandate to grow beyond this.
When a door gets closed behind you, it must be because you've passed through it.
'So what has happened in me that passed me though another door?'
Don't worry about it. Look for the newness of what's next. More opportunity and more open doors.
BG's not alone in what he's viewing. There are a lot of people there that he'll touch, and you can almost taste the outcome.
If we call it 'tragic', and that it shouldn't be, we've diminished it's purpose, hence it's value.
I like to hear these stories. Every painful beautiful expanding bit of them.
Atlantean Avatar
19th January 2014, 11:16
My heart goes out to all affected by firestorms in Australia. Our thoughts are with you guys. Good on you atlantian Avatar for planning to build something underground! I have long puzzled over the lack of the Australians building underground shelters for protection from fires. Seems really sensible to me. Every year hundreds of properties it seems, are threatened or destroyed by fire.
When I started holistically managing my farm, one of the criticisms were that leaving the grass to grow longer would be in danger in hot dry weather. I myself wondered about this. In actual fact when the grass is left longer, the base stays moister and very dense. We had quite a serious drought last summer but we did not run out of feed for our cattle and moisture was retained. There was no danger of it burning. This is a normally very dry area in summer, but it still does not compare with the big dry of Australia, where drought seems to be getting worse year after year. When land is set stocked (meaning animals are grazed continually on the same land) even if it's at a very low rate of animals per acre, pasture is eaten out with no recovery time. This produces bare land or long dry grass with the moister bottom eaten out. This is great fuel for fires, dry grass and plenty of oxygen!
It has been quite cool and wet for most of the year here in our part of Australia. The main topic of conversation has been, "will we ever get rid of all the mildew on our houses". When the sun finally put in an appearance, it jumped from being mostly around 5 -18 deg celcius to daytime 47 and nighttime min of 33. Total shock for plants, animals and of course people. The grass, which was quite high this year and still quite green (despite my 2 horses and cow putting in their best mowing efforts) dried quickly in the extreme heat. We were very lucky this time but others were not so fortunate.
This summer however is far from over and there are still areas on our farm that the clearings and walking trails have grown over because our animals have their daily food trail to follow. Excess land gets overgrown and before you know it there is a thousand tree forest where before there was none.
Well enough ramblings. I have had about an hour's sleep in the past few days. Time to sleep.
Sunny-side-up
19th January 2014, 11:47
Hi BG your a beautiful guy, you have/live in a beautiful home/area, you appreciate it's beauty, stay safe and look after each other for many, many, many more years!
Favorable winds to you!
Love and Hugs
chocolate
19th January 2014, 13:38
I tell you, I have a strangely accurate sense of knowing!
:rolleyes:
God speed Bright Garlick!
Bright Garlick
22nd January 2014, 04:50
Thanks everyone. We made it OK. Over 60,000 ha burnt, 32 homes lost, many thousands of wildlife/livestock burnt, injured or dead.
Fire still in the area and the risk is still there but the worst has so far passed and we have a home !
I feel the wind change that occurred at the 11th hour was a complete miracle and others are now saying the same thing. Of course there are no miracles, only that everything is within the whole and nothing is separated.
I prayed to many things, including the balls of light which have been part of my life. Seeing dozens of them on the mountain near the lake, the night before we evacuated, told me that they and others were responding to our prayers. If not for the abrupt wind change, all would be lost. Heavy burning ash fell but nothing burned. Instead a rain fell dampening the ash. I don't believe that had anything to do with prayers here (sorry). There was a concerted effort by several of us inside the fire zone to connect with the spirits of the Earth. It was they who saved this place, not humans.
Nearby, another sacred mountain - the most sacred place to Aboriginal people in this state, is still burning. When I have visited there, I have sensed great discomfort - even a possible murder or two. I once walked a police officer across the hill because I found something that might have been related to a homicide. We found nothing confirming my suspicions but I never felt right about it. The fires there keep jumping containment lines, as if the Aboriginal spirits are cleansing the mountains. No prayer seems to be able to change the outcome there. It seems to need to burn.
So we are fortunate. Some greater powers chose to protect this place.
Thank you to everyone who cared enough to reach out.
Sorry Tesla my views on population control still hold and are perhaps even stronger after my experience. This planet needs our loving, caring responsibility and there are too many of us putting a burden on this precious Earth. During my experience with the fire I saw greed and stupidity as well as kindness and compassion. Many people cared more for their investments, then for individual lives of all sentient beings and the life of the mountains. We are the most selfish species on the planet.
This for me was a great preparation for the solar catastrophe, which I still believe is coming. We have crossed the horizon and nothing we can do will stop it's catastrophic impact. I am grateful I live in the right place to endure such a tragedy and I encourage you all to consider how you too might be emotionally and pragmatically prepared for such an event.
I misunderstood what my ET friends showed me in January 2011 about that event. I have revisited it and am certain it is approaching rapidly. In less than 18 months that window of probability will close. So we will know by then.
But of course, as the fires reminded me, everything is uncertain.
Blessings to all of you and thank you for your loving kindness,
Bright.
:high5:
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