| Subject: George Carlin. Part 2 of 2. |
| From: "John Winston" <johnfw@mlode.com> |
| Date: 07/04/2011, 21:54 |
| Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy.area51 |
Subject: George Carlin. Part 2 of 2.
April 6, 2011.
We will now conclude what Sylvia Browne's Francine had to say about
George Carlin.
.................................
.................................
Once he spent time at the scanning machine and orientation all of his
memories came floating back, not only of the life on the Other Side in
which he had just returned but the life that preceeded the present one....
he was a b-ack man in the mid 1880s, wrongly conviced and executed for
a murder he did not commit, the murder of a w-ite woman, which it was
determined later that was actually commited by the presiding judge.
It was understandable why George arrived angry and rebellious against
"the system", and it was brilliant in him to have charted a sense of humor
that would allow him to express his outrage through the power of laughter.
He regrets that he found it difficult to distance himself from the
penetrating
that drove his comedy so that he could genuenly relax and enjoy his
success from time to time. He also recognizes that he was conflicted about
his success, loving the comfort it accorded him, but also not wanting it to
get
so comfortable that he would lose his edge, and it was in pursuit of that
edge
that allowed him to indulge in his addiction to cocaine. He wants his
daughter
to know how much he admires her, wishes he had been the fathter
she deserved, and is intensly proud of her. He's also graftful to his second
wife,
who he said was more understanding and compassionate about the
"baggage" he brought in their marrage than he could never repay.
His life at Home is blessfully happy in it's own unique way. You
need to remember that all of us maintain the same personality traits
throughout the eternity of our s-irits---- the outgoing remain outgoing no
matter how many times they i-carnate and return to the Other Side, the
introspective remain introspective, the humorless remain humor-
less, those with a sense of humor eternally have a sense of humor and so
on. George is no exception. He enjoys spending time in the Hall of
Records,
researching past and present charts of historically powerful men and
women and enertaining at large gatherings with his singularly ensightful
perspective on those who experienced power on earth. He's also very devoted
to study and meditation on charts of his own lifetimes intent on track-
ing the onset of his avowed atheism in an effort to learn how he grew to be
so loudly, outspokenly wrong about the existence of G-d. He has no plans
to in-arnate again.
Part 2 of 2.
John Winston. johnfw@mlode.com