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Thanks! I was pleased, and sort of hoped that somehow THEY were pleased...

I know what you mean. Personally, I don't believe there's any way they can be pleased (or be anything, really). That said, I think that.... hmmmm. I think that they WOULD be pleased, if they could. If we could send a message back through time, telling them "your photograph has reached me, a dozen decades from now, and I see you", I think they'd be happy about that.
I like to think they took these photographs, and passed them along to someone, for a reason. It was one way that they could 'live forever'. By bringing them out again, and even adding them to the blockchain, you're giving them back a little bit of life. They're not lost forever, yet. They can still be seen, and thought about, and maybe even researched. They're not completely dead. They weren't in vain.

I am very comfortable admitting I do not know what happens when we die. But there are some very interesting bits of information out there that leave me open to almost any possibility. Ever seen this story? Crazy shit! https://www.iacworld.org/the-scientific-mystery-of-transplant-cellular-memory-projectiological-hypotheses/

I remember reading about the case where the little girl helped to solve the case of her donor's murder. Amazing stuff.

I've been an empath since childhood. I've often "known" things I had no way of knowing, many of which I've been able to confirm through research.

And yet it's not a controllable gift, nor do I know how it "works." I just know that it does.

I do agree with Rupert Sheldrake's theory of morphic fields. It is an elegant theory that fits what I've seen in my own life.

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Oh, yes! Rupert Sheldrake is avisionary and pioneer! I have long been drawn toward "energy work" and what is happening the past few years is just amazing. Are you familiar with Dr. Jerry Tennant? I took some continuing ed stuff from him, we had a VISX laser in our clinic. He was a brilliant ophthalmologist. I won't spoil the rest of the story.... Look him up on youtube and let him tell you! You are going to love what he is doing now!

I always adored Sheldrake, not least because his response to traditional approaches to biology was the same as mine: you're telling me that my best way to learn about this animal is to kill it?

Completely insane. Not to mention being ethically and spiritually bereft.

I've heard of Dr. Tennant, but I'm only marginally familiar with his work, so I'll check him out later.

Thanks for the heads up

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