by Digger Barr
https://gaiasgardens.guru/
Flat Earthers make a very good point.
Our world is not everything that we think it is.
It is more than that.
I was doing mind twisters in the wee hours of the morning when I was supposed to be sleeping.
And I was trying to wrap my head around the fact that we live in a material world.
I for one will be the first to admit I have too much stuff.
I started to clean house and get rid of stuff when my son left for college.
He has since graduated and moved back home and I still have too much stuff.
At some point I must have started replacing stuff with more stuff. Empty shelves don’t last long in my house.
When I die, the estate salespeople will advertise, “This is a real digger folks”.
Maybe I should go ahead and make those signs for them. I have plenty of materials from which to do that.
Then as they start sorting and find the signs they will know it was the plan all along.
We have so much stuff that Storage facilities have become our way of existing.
Some families have multiple storage units.
Can you imagine what other countries must think of this idea?
Here in the good ole US of A we have so much room. Our houses are big. Our lots are big. We have huge cars, huge boats, huge , huge, huge.
Future generations will have posters of Storage rentals and be in awe we had so much abundance or thought we had to own everything that was ever made, ever!
And yet the trend is to tiny it up and live small.
Purge is the word of the day.
Tiny houses are fun but you can’t bring all that stuff with you.
Apartment houses are being built everywhere as our nation is moving into stacked boxes.
We are being forced to downsize but probably not for the reasons given.
Moving into cramped living conditions for economical reasons makes no sense.
I actually bought my house for half the price it takes to pay rent on an apartment.
Nothing wrong with Apartment living. It surely does guide decision making when collecting too much stuff.
One would think that only the most desirable of things would be brought home to an apartment keeping the clutter at a minimum.
When other people looked at your stuff they would be able to tell something about who you are as a person.
They could look at what you collected and see how you lived through the things you surround yourself with.
A modern day archeological dig happens when Storage units are put on auction.
When archeologists dig into our past they use everyday items to retell the story about the people who lived there before.
This got me wondering why we haven’t found anything from the people of Tartaria.
Where are the artifacts from the Pyramids of Giza?
Where are the artifacts from the Pyramids of Peru, Croatia, and Mesoamerica ?
We find buildings, temples, streets, brick and mortar.
But where are the trinkets or precious belongings?
Where is the cookware or hand tools? Where are the mobile or other forms of transportation?
Now when it comes to more recent cultures we have tons of pottery shards, bits of leather and bone.
Things that withstand the corrosion of time while buried in the dirt or sand.
But things don’t add up.
We have been led to believe a distortion from the truth.
Buildings don’t lie. They are phenomenal in architecture.
But where is the cultural evidence of everyday existence from these lost civilizations?
It’s interesting to think that we have multiple UFO crashes and we hear all about how reverse technology has brought us new modern gadgets from these crashes.
This technology may have actually been given directly to us but my point here is that we never ask about how they eat?
How did they live? What kind of books did they bring with them?
We are all about the tech but what about how they live on ship?
We know through channels and such sources that Galactic’s don’t need to eat but they do enjoy a meal for social reasons.
And maybe technology provides for those items. But do they have stuff?
Of all the important questions to ask when one is communicating in this way, apparently asking where they keep their stuff doesn’t really hit the priority list.
Other key items archeologists look for when examining artifacts from a dig, is learning about items of worship.
Figuring out what people believed in is a very difficult but highly desired part of understanding how people exist.
When they dig through my house they will absolutely know This person worshiped rocks.
Oh yes, books and rocks. Books and rocks and coffee pots. Books, rocks, coffee pots and tarot cards.
Okay they will think I worshipped a lot of things.
Worship is a strong word for me. I can’t really say that I really do worship anything.
Hold reverence for yes , Worship, mmm not so much.
But that is how our science works. We look to our things to find meaning.
In our history lies Religion. We find religion in icons of worship.
We can tell Catholicism from Muslims from Paganism easily.
Identifying how spiritual a people is often surmised by how many unexplained artifacts were left behind.
If the purpose can not be determined it must therefore be a religious artifact.
Structures themselves such as StoneHenge, the Adams Calendar and Chaco Canyon, actually seem to give more evidence to levels of spirituality than do artifacts.
We know through the arrangement of complexes Ancient people had a vast connection to the stars.
When they find my three telescopes, will people say, “oh wow, here lived a spiritual person who studied the stars.
Probably not, because it is commonplace and actually ridiculous to have so many telescopes.
Honestly, why do we have so much stuff?!
I like planet earth. I really do. This is where I keep my stuff.
My head is usually somewhere up there in the stars.
But here on planet we are 3D and that means material stuff.
Suddenly, I don’t feel so self-conscious about having stuff.
I am actually doing what this dimension requires.
Just a point of clarification. I try not to be a hoarder.
But I see so much use and reuse in everything. I do try to not just throw things into the landfill.
My stuff are things of creation. I have so many projects and making things requires a vast amount of material.
I have yet to master how to create from thin air.
I am working on that.
Overall I think we do not need so much stuff.
We tend to have multiples like my telescope issue, making the redundancy just an issue of psychological delusion.
Maybe some counseling will help.
“Now tell me, What is your obsession with the stars?”
Releasing the need to have stuff or embracing the idea we live in a 3D existence is a constant ebb and flow for me.
As long as we are attached to making money and co-existing in the matrix I have determined that using material items is part of this life.
I would very much be interested in finding out how the Tartarian lived or what they created all of that electricity for.
Where are the appliances?
I would like to learn how to live without the need for stuff.
Until then, I am just going to have fun with it all.
many blessings
Digger25