Incommunicado

The reason I’m not bothering you more is that for a couple of weeks I have been working again on a novel I have been working on, on and off, this version and that, for more years than I care to count. This time it is coming well, but then, I always think that at the outset. We’ll see. The thing is, every so often it feels like I’m getting help. The last time that happened, it was Babe in the Woods, (which i should have titled Open Door), and when i expressed surprise to Rita (then in her last year in the body), she reminded me that Hemingway had said he would help, months before. I had forgotten.

Let’s pattern for something similarly helpful this time around, but I must say, that’s what it feels like, somebody giving me bright ideas now and again. Stay tuned.

Films, books, and psychometry

This review pans the movie “Papa: Hemingway in Cuba” in no uncertain terms.
Maybe he’s right. God knows, Hollybood puts out some God-awful trash. But I’m going to see it anyway, as soon as it comes around. I want to see what Papa thinks of it.

All right, I’m smiling too — and yet….

Here in Charlottesville, at the University of Virginia, the Special Collections library has a few original items that passed through Papa’s hands: short stories, airmail letters, that kind of thing. Even after several years of on-and-off communication with Hemingway, or anyway some aspects of Hemingway, after having those papers in my hands, I felt even closer to the man, and after a while it occurred to me — that’s what psychometry does, it puts you in closer touch with something through physical touch.

Can I prove it? Of course not. But I can go with it and see where it leads. Even if I’m totally wrong, it may take me somewhere right, and if not, no big loss.

Coming soon, to a psychometrist near you. 🙂

http://www.theguardian.com/film/2016/apr/27/papa-hemingway-in-cuba-review-hollywoods-havana-horror

I forgot to mention…. !

When I was on Coast to Coast last night, I should have mentioned that I am co-moderating a weekend workshop at TMI in less than three weeks (22nd to 24th). If people had known that they could sign up without having had any other TMI courses, I’ll be we would have gotten a few inquiries. As it is, we have 12 and need at least 13, but Bob Holbrook assures me that the remaining few (we’re looking to have 18 or so) will self-select. I wish they’d hurry!

If that means you, reading this, go to www.monroeinstitute.org and look at programs, weekend programs, Accessing Inner Guidance.

A long strange trip — continuing

They say our lives never make sense as we look forward, but when we look back, we see the patterns. This strikes me particularly at the moment, as several activities converge.

For one thing, I have been preparing for the weekend workshop on Accessing Inner Guidance that I am going to co-train with Bob Holbrook at The Monroe Institute at the end of the month. (www.monroeinstitute.org for details. Click programs, program calendar, then the green box on April 22 – 24 that says Accessing Inner Guidance.) Naturally that means reviewing how I got to where I am, and that means remembering all the mistakes I made, all the idea I had that turned out to be wrong.

What I did wrong, and what wrong ideas I had, are probably the most important part of the course, because communication is so easy, and so natural, that if we didn’t have wrong ideas about it, there wouldn’t be a problem. I was just listening to Keven Turner’s interview on future-primitive, and I laughed when I heard him quote Michael Harner saying, “it’s so easy, it’s embarrassing.” In my experience, it’s equally embarrassing to review what I used to be, what I used to believe. But, that’s life. If we came here knowing, what would we have to learn?

So the course is one thing. Another is Coast to Coast AM, that I’ll be doing with George Noory in about 13 hours. I’ve talked with George a couple of times before – about The Cosmic Internet and about Afterlife Conversations with Hemingway – and he is always kind to his interviewees, and makes a real attempt to ask questions on behalf of his listeners. But still there’s always performance anxiety. That’s life too.

Then there is my to-do list. When you reach my age, it’s worth while to decide which things you can expect to finish and which must be abandoned. I have been working on my long-delayed novel that I call The Stone, but have had to put it aside to prepare for the course. After The Stone, assuming I can get it written, I’d like to write two follow-up novels to Babe in the Woods, the first showing George dealing with the disruptions in every part of his life after his Open Door journey, and the second showing him living his new life. That would make it a trilogy, and that’s far enough. Whether I can get these books published and whether, if I do, they will sell, is another problem, but not mine particularly. If I can get them written, I will be well content.

Beyond them, there is only Rita’s World Volume II, which comes out this fall, and perhaps a third volume, the material for which came in between February 11 and March 19.

After that, perhaps it will be time to hang up my spurs, or whatever the proper expression is. Except, as I said in the beginning, looking forward, we never know.

Rita to be on Coast to Coast AM radio

Well, she’s sending her secretary, but anyway.

Pacific time: 10 p.m. to midnight,Sunday April 3.
Eastern time: 1 a.m. to 3 a.m. Monday April 4.

If you can think of any questions you’d like to have George Noory ask me, send them to me at muddytracks@earthlink.net. I’m going to suggest a few, and maybe yours will be one of them.