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The Ascension Mysteries

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The document discusses David Wilcock's book 'The Ascension Mysteries' which talks about topics like extraterrestrials, ancient civilizations, NASA coverups and more.

Some of the topics discussed include extraterrestrials, ancient civilizations, stargates, lunar bases, insider testimony on secret space programs and more.

The author provides references where applicable as well as insider testimony from whistleblowers to support claims about NASA coverups and secret space programs.

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The ascension mysteries pdf


Publisher: New York, New York : Dutton, 2016. ISBN: Call number: Properties: xiv, 506 p. : sick. ; 24 cm. Topics: Cosmology. Consciousness. Spiritual life. Good and evil. Extraterrestrial beings. Unidentified flying objects. Conspiracies. Revealing the cosmic battle between good and evil AUD
$35,00Discount: Price/COM_VIRTUEMART_UNIT_SYMBOL_: In The Ascension Mysteries, David Wilcock unlocked the mysteries humanity has always struggled to answer: who are we, how did we get here and where are we going? Now, in The Ascension Mysteries, David Wilcock reveals that Earth is
on the front lines of a battle that has raged between positive and negative extraterrestrials for 500,000 years, and he looks ahead to what this struggle means. Follow his captivating journey through the history of the universe and explore mankind's great cosmic battles around the ascension of mankind.
Through his contact with a positive higher intelligence behind the UFO phenomenon, groundbreaking scientific information and testimonies of foreign encounters and stargate travel from high-ranking government whistleblowers David Wilcock is able to answer the central question of our time: What does
this struggle mean for each of us personally? By uniting ancient texts from a variety of religions with scientific data and insider testimony, The Ascension Mysteries presents its wonderful revelation - the earth is on the verge of a cosmic event that will transform matter, energy, consciousness and biological
life as we now know it and will finally defeat the great villains of our time. Several books by this author Author bio: David Wilcock examines ancient civilizations and new paradigms of matter and energy. He is the founder of DivineCosmos and over two million people have watched his documentary The
2012 Enigma. Category: Mind Body Spirit ISBN: 9780285643628 Publisher: Profile Books Imprint: Souvenir Press Pub Date: February 2017 Page Extent: 528 Format: Book Subject: Unexplained phenomena / paranormal Just finished reading this latest book by the modern hero, David Wilcock. The
introduction and second half of the book provide wonderful, exciting reading, even for long-standing addicts of cosmic disclosure and wisdom about Gaia. But David takes a real risk in including an autobiography that occupies pages 27 - 240 (Chs. 2-13 for Kindle readers), a risk that many will conclude
does not ultimately pay off. As one early Amazon reviewer suggests, readers new to David and revelations by his insiders may well be discouraged and turned off by the highly detailed, frankly depressing account of his formative years. The best advice for most readers may be to read the introduction, and
then start over on page 241 until the end of the book (Kr. 14-25). David's life story chapters are quickly slammed into a sad series of bullying and self-sabotage episodes, all told painful details. Honestly, it's a drag to read. David may have covered the essence of his misery more succinctly in a single
chapter or even a few sentences: the extraordinarily bright child of creative parents, David's life fell apart when his parents divorced; He began to gain weight and stopped caring about his personal appearance; As a consequence, he was exposed mercilessly in the public schools of Schenectady, NY as
the smart, fat boy; In the end, he stopped the bullying by the nick-of-time application of martial arts techniques, but he was still an outcast; The few friends he made were insensitive idiots who bullied him more subtly under the guise of friendship; he became addicted to booze and alcohol quite early and
quite deeply, which only aggravated his life; The few bright spots included some girls who, despite his general appearance, were attracted to his beautiful blue eyes and the chance discovery of ABBA, forbidden to listen in his household as a disco; He attended SUNY, described as a notorious party
school at the time where he was bullied again and got even heavier into drugs and alcohol (but no sex); His life was finally reversed by two events - his sociology professor discussions about the Cabal/Secret Government, and his (imaginary) near-arrest on drug charges; He began attending AA meetings,
but dropped out prematurely, likely replacing his addiction to drugs and alcohol with an addiction far more fortunate for all of us - UFOs and conspiracy theory. This gets us to chapter 14, where the book begins, and it's immediately a brilliant shot in the arm (as it was) for the flag reader. Most, but not all, of
the material here will be familiar to regular viewers of his Gaia shows, and will certainly blow the minds of newcomers who succeed in slogging through so far. Here is a brief summary of some important disclosures:- Our solar system may have been designed as a kind of “spiritual advancementâ€
farm, with its ultimate goal apparently to bring beings in shape (bodies) back to Source / God - this is proposed instead of verbalized- An advanced protective net was installed around the solar system (over 1 billion years ago), after which the super-advanced builders mysteriously disappeared- There
used to be a giant Earth-like planet (called Marduk) between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter (now the belt)- Humanoids at Marduk war with other civilizations advanced, advanced, but apparently not with humanoids on Mars as suggested in David's TV series, and the planet Marduk was destroyed, with
Mars all but destroyed in another disaster (both half a million years ago)- This disaster shut down the protective net , allowing negative devices to enter the solar system- The “souls†(or perhaps the corpses?) of the warlike Mardukers were recycled into more human bodies on Earth, apparently
mixing with already here, but characterized by their gigantism and seemingly by their extended skulls (or perhaps these are another species?) - A negative group of extraterrestrials took advantage of the destruction of the protective net to invade and essentially conquer the Earth (300,000 years ago) â€
our image of Satan is said to look like some of these beings- The Reptilians are said to feed on negative emotions (fear, hatred, terror, etc.), called †œloosh, †(Robert Monroe was the first author to write about this concept in his travels out of body accounts, not mentioned here) and it is their intention
to make the planet as miserable as possible to feed himself with this loosh energy- This is at least one reason why life on Earth has been generally quite bleak and miserable throughout the history of mankind †the more misery , the more loosh to eat (drink? David doesn't say)- The former Mardukians
(although this is not made very clear - there seems to have been a separate later wave of fallen angels) - had rights issues and has dominated the rest of the human population as royalty and financial elites- At the end of World War II a large part of the German ruling elite moved to large hot underground
caves under Antarctic ice- the United States sent a war fleet to conquer the new German Antarctica, during the Commodore Byrd (1947)- Antarctica all but the U.S. warfleet, and as a result, the US president eventually caved in and signed an agreement with antarctic- The new company American and
Antarctic allies established a “secret space program†in place now and the elite tried to trigger WWIII after which they would emerge from underground bunkers to a new world cleaned of all their surface inhabitants- Fortunately , some of them put up massive bullets in our solar system apparently as
a means of restoring the old protective grid- An alliance of those who are opposed to Cabal and reptilians fighting back (and hopefully this will not turn out to be a case of meeting the new boss, same as the old boss)- The solar system enters a long pro prophesied high-energy cloud area that has the
capacity to trigger an ascent (hence the book's title) of humanity, or at least the more deserved parts of humanity that follow the advice of just being pleasant- The exact nature of this ascent is not clear , but David seems to imagine it as an exchange of our physical forms of rainbow bodies witnessed in
Tibetan Buddhism , or as new spiritual bodies predicted by Paul (and the dead shall be raised indestructible). The wild second half of the book almost makes up for the depressing first half, but it's a close call. Why this long, depressing life story? Only here: David may have realized that the last 11
chapters simply weren't enough for a full-length book (at least not the ones we've been used to from him), or he may have found the possibility of a public catharsis irresequential (and who could possibly blame him). At one point (p. 228-29) he blames his early behavior on the elites: My life had fallen
apart, just as the power elite had hoped it would. Maybe, but it doesn't quite register that way. David writes that the long bio part is needed to show why he has become a fighter of cosmic bullies and villains, and it makes some sense. As for David's longing for a rainbow body, he is yet to discover the
Advaita philosophy that can address his remaining questions. Read David's new book now for its wonderful second half; important reading, whether it's fact or a new mythology (and maybe they're the same). Ascension Mysteries by David Wilcock is an interesting treatise in the possibilities that the
universe may provide in the future. Wilcock's entry into the fiercely phenomenal is an unlimited approach to what he believes wholeheartedly should take place in the world at this time. The book contains a comparison of data points, some of which come from verifiable sources, and some of them come
from alleged whistleblowers, who merge at the core to what Wilcock has repeatedly called The Ascension Mysteries by David Wilcock is an interesting treatise on the possibilities that the universe may provide in the future. Wilcock's entry into the fiercely phenomenal is an unlimited approach to what he
believes wholeheartedly should take place in the world at this time. The book contains a comparison of data points, some of which come from verifiable sources, and some of them come from alleged whistleblowers, who merge at the core of what Wilcock has repeatedly called the ascent process. By the
way, the first half of the book felt more like having a salad, and the second part of the book was where meat and potatoes were at. As a connoisseur of data, the second part was far more interesting than the first, and is definitely very grateful for the countless sources Wilcock uses where applicable. As a
forewarning, some chapter titles - mostly especially in the first half of the book - are a bit of a misnomer because they make the chapters seem like they should be far more interesting than they actually were. This comes from someone who knows how interesting Wilcock's work has been in the past. The
subject count in the first half of the book often went in personal directions, which was in a way a bit of a disappointment considering the possibilities the chapter's name contained. It's a subjective point of view, so your mileage may vary. In the budding phase of The Ascension Mysteries, the author begins
to question much of what we have been taught in schooling, which admittedly not only paints the story in a different light, but is simply unclear when diving deep into that matter. In any case, Wilcock continues to lay the groundwork for his work with an analysis of the structure of the universe, which he has
called The Source Field. He uses references such as the work of Dr. Hans Jenny and Dr. Luc Montagnier to support this theory. The author follows up touching lightly on the Disclosure Project that took place in 2001 and featured reputable individuals who claim to have access to data reviewing UFOs and
cover ups that would boggle the mind and these individuals were also willing to testify before Congress. Then, prominently noted by the author are the myriad problems we as a society face with constant bombardment of what Cabal wants to infuse the population about illuminati symbolism in pop culture
and media, while venturing into his personal background in terms of how he grew to find this information. Noted within the framework of the book are also references to Carlos Castaneda and how his findings dovetail with alternative realities. Wilcock also notes how his dreams helped lay the foundation for
much of what he knows, while at the same time playing big pharma into the health deterioration of his mother. The author mentions the many cases of personal synchronicities that took place in his life. From there, the author talks for a long time about personnel events that revolve around ESP, and how it
has helped to manifest much of what we know about his work today. In fact, a large part of the first half of the book is intertwined with personal anecdotes about the journey he has gone through. Also noted by the author is his delving in LSD as well as his pursuit into Lucid Dreaming travels spawned
largely by the work of Dr. Stephen LaBerge's PhD dream book. With this, Wilcock gives us how these two events also played a roll into his understanding of reality as he saw it at the time and as he sees it now. Soon after, the author touches on NASA and many of the issues about the information they
have covered up at the time, and some that they still cover up today. Mentioned with the factors of NASA's duplicating business, the whistleblower testimony is from personnel who were privileged to information about lunar missions and such, which definitely let the reader know that something is amyss in
NASA's halls. Wilcock covers the work of Maurice Chatelain, who was communications director for the Apollo missions, and also shows how his findings of the Constant of Nineveh pair into the book. Wilcock also covers how Constant of Nineveh weaves into the solar system, how precession helps bring
ascent about, and how ancient history is littered with references to a possible ascent according to his Wilcock mentions the breakaway civilization, but he never mentions that it was Richard Dolan who coined the term in his magnum opus series UFOs & The National Security State. Given how much
Wilcock talks about Secret Space Programs, you'll find that he would give a real nod to the creator of the idea, since it pairs perfectly with the Secret Space Program, especially since he's one of the most trustworthy in UFOlogy.Be that as it can, Wilcock then puts his crosshairs at NASA by giving it a much
more in-depth look later in the book that covers a much more thorough approach than before. Other notable topics include stargates, Ancient Civilizations, lunar bases, lunar anomaly over the solar system, unofficial disclosure, underground bases, insider testimony, the fight against the solitaire and much
more. One of the strongest strengths in the book is also the greatest weakness anyone will claim, and it is his heavy reliability on insider testimony. Knowing this, it's definitely an area to keep tabs on. Some aspects of the book are much stronger than others, but the totality of data points sets the stage for
possibilities in intricate ways. Secondly, the book's main con - as mentioned earlier - is that much of the first half of the book is filled with personal information that could have been summarized much more effectively and not so detailed, thus allowing the book to have even more concrete information.
Although the information Wilcock provides about his family and his past is important for understanding all the early process in relation to Wilcock's background, he could only have stacked more evidence for himself instead. Ironically, a large part of the book felt like reading a diary. That's fine, since it's part
of Wilcock's approach, but given the subject at hand it would have been nice for his book to be structured in a way that was as ironclad as possible rather than overly anecdotal in a few areas. But it's just an opinion. Given that Wilcock has many references where applicable, some will argue that he has
already given us ample evidence for his many arguments. Whether people agree with Wilcock's thesis on ascent is up to them. With all the evidence he provides where applicable, it at least gives people something to think about about the many topics covered and their inherent implications. ... More...
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