Loneliness does not come from having no people about one

“Loneliness does not come from having no people about one, but from being unable to communicate the things that seem important to Carl Jung 4oneself, or from holding certain views which others find inadmissible.” ― C.G. Jung

DNA Memories – Our Blood Holds the Lost Keys to Ancient History

A section of DNA; the sequence of the plate-li...

A section of DNA; the sequence of the plate-like units (nucleotides) in the center carries information. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

What we all need to understand is that each one of us is beautifully unique in our own specific ways. Yes, many of us have the same basic desires to live or be happy as human beings, but we are also 100% individually different in regards to our missions here on earth. This is where it is crucial that we go beyond the simple fact that we are all created equal by God.

Each one of us is at a completely different stage in our soul and karmic developments making each one of us special in our own God given ways. It is the creator who decides your Karmic fate based on your soul development, but it is your DNA and RNA that is the deciding factor in tapping your inner gnosis in understanding your past, your current mission in this life and your future destiny.

A multidimensional world that takes you as above, so below and also as within, so without. (more…)

Irish DNA has Middle Eastern and Russian roots, gene study shows

(SOURCE: RT) – Irish DNA originates in the Middle East and southern Russia, from where settlers brought ceramics and cattle as well irish dnaas the genetic features of brown hair and blue eyes, scientists have discovered.

Scientists from Belfast and Dublin have analyzed remains found in ancient tombs in Ireland to get a broad picture of migration to the country.

They used genetic evidence from the body of a woman who lived around 5,000 years ago and was buried near Ballynahatty, close to Belfast, and the remains of three men who lived between 3,000 and 4,000 years ago in Country Antrim.

Based at Trinity College Dublin, the experts traced ancient migration patterns using a method called whole-genome analysis, which examines where people came from genetically rather than at their personal DNA characteristics.

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