usually come and go after the founder has made his dollars, that teaches us if
“we wish something and pray hard enough for it we will get it. That is a bit transparent to me,
though very common and it appears a new one crops up every half-decade ago with beautiful
glossy brochures, slick videos, and great testimonials from “people we trust” (who were
paid big-time for their contribution to “the cause”. We are likely to see many more of those
in our lifetime, simply because they are attractive and popular. But I could hardly call them
“anything new”. The one’s I have seen are copies of everything from EST to a dozen of others
long before this century.
But I think it is a good culture for people who want fellowship, and happen to have a
belief in their God (which I tend to think is the same as the one I believe in but that is just me),
but don’t want to get “tied into” or “lured into” the “politics of traditional religion”.
So certainly, though nothing new, they serve a positive purpose.
Back to paganism. Do you live in an energy vortex? I do. But is this “junk science”, religion,
paganism, or just the universe at work.
I do not have the answer but I do know that physicists agree that energy vortexes do exist and
some extraordinary things occur if one is in the center of one. I will not go into the details
of what an energy vortex does and does not do, simply because I would be making up things
that I have not researched carefully. Allegedly if you live in an energy vortex you live in
a place where nature blossoms more easily; two examples are Findhorn, Scotland and
Hot Springs, Ar (there are many more). In Findhorn, allegedly roses