Make Things Go Right with Quantum Magic
It’s easy if you try. Imagine spending 15 or 20 years learning the various aspects of magical invocation — everything from visualization to thought-form handling and everything in between.
With my Orbs, you don’t need to achieve any special skills.
Just conjure up the Orb on the screen, and start running. The Orb takes care of all the rest — but what are you trying to accomplish?
Think of your past events, trailing back many billions of years, all colliding with, and intruding on, the present lifetime.
Every time you stub your toe, ALL CASES of stubbed toe are brought in, causing additional suffering that is totally needless.
When someone asks you “When were you born?”, don’t you hesitate a moment before answering?
It’s not because you don’t know the date, or you mind admitting your age. It’s that when someone asks you when you were born, you immediately get a welter of images and events that add up to a whalloping amount of badness, and your present life problem becomes heavy with Past Life Hooks.
Past Life Hooks are like barnacles — they stick to you no matter where you go, and they can influence you greatly, and affect your day with needless misery and suffering.
It’s simple to get out from under.
Just put on your ammy first thing in the morning, then fire up your laptop or desktop PC, perform a standard 10-card layout of the INFLUENCE DECK, and run the Orb indicated by the “Final Outcome” card — it’ll take ten minutes, tops.
The rest of the day, you’re free from Past Life Influence.
Without those additional burdens and dragging effects coming to you from your past encounters, your day will go a whole lot better.
As you run the Orbs, there are powerups and all sorts of magical benefits that stack up and add to your willpower, your charisma and your ability to handle stress.
It’s all done for you.
Everything is programmed in, so you don’t have to do anything but RUN, and these are beautiful spaces, so you will get a boost even from the aesthetics of the Orbs and cards.
Latest Screenshots of “Past Life Influence” Orbs:
NUMBER 1 — Atlantis is a wet and watery environment, situated in the Atlantic Ocean, existing from about 40,000 B.C. until its first destruction in 24,000 B.C. and the final annihilation that came in 12,600 B.C. in the form of an earthquake and tsunami effect that caused the entire island to vanish beneath the waves, and that’s probably the last thing you can remember.
NUMBER 2 — Babylon is the legendary city that existing between the confluence of the Tigris and Euphrates Rivers, in what is today called “the fertile crescent”. You spent many happy hours here building infrastructure and seeing to it that the Supreme Ruler was kept happy — if he got bummed out, a lot of people died, pretty much the same as what happens today when Supreme Leaders grow bored with peace or need a war to distract from their blatant corruption.
NUMBER 3 — Nineveh has the reputation, simply because in the 1800s, Layard published his profusely illustrated excavation record of one of the very first archaeological digs of the modern world, in “Nineveh & Its Remains”, still a classic in the field. Nineveh has the distinction of being a religious center of the ancient world.
NUMBER 4 — Uruk has a large temple complex located in what was in ancient times the center of the capital city, which is today called “The Susa”. It is a leveled mound that once held the main mass-rituals of the culture, celebrating the harvest, return of the sun in springtime and of course breeding, always a popular subject. In these days, you were kept alive only so long as you could work.
NUMBER 5 — Karnak was one of the greatest cities of ancient Egypt, and its buildings are amazing and impressive, the columns seeming to reach right up into the sky. The sheer size of the temple complex is overwhelming, and so was the taste of the driver’s whip, if you slowed down while dragging a 150 ton stone across the desert sand. Pyramid building didn’t last long, but it didn’t help the workers any to be working underground, except for the blessed relief from the blistering desert sun.
NUMBER 6 — Amarna is the modern name for the city of Akhet-Aten, or “Sun City” — the first retirement community of the ancient world. No, seriously, Amarna was the new and highly controversial capital of ancient Egypt under the reign of Akhenaten, who decided that the sun disk was the real God, and that all the other gods be eliminated from the worship schedule. He also dismissed thousands of Priests of Amon Ra, who were now suddenly starving and homeless, having previously been the richest and most privileged class in Egyptian society, so 18 years later, they took their revenge and that was the end of the young Pharaoh Tut-Ankh-Amun, and it was also the abrupt end of the soon to be forgotten 18th Dynasty, and thanks to the fact that most kings prefer not to die alone — they take some followers with them into the afterlife — and as usual, you went bye-bye along with the rest of the people connected with that dynasty — but, thanks to the miracle of reincarnation, here you are alive and well, able to tell the tale. or at least run through the Amarna Orb.
NUMBER 7 — As you’ll note, if you’re keeping track of design, these Orbs are the result of many hours of additional work, shaping and organizing the internals to make it a great experience that actually brings you to the Power State, ready to face the world and its many miseries and disappointments.
NUMBER 8 — Thebes was for a while the capital of Egypt, with all sorts of speculation about Upper and Lower Egypt. Dynasties are often confused and mixed up by modern archaeologists who are only guessing — we who can go back there and visit and observe will tell you that most of the time, they got it wrong. Many of today’s aches and pains are amplified by the misery of daily life in ancient Thebes.
NUMBER 9 — Alexandria, a seaport so large, rich and powerful that the only city that could rival it was Rome itself. The port city was also near a giant salt deposit that made many of the merchants there rich beyond anything existing today. Naturally, the naval force of this enormousĀ urban metropolis was equal to the task, boasting some of the fastest ships of the line. The main weapon at that time for sea battles was broadside ramming, so the prows of the ships were well-armored. If they got close, there was sword fighting, like they show in those Johnny Depp pirate films, and that may be why you have a nagging pain in your right side, and it doesn’t seem to go away or respond to medical analysis. It’s a phantom pain from long ago.
NUMBER 10 — Mental and emotional pain emanate from the Carthage Time Zone, and you can be sure that you carry at least a few memories linked to the ancient city that achieved lasting fame by being leveled to the ground and smashed into quarter-sized pieces by a vengeful enemy. Carthaginians were an argumentative lot, and they went down debating the war.
NUMBERĀ 11 — Constantinople was the capital city from which Christianity was created, not Rome. Had it not been for the Conversion of Constantine, which happened after he won a giant mega-battle, before which he’d seen a cross-shaped cloud in the sky, obviously a sign from God that he would win the fight, and by golly, he did, so he made Christianity the state religion — did I mention that his wife — a popular local hooker — was a fervent believer, and she nagged him literally day and night about making Christianity the state religion??? I guess persistence pays.
NUMBER 12 — Nobody liked living in Corinth, but there’s a law — “Everybody has to be somewhere”, and I guess that means us. Corinthians made those famous “Corinthian” columns. Well, not the whole column, just the top and bottom parts. Corinth was best known for the ancient slave trade, pretty much as we see all over the world today — nothing has fundamentally changed about humans and slavery.
NUMBER 13 — The Aegean island of Delos was the home of Cleopatra — not the Egyptian Cleopatra, the Greek one, who headed a community much like that of Sappho on the island of Lesbos. The Lesbos Amazons were the source of the rumor that found its way into popular story and legend, but these legendary sailors and soldiers DID exist, and they beat the hell out of their neighboring cultures for a while, then they were smashed, leaving the beautiful marble temples scattered rubble over the scorched earth. Today, it’s a paradise for tourists and buskers alike.
NUMBER 14 — Lesbos is today probably the most famous Greek island. It was the home of the legendary poet Sappho, who was for centuries portrayed as the matron of a girl’s finishing school or private academy. It was nothing of the kind, not was it particularly unusual for a group of women to live without men, and that means happy women. Hey, that might be a solution for the American tragedy. Breadlines? Soup kitchens? Never mind feeding the useless homeless street people. Send the men to the labor camps, where they can work on the infrastructure until they drop, and that included you, so get with it and cut yourself loose from the additional pain of Past Life Impactions.
NUMBER 15 — If you wondered about it at all, you probably thought that the Greek philosophers were all from Athens, right? Well, you’d be wrong. Most of the ancient Greek philosophers that you’ve heard about were from the Greek colony of Miletus, a port city on the mouth of the Meander River, which slivers around from year to year, hence the name “Meander”, to wander aimlessly. If you’ve been feeling stupid and neglected and hopelessly mired in deep despair, you’ve got nothing on Miletus for pure pain. Get those clammy “Miletus” hooks out of yourself right now!
NUMBER 16 — Sparta was a Greek city-state, meaning that it was independent, had its own king and ruling class and was always spoiling for a fight. Spartans glorified war, sports and heroism far more than even the Romans did, and to them, winning was everything. It’s possible that Trump is subject to Spartan influence, because he sure does spout their belief system and practice their cruel brand of control and domination. You’re probably feeling one of many aches that originated in the Spartan Time Zone. You can disengage them quickly and easily by simply running the Sparta Orb.
NUMBER 17 — Caesarea was a port city that is now accessible through Israel. The largest excavated mosaic tile floors, almost 17 acres of them, were found and exposed for photographers some 35 years ago. You were undoubtedly one of the workers on this project for the Emperor. The Emperor is long gone, but here you are to tell the tale. Kings may come and kings may go, but old soldiers never die, and that includes you. The body goes, but YOU keep trucking on. Want proof? You ARE the living proof.
NUMBER 18 — Herculaneum was a well-kept vacation paradise near enough to Rome to be an easy chariot ride out there for the weekend, but it was right in the lap of Mount Vesuvius, an active volcano that is still rumbling today. Well, one Thursday afternoon, the place exploded like Mount St. Helens, and the hot ash came raining down on the population, freezing some of the bodies into shapes that were later molded in plaster from the empty holes where people had been encased in the ash, and if you get a chance to wander the area, you might very well spot your own former body. It’s always a treat to see yourself both coming and going.
NUMBER 19 — Pompeii was another town right next to Mount Vesuvius, and it’s the more famous and popular tourist stops in the area. You can see ancient murals and even visit shops that featured pita bread sandwiches — you can see them molded from the cavities in the ash rock. What a surprise that eruption was, even though we had days of warnings with rumblings and smoke and whatnot. Get the meathooks out of your butt with a run through the Pompeii Orb — it’s always sending out endless misery, and you don’t have to take it anymore.
NUMBER 20 — Rome, capital of the ancient western world, and for a while, that included the Eastern “Byzantine” Empire, which later broke away from Rome and was the source of the religion that swept Rome into the Middle Ages, Christianity. More than 3 million citizens and millions more slaves and freemen roamed the capital city in the first century, both B.D. and A.D. and you were definitely among them, probably in the lowest possible class, which fits the description of most Romans and most of the people on Earth throughout human history. The Romans invented war, and were among the most ruthless rulers of all time. You should thank your lucky stars that you’re not in ancient Rome right now, but if you’ve got a cramp in the left hand, it’s probably from holding that heavy shield for hours at a time while a gladiator in training whacked away at it with a dull wooden sword, until in a fit of boredom, he pulled out a real sword and that’s the last thing you remember about that lifetime.
NUMBER 21 — Tyre was home to one of the best coin mints of the ancient world, and coin collectors today treasure those that were issued from this powerful city-state. Most people today are unfamiliar with the name, but if they start to disengage the tenterhooks of the ancient past, they’re bound to come up against it, because it’s the source of many modern aches and pains and enhanced headaches, backaches and emotional binges. All that and more emanates from this notorious source of pain and suffering.
NUMBER 22 — The roar of the battle-cry, “Damascus!” can be seen and heard in the 20th century movie, “Lawrence of Arabia”, which documents the rise and fall and eventual mysterious death of T. E. Lawrence, who helped liberate the Arabs from the Turkish oppression that led to the Middle Eastern participation in World War I, from 1914 through 1918 until the September 11, 1918 Armistice that ended the shooting, but not the war. It’s still going on today, and many borders are drawn across tribal lines by English and French capitalists working to establish European rule in Arabia, which didn’t last long. Your struggle against the impulses that emanate from ancient Damascus will be long and tedious, but it is a winnable war.
NUMBER 23 — If you were looking for a place to test your metal detector, the Fortress of Sidon would be the place I’d start. Coins from this period are very treasured and most have been taken into important collections already, but that’s nothing compared to the wounds and battle scars you acquired in your service here in Sidon, the main stronghold of the infamous and notorius “Knights Templar”, who occupied the fortress city until it was taken by Saladin in the name of Islam, and the same kind of unrest is still going on today in the region, unbroken by two thousand years of history.
NUMBER 24 — Benares, India, is one of the warmest and wettest regions on planet Earth, but you’d be hard pressed to find a more wonderful group of cooperative people, living as harmoniously as humans can do. If you spent time with me in that funky treehouse years ago, you’ll remember the many times we lived and died there, and what a pleasure it was to have an ashram nearby to run to when the situation got out of hand, especially at monsoon time. When it rains in Ranchipur, it pours.
NUMBER 25 — Xi’an China is a stunningly gorgeous landscape, but there’s plenty of suffering and misery to be found there for the past 30,000 years, most of which you have the phantom scars from and are still yelping with the agony. Maybe it’s time to cast off the anchors that are holding you in past life pain.
NUMBER 26 — Nara is a very old city, urbanized thousands of years in the distant past, and you were there for almost all of it, along with just about everyone you knew, all of whom have reincarnated here for this latest round of misery and suffering, but we’re here to do a job — bringing the Influence Deck and Orbs to the people who are suffering the most — those on the verge of Awakening, like yourself.
NUMBER 27 — Osaka is one of those Japanese towns that has been around for thousands of years, and has retained a unique quality all its own. Ceramics and sculpture flourished here from the Nara Period to the Tokugawa Period, and there are still touches here and there among the industrialized culture to show that it once had an artistic beginning. Of course, this culture offers its own brand of phantom misery that survive into the present by being pulled in as Past Life Hooks, and can be cast off easily by running the appropriate Orb.
NUMBER 28 — Copan was one of the capitals of the Mayan Kingdom, and if you spent any time at all with “18 Rabbit”, you’ll remember the fun we had at the ball games, after which the winners got to be sacrificed, their hearts torn out of their living bodies — now, that’s gotta hurt, and if you get a pain in the chest that isn’t explained by any medical condition, it could be gas, or it could be a phantom pain coming to you from an ancient lifetime.
NUMBER 29 — Cuzco was another Mayan town, one that rivaled most large cities today, but like all the other cities in the Mayan Empire, the population suddenly vanished on a single day — vanished without a trace. But YOU know where they went, don’t you? They’re right here, scattered among the modern Americans living today, and you’re one of them, and you can get those hooks OFF you once and for all just by running the Orbs!
NUMBER 30 — Tikal was without a doubt my favorite Mayan town — I lived there as often as I could arrange it, and we had a greatly satisfying run in that culture, which was receptive to the Teaching in the form given, always according to local customs and legends. Wow, it’s getting late, past breakfast time, dashing to get onstage for morning show.
See You At The Top!!!
gorby