Melbourne Storms
This is a series that looks at what Psychic Attacks are and what you can do regarding them. This entry we’ll focus on how Weather can be influenced by humans with more examples of what I’ve done.
Following on from my last entry about praying for rain, it just so happened that this week produced another example of such consequences.
In Australia, we’ve had some pretty bad bushfires. This happens every ten or so years. They tend to be inevitable as this is the kind of country we live in.
From what I’ve heard, Australian government policies about being allowed to clear growth to protect your property are forbidden and can attract fines.
So, when fires happen, they destroy things in a major way.
Group Prayers
Recently, there were calls online for people to join group prayers for sending rain to the fires.
Well, we got it, in spades. Floods, golf sized (and larger) hail stones (in spite of it being mid-summer) and damaging weather.
Mind you, it fell in many areas that had no danger of fire, but that’s what can happen when groups pray indiscriminately, without thinking of constraints and consequences.
Heavy Downpours
This is just a snippet from the Herald Sun from Monday 20th, January 2020.
Victoria braces for second day of thunderstorms, hail and heavy downpour
There’s no end in sight for Victoria’s wild weather, with more thunderstorms and heavy downpours set to ravage the state throughout the day.
THUNDERSTORM
The rain is set to continue to pummel much of the state today, with the Bureau of Meteorology issuing a “severe” weather warning.
The city will start to see rainfall in the late morning which will continue until the late evening, a spokesperson from the BoM (Bureau of Meteorology) said.
Please Be Mindful
So, I’m asking, all of those who engage in group prayers, be very careful what you are praying for. The cures can be just as bad as the problem.
I had to learn this the hard way.
Before I got much of my past life memories back, I was never sure if my powers were real or not. (This was due to a Reality Attack.)During our summer in 2003, for a period of four days, I decided to see if I could create storms. So, I kept on visualizing rain.
Once again, my Guides kept on saying, “I wouldn’t do that, you’ll create storms.” But I dismissed this and kept on doing it. Why I didn’t listen, I don’t recall. I believe it was due to me not having any true belief in my own powers.
It’s not like I was surrounded by people who validated who I was, and what I could do.
Wild Weather For The Next 3 Days
On the fourth day, at work, we suddenly got heavy hail and I looked out of the office window in disbelief. Hail is very rare in Melbourne, especially in mid-summer.
On the way home, on the train, I read in the afternoon paper that the weather report was for wild weather for the next three days.
I figured that, if that was me, I could probably reverse it.
I sent the thought for the rain to stop. Within minutes, it eased and did not return.
You’d think that this should have been a wake-up call, but it wasn’t. I felt it could have just as easily been coincidence.
Once again, if you are working to affect the weather, be very mindful. Only do what you are called upon to do.
Tornadoes
Anyway, moving on.
I’ve had to learn the hard way to be mindful of my thoughts. Even if I don’t have intention behind them, they still produce results not long after.
Here are more examples of my unchecked influence on the weather.
Once I visualized a whirlwind, while daydreaming. A day or so later, I read that there was a mini-tornado in a nearby area. Tornadoes are not known to happen in Melbourne, Australia.
This is an article in The Age Newspaper about it from October 18, 2006
Whirlwind tears roofs off homes
An SES volunteer removes fallen trees from a property in Corio.
Photo: Andrew de la Rue
A ‘mini tornado’ and 100 kmh winds ripped the roofs off houses and knocked trees out the ground in Geelong last night.
Bureau of Meteorology senior forecaster Richard Carlyon said gale-force winds of over 100 km/h were responsible for the freak weather event.
Victorian State Emergency Services Corio unit controller, Bill Verheyen, said the wind was like nothing he has ever heard before.
“It came through at about 10.40pm last night, it sounded like a freight train coming through, it was like a mini tornado,” Mr Verheyen said.
Never Heard Wind Like It
“I’ve never heard wind like it and I’ve been doing this for 13 years … It really did sound like a freight train, it only lasted for about three, four, maybe five minutes and that was the end of it.”
Twenty-five SES workers battled through the night in Corio to remove trees and building material strewn over two kilometres throughout the bayside suburb.
“It’s been pretty frantic, we’ve been on the go for the last 14 and a half hours, we’ve done 45 fairly major jobs so far, we’ve had roofs dislodged, a carport taken 250 metres down the road and a trampoline that went from one backyard to a few down.
“The good thing is we haven’t had any injuries, ” Mr Verheyen said.
The Bureau of Meteorology is forecasting another night of strong westerly winds around the bay.
The Gulf War
Another incident that comes to mind was when the Gulf War started on 2 August 1990.
At the time, I was so livid about it (for reasons I can no longer recall) that I visualized massive sandstorms rising up and blocking everything. I heard later that one of the worst sandstorms in history had been reported.
It was enough to stall the invasion on Iraq.
Next: More examples