tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-925549664214256461.post9010887984977739415..comments2024-03-24T17:49:05.886-04:00Comments on The Robert Moss BLOG: From the lost books of the ancient BaltsMarcia Mosshttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04530003059608361331noreply@blogger.comBlogger5125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-925549664214256461.post-58844437812974660262010-03-20T01:40:15.618-04:002010-03-20T01:40:15.618-04:00Alla - Aciu!
Cobweb - thanks for the gift of your...Alla - Aciu!<br /><br />Cobweb - thanks for the gift of your enthusiasm!<br /><br />I like the feeling that as I blog my travels, I invite a global family of dreaming friends to join in the odysseys.Robert Mosshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09231870716685877709noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-925549664214256461.post-82716662467922883472010-03-20T01:37:55.164-04:002010-03-20T01:37:55.164-04:00Justin - Thank you. People everywhere are indeed i...Justin - Thank you. People everywhere are indeed in need of collective soul recovery, which requires us to open authentic channels to the ways and the wisdom of the ancestors that it is timely and helpful for us to access today.Robert Mosshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/09231870716685877709noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-925549664214256461.post-84499164538991572002010-03-17T17:29:31.829-04:002010-03-17T17:29:31.829-04:00Your words transport me out of the familiar world ...Your words transport me out of the familiar world in which I live into another place full of magic and imagination, no need for dreaming its real and immediate. I like Justin Patrick Moore's concept of walking on cities under the pavement and the thought that threads of the past might be just under our feet ready to be absorbed up through our bodies into our conscious. It feels almost like it gives real substance to the meaning of the expression 'walking in another's footsteps'.<br />All rich and powerful day dream imagery.<br />I celebrate the day I came upon your Blog and your world opened up to me, it has proved to be a truly wondrous gift even a turning point in my life.cobwebhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04701847617673790053noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-925549664214256461.post-25778273025889529202010-03-17T13:16:58.848-04:002010-03-17T13:16:58.848-04:00You are again in the country I lived 10 years and ...You are again in the country I lived 10 years and really loved. Say 'Hello' to it from me, please! :-) As for Lithuanian myths and fairy tales, there were very many sad and dark ones. The language itself is one of the oldest in Europe, and it preserved its ancient shape pretty well (unlike Latvian, which significantly changed within ages). My friends told me that it still has many Sanscrit roots. Also, their meats and beer have always been VERY good. :-)))) <br />Sėkmės! Good luck!Allahttps://www.blogger.com/profile/03246354719305581718noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-925549664214256461.post-47970985882662122902010-03-17T09:17:13.981-04:002010-03-17T09:17:13.981-04:00Robert, I've been enjoying your magical travel...Robert, I've been enjoying your magical travel journals immensely. They are a good reminder that traveling is about adventure, and opening up the soul to new experiences. What make these pilgrimages of yours so interesting to read is in hearing tales like this one -where you talk about the great work people are doing in collective soul recovery, through dreaming unified with other arts. <br /><br />It's a lesson that can be brought home to any locality. Here in downtown Cincinnati on the banks of the Ohio I think of all the buildings and roads that are paved over the top of places where ancient earthworks once stood. <br />Journeys, in the end, always seem to be about homecoming. The soul can be enticed home through the images of art, the beauty of words and melody in a wondrous song. It has to be wooed back home.Justin Patrick Moorehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13354354033674548466noreply@blogger.com