Near Death Experiences & The Schumann Resonance – What Do They Mean?

Near Death Experiences & The Schumann Resonance – What Do They Mean?
This video is about that and I hope it helps!
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Truth is Stranger Than Fiction – The Story of the Titanic

The movie Titanic is one of the most popular movies since it’s release but the real story is even better.

Two authors imagined this happening in life. 

In 1886 W.T. Stead, a spiritualist and investigative journalist wrote a story about it.

“How the Mail Steamer Went Down in Mid Atlantic, by a Survivor” and it tells the story of an unnamed ocean liner that sinks in the Atlantic. In the story, the protagonist is a sailor named Thompson, who grows concerned over the lifeboat shortage on deck. Sure enough, the liner collides with a small sailing ship in a fog.

As the ocean liner sinks, women and children are given priority seating on the lifeboats, but chaos reigns and only 200 passengers and crew members of the original 700 people on board survive the disaster. Thompson himself survives when a lifeboat circles back around and pulls him from the water.

W.T. Stead ends his story with a word of advice: “This is exactly what might take place and what will take place if the liners are sent to sea short of boats.”

Stead lost his life in the Titanic disaster, and was convinced he’d die by either lynching or drowning and so he did. He imagined it, convinced himself of it and so he drowned just as imagined but not before giving out that warning.  Too bad he did not pay attention to the very fact he warned about. He couldn’t really. He had already sealed his fate and it was meant to be so others would read his tale after the disaster and take heed – more lifeboats. 

14 years before the Titanic – 1898 -the book Futility – The Sinking of the Titan was written and published. 

“The Wreck of the Titan: Or, Futility” by Morgan Robertson imagined more similarities to the sinking of the Titanic.

Like the Titanic, the Titan was described as the largest ship afloat at the time. In fact, the sizes and lengths of the ships are quite close, as well as the speed at which they crash into the iceberg. 

Both liners have a dangerous shortage of lifeboats. In the story, the Titan was both dubbed “unsinkable,” and proceeded to sink on a cold April night.  The Titanic sank on April 15th. 

The similarities between the Titan and the Titanic go far beyond a name and an iceberg. The length of the titan was 800 feet, the Titanic 882. The speed at which the Titan cruised into the iceberg was 25 knots. The Titanic’s was 22.5. The Titan held 2,500 passengers. The Titanic held 2,200, though both had a capacity of 3,000.

Both ships were British owned. Both ships were hit on their starboard bow, around midnight. Both sank in the North Atlantic exactly 400 nautical miles from Newfoundland. Both had a severe lack of lifeboats, the Titan holding 24, and Titanic carrying just 20. Both had a triple screw propeller.

Edward John Smith the captain of the Titanic stated before heading out “Even God himself couldn’t sink this ship,”. He mocked God so he had to go.

These authors wrote it, imagined it. One of the authors and the captain lived it and in order for it to happen a Man who did not respect God – thought men were better – had to be the captain. We all learned of the need for more lifeboats but few realized the real lesson – one does not mock God for God although invisible is everywhere and is inside and he knows what you say. 

Words are a form. God takes that form and becomes THAT. He doesn’t discriminate. You mock him – He mocks you right back. You in the human form are the operator of the power not the power. Have a little respect.

Edward John Smith presided over an Anglican service in the Titanic’s first-class dining saloon. He was for all intents and purposes a God fearing man who mocked God. 

Smith was accused of ignoring ice warnings from other ships and failing to reduce the ship’s speed to fit the conditions at hand. It was noted he did what any captain at the time would have done so he was exonerated. His body was never recovered.

Smith and his crew spotted a ship that appeared to be no more than 5 miles away and gave the order to send out a CQD, the universal distress call that was soon replaced with an SOS.

The ship they spotted in the distance didn’t answer, but several others did. The nearest, RMS Carpathia, replied that it would change course and hurry to the Titanic’s position. But the Carpathia was 58 miles – or four hours away. It was just after 12:30 a.m.

Still hoping to get the attention of the mysterious ship nearby, the captain ordered the firing of distress rockets at 12:45 a.m. At the same time, Boxhall – one of the ship’s crew – tried to contact it with a signal lamp, flashing a plea for help in Morse code. There was no reply to either.  The mysterious ship was never identified. 

Although Smith had ordered the lifeboats uncovered some 40 minutes earlier, he didn’t give the order to begin loading and lowering them until Second Officer Charles Lightoller reminded him by asking, “Hadn’t we better get the women and children into the boats, sir?”

In shock? Probably at first.  Did he realize he was going down for mocking God?  Probably. Up until this time his life had been charmed. In more than 40 years at sea he had rarely been involved in an accident and never held accountable for one. He loved and feared God so he was well taken care of until he mocked God. Then as we are told in the Bible will happen – he became confused, could not think, made mistakes – sinned. God was not listening to him. More importantly God meant it for good. To have more life boats, slower speeds in icy waters, and to know all things are possible. No such thing as unsinkable to God.

It was reported that Smith jumped off the bow holding a baby, swam to a lifeboat and handed the baby to those in the lifeboat and headed back to the Titanic. If nothing else in the face of such disaster he kept trying to save the women and children.  He died saving others.

I think he knew what he did and I think he was concerned about showing God he really did love life and that he was indeed sorry for mocking God. 

It was imagined, it was lived and so it is done. Those who died were meant to die so this lesson would be learned. It was to remain a mystery until it was time for oceans to reveal it. Oceans are deserts and the sands of time have been revealing these things to us for a while now. 

The movie is fantastic for sure but the story behind it is even better.

What do you think?  

As Neville stated – There is no fiction lol.

Blessings to you and I look forward to hearing what you think!