This is the time of the “signs of the times.” How could anyone not notice?
It long has been said that major events, including extreme weather events, would parallel our waywardness, breaking us down to a simpler lifestyle.
We have a stark and startling glimpse from places like Asheville, North Carolina, which along with surrounding territories was hit so forcefully by Hurricane Helene that mules have to be used to get supplies to what was once the thriving “sophisticated” chic modern world.
Is it a happenstance that Asheville, which certainly has many excellent folks, is also a locus of occultism? (See a “Special Report” about it from June.)
In headline after headline, now, after the storm–the breakdown–are words like “biblical” and “apocalypse.”
Such verbiage should no longer be viewed as hyperbolic. (Below, a church we attended there recently; no priest was available for Mass.)
The percentage of Asheville residents who identify as “religious” is fifty-two. (The national national average, fifty-eight percent, isn’t much higher).
Tribulation indeed this was and is in North Carolina and elsewhere in the Southeast. Also, a glimmering of what is to come (unless it radically changes course) for the entire wayward violent warring hip-hop money-drenched world.
The city in question—considered by many the place for a summer home, a great autumn destination, or even a spiritual “refuge”—exists, we learned, on a geographical configuration (“ley lines”) that many claim carries special spiritual power (albeit, too often the wrong sort).
“Some New Age adherents believe that Asheville, like Sedona, Arizona, is in a powerful ‘energy vortex,’ an idea that brought waves of spiritual seekers starting around the early 1990s,” said The New York Times yesterday (10/1/24).
We found a blog that adds, “Asheville has been called many things—weirdest, happiest, quirkiest place in America, Santa Fe of the East, New Age Capital of the World, Paris of the South, Beer City USA, Most Haunted, Sky City and others. It has many secrets, mysteries, and legends…”
Yogics. Astrologers. Reiki. Hauntings.
Downtown, gay-pride flags flapped from storefronts.
“Bigfoot”–often a harbinger of the occult—was all over the (now flooded) place.
If straightforward ghosts aren’t enough, in the lush mountainous forests surrounding Asheville are uncanny luminosities they call the “Brown Mountain Lights.” It’s not all the product of recent trends. For more than a hundred years, people have reported seeing strange illuminations above the hillsides. An overlook along Highway 181 has been a popular viewing spot, so much so that by 1913, the lights had captured the attention of a U.S. congressman who requested a governmental study on the phenomenon.
Highway 181 is now impassable in parts due to mudslides.
Entire towns in North Carolina and other parts of the Southeast are isolated by mud or floodwaters. It’s an omen for the entire nation.
The atmosphere is holding more water than anyone can remember, as temperatures (another sign of the times) gyrate.
The ground there was already soggy from recent rain when Hurricane Helene blew through. But the amount of water dumped by that cyclone is calculated to have been forty trillion gallons, enough to fill the Dallas Cowboys’ stadium 51,000 times, Lake Tahoe once, or sixty million Olympic-sized swimming pools.
Such is the gyration globally that one small stretch of border between Italy and Switzerland had to be redrawn due to retreating glaciers. (No conspiracy theory there.)
“You can feel a shift in energy throughout the area in and around Asheville, but there are specific spots in the mountains where the [vortexes] seem to be more concentrated,” one local told Travel & Leisure, which added that “to help others find — and reap the benefits of — these centers of energy, [she] and her team lead outdoor hiking, yoga, and meditation micro retreats in the area. On these two-hour excursions, they use practices like yoga, meditation, and mindfulness to enhance’ the participant’s experience with the vortex and Asheville’s natural resources in general.”
One witch openly held rituals cursing conservatives during the total eclipse in 2017 — which had Asheville in its path of totality. (Also in that path were seven towns all named “Salem.”)
Those natural resources now seem angry.
The breakdown in infrastructure?
Expect this to occur with increasing frequency and far greater breadth.
“Chastisements,” said one alleged prophecy we have quoted, “will differ according to regions, and… will not always or usually be immediately noticeable for what they are.”
[resources: two prophecy books for price of one: Tower of Light and Fear of Fire]
Take a look at the incredible before and after of the SR 107 bridge over the Nolichucky River. A Google image shows the bridge before Helene, while videos taken by TDOT employees show the aftermath. We know there is a long recovery road ahead, but TDOT is committed to rebuilding… pic.twitter.com/kWJj3f81T7
— myTDOT (@myTDOT) October 2, 2024