Nature Healing Itself: The Days to Come That Are Here
October, 2005
In the 1980s, Ramtha taught about the days to come when the Earth would go through drastic changes in an effort to heal itself from the damages of pollution and the abuse of its resources. Ramtha’s prophesies from that time are today’s media headlines.
“In these days to come, one should leave the beaches and seek higher ground. In the days to come, seek dry ground, higher ground, away from the oceans.”
“You will find storms that unleash a violence that you have never seen before, that are coming from the area near the equator called the Dead Horse Drones. They have been called hurricanes. They are coming in profound fury because it is the only way that nature, in its endeavor to heal its wounds, can clean the air up and wash away the debris so that it can heal. Those are the things that are coming on your East and West Coasts. And those storms are going to become more unpredictable. In the days to come, nature will heal its wounds so that it can go on. It will get rid of that which is hurting it.”
“There are grand industrial plants that are going to fall under the violence of nature because the plants are poisoning the water and polluting the seas. The delicate balance of nature that is lovely and beautiful is being lost because of a convenience.”
– Ramtha
May, 1986
Excerpt from: Change — The Days to Come, May 17-18, 1986.
Ramtha Dialogues®, Tape 120 Ed.
NOTE:
Dead Horse Drones: The Sargasso Sea, located located between 20° to 35° North Latitude and 30° to 70° West Longitude. Currents in the Sargasso Sea are mostly dead calm. It is surrounded by some of the strongest currents in the world that interlock and isolate it completely, like the eye of a hurricane, from the rest of the Atlantic. Anything that drifts into its surrounding currents finds itself caught in the Sargasso Sea with little possibility for escape. This region, closely associated with the Bermuda Triangle, runs through what sailors traditionally call the Horse Latitudes because stalled ships, relying solely on wind power in the past, threw their horses and cattle overboard as a last resort to save on food and water.
– August, 2005
– “New Orleans shelters to be evacuated”
“Floodwaters rising, devastation widespread in Katrina’s wake”
“New Orleans resembled a war zone more than a modern American metropolis Tuesday [August 23, 2005], as Gulf Coast communities struggled to deal with the devastating aftermath of Hurricane Katrina. New Orleans was left with no power, no drinking water, dwindling food supplies, widespread looting, smoke rising on the horizon and the sounds of gunfire. At least one large building was ablaze Tuesday. There are dead bodies floating in some of the water. The rescuers would basically push them aside as they were trying to save individuals,” quoting CNN.
Read more
– April, 2012
“Damage to world’s oceans could hit $2 trillion a year, experts say”
“In the study, ‘Valuing the Ocean,’ marine experts led by the Stockholm Environment Institute analyzed the most severe threats facing the world’s marine environment and estimated the cost of damage from global warming,” quoting MSNBC.com.
Read more