Traveler’s Diary 3/17/25

Once again things are turning and churning.  It is as though the wheel has been turned and a new combinations coming up. This once includes more weather ‘anomalies’ along with more physical symptoms.  It is well to consider the response of the body to ehe environment — both physical and energetic – before getting panicky about things happening within.  You must remember that the body aligns with the environment, ii is physical, and it is motivated by the spiritual and the mental.  Now know the there is much power in the mental that can overwhelm the spiritual and the physical not because it is necessary stronger, but because of the attention that is being placed in t hat arena.  So, when you feel yourself being drawn into a strong consideration of what is going on in the body, it is well to sit back and see whether that consideration is a distraction or whether it is the body going into survival mode.  As a distraction what is happening is that there is an outside force at work on you and perhaps the whole of the humanity —- we thought to say ‘the physical’ because in most cases it is dealing with all the people in the physical world, and in fact, it can also be affecting the natural world, however in order to make things clearer and to bring focus back to the physicality we chose the other word, ‘physical;’. 

The physical as you know is but once facet of the individual and not necessary always the most…. Effective or…….. we are looking for a word and we cannot at this moment find it n your vocabulary however the physical has its place, but the determiner of the body is a team.  You need all the various elements, but at one time one element takes over and at another (time) a different one.  However the importance in this level, in this dimension is for the body to continue on, and therefore one thinks mainly of the physical, but as you have seen in spiritual….. and energetic healing, what can be done is that a new alignment of the physical can be achieved through dealing with the energy body. This body’s one of the layers of the person, can change the physicality if , and of course, this is is important, if it is so allowed for the physical motivator always is watching what is going on and at times will override what is best for the totality of the body/bodies.

We know this is off the subject a bit, but allow its to make an analogy with the weather.  When the environment, particularly the weather is being manipulated, then the alignment of the various areas of the environment is out of whack, and there can be extreme events that were not actually part o the real motivation of the weather.  These things can be caused by the atmospheric heaters that are in action all over the world.  As we have mentioned earlier, they have reached a point, a tipping point, at which these technological means will be thwarted by the earth, yes, but also by the actions of these terrible individuals.  They will be thwarted because things are so out of balance that they are toppling and can no longer be righted by technological means, so look for unexpected, (???) unexpected, (parts) of the earth to work towards righting the imbalance.  Know that this alway will (affect) humankind.  It is well to look for alternative remedies and keep them close at hand for they posses an energetic component that can help the body respond to the rocking and rolling..

We go.

Dr. Jeff Masters on The Week’s Wild Weather

Wild weather week ends; Mississippi River rises out of danger zone

Published: 2:44 PM GMT on February 01, 2013
One of the most unusual weeks of January weather in U.S. history has drawn to a close, and residents of the Southeast are cleaning up after a ferocious 2-day outbreak of severe weather. NWS damage surveys have found that at least 42 tornadoes touched down on January 29 – 30, making it the 3rd largest January tornado outbreak since records began in 1950. Here are the largest January tornado outbreaks since 1950:129 1/21 – 1/22 1999
50 1/7 – 1/8 2008
42 1/29 – 1/30 2013
40 1/9 1/10 1975

As wunderground’s Angela Fritz wrote in her blog today, the powerful tornado that ripped through Adairsville, Georgia, northwest of Atlanta, at 11:19 am EST Thursday morning, killing one person, has been rated a high-end EF-3 with 160 mph winds. At least seven other tornadoes in the outbreak were EF-2s. Damaging winds reports for the 2-day period numbered 597, the highest 2-day January total since NOAA’s Storm Prediction Center (SPC) began tabulating these in 2000. The severe weather outbreak was fueled an air mass that set many all-time January records for warmth and moisture, as detailed by our weather historian, Christopher C. Burt, in his latest post, A Wild Ride Weather-wise for the Eastern Half of the U.S. the past Four Days.


Figure 1. Damage to the Daiki Corporation factory in Adairsville, GA, after the January 30, 2013 EF-3 tornado. Image credit: Dr. Greg Forbes, TWC.


Figure 2. Severe weather reports for the month of January; 597 reports of damaging winds were recorded January 29 – 30. Image credit: NOAA/SPC.

Mississippi River rising
This week’s storm brought widespread rains of 1 – 2″ to Missouri and Illinois, along the drainage basin of the stretch of the Mississippi River that was so low as to threaten to stop barge traffic. Happily, the rains have caused the river to rise by more than seven feet over the past week, along the stretch from St. Louis to Thebes, Illinois. Thanks to this much-needed bump in river levels, plus the future run-off that will occur from the snows that have accumulated in Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Iowa, I expect no potential low water closures of the Mississippi until June at the earliest. According to today’s newly-released Drought Monitor, though, the area of the contiguous U.S. in moderate or greater drought remained unchanged at 58% this week. It will be dry across the core of the drought region for at least the next week; the GFS model is predicting that the next chance of significant precipitation for the drought region will be Saturday, February 9. Don’t bet on this happening, though, since the model has been inconsistent with its handling of the storm. The drought has killed hundreds of thousands of trees across the Midwest, and many more will succumb during the next few years. According to Brian Fuchs, a climatologist with the National Drought Mitigation Center, drought was present in at least isolated spots in all 50 states of the U.S. for the first time in history during 2012.


Figure 3. The water level in the Mississippi River at St. Louis was at -4′ early this week, just above the all-time record low of -6.2′ set in 1940. However, rains from this week’s storm have raised water levels by seven feet. Image credit: NOAA/HPC.


Figure 4. The liquid equivalent of melting all the snow on the ground present on February 1, 2013. Widespread amounts of water equivalent to 0.39″ – 2″ of rain are present over Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Iowa, which is near average for this time of year. When this snow melts, it will raise the level of the Mississippi River and aid barge navigation. Image credit: NOAA/National Operational Hydrologic Remote Sensing Center.

Links
Adairsville Tornado Recap, Photos, and Video from Angela Fritz

A Wild Ride Weather-wise for the Eastern Half of the U.S. the past Four Days by wunderground’s weather historian, Christopher C. Burt.

Tornado Expert Sees “Staggering” Damage in Georgia

Have a great Groundhog’s Day and Super Sunday, everyone!

Jeff Masters

from:    http://www.wunderground.com/blog/JeffMasters/article.html