The most serious problem of the week is the spread of ISIS.
The most ridiculous ongoing situation are the twists and turns in the 2016 election.
In the realm of alien disclosure - there are 2 names that come up - Corey Goode who many associate with David Wilcock - and Simon Parkes. Once again - as in past decades - it all goes to an upcoming collective ascension which equates to the end of the hologram. This seems like old intel that has been recycled but needed by new people on a mission to find truth. I wouldn't say the human experiment is a failure - just that it was obviously designed to fail. Each of us has their own programmed belief system. You have to find yours - hence the Internet and the need to be free from work and other things that prevent growth - leading to a final conclusion after which you wait and watch events unfold.
The survey below is wrong and just represents the number of reported cases. The number of mentally ill far exceeds that in any area of the planet. The main symptoms appear to be depression and anxiety.
New York City finds one in five adults has mental health problems Reuters - November 12, 2015
At least one in five adult New Yorkers suffer from depression, substance abuse, suicidal thoughts or other psychological disorders every year, according to a report released on Thursday ahead of Mayor Bill de Blaiso's new mental-health initiative.
One of the most interesting stories this week is about autism and worth reading/watching:
New Survey Method Finds More Kids With Autism NBC - November 13, 2015
A new government survey finds that more than 2 percent of U.S. kids have been diagnosed with autism - or 1 in 45 children aged 3 and older.
In another statistic about children: Nearly 60 million people are currently displaced from their homes by war and persecution - more than at any time since World War II. Half are children. multimedia journey in text, photographs and virtual reality tells the stories of three of them.
Are you superstitious about number 13?
If you are, does it have anything to do with
things that go wrong in your life on a regular basis?
There was a Friday the 13th in February and March this year and
November exactly 39 weeks (3 x 13 weeks) after February's Friday the 13th.
It's an interesting day. I know 5 people born on this date and it's the 10th anniversary of the death of my ex-husband Ralph who has been around.
The human emotional experience is most often based on fear. The fear of Friday the 13th is called paraskavedekatriaphobia or paraskevidekatriaphobia, a specialized form of triskaidekaphobia, a phobia (fear) of the number thirteen.
Despite our well-developed brains, our complex technologies and centuries of scientific progress, the human race remains a fearful, superstitious people from ancient times to modern day prophecies - and across all cultural divides.
Friday the 13th superstitions originated in a Norse myth about twelve gods having a feast in Valhalla. The mischievous Loki crashed the party as an uninvited 13th guest and arranged for Hod, the blind god of darkness, to shoot Baldur, the god of joy and gladness, with a mistletoe-tipped arrow. Baldur was killed and the Earth was plunged into darkness and mourning as a result.
Frigg
'Friday' was named after Frigg (or Frigga),
the Norse goddess of marriage.
Later she was confused with the goddess of love, Freya, who in turn became identified with Friday. When the Norsemen and Germanic tribes became Christians, Freya was supposed to have been banished to the mountains as a witch. Friday came to be called 'witches' Sabbath. It was believed that on this day, each week, twelve witches and the Devil met - thirteen evil spirits in all.
Some believe that the arrest of Jacques de Molay, Grand Master of the Knights Templar, and 60 of his senior knights on Friday, October 13, 1307 by King Philip IV of France is the origin of this superstition. That day thousands of Templars were arrested and subsequently tortured. They then 'confessed' and were executed. From that day on, Friday the 13th was considered by followers of the Templars as an evil and unlucky day.
Were the Knights Templar created by a group called the Priory of Sion? The treasures and secrets of these mystical organizations take us to the American continent and the Freemasons, who carry the energy signature of the creation of our reality with them.
The original US flag had 13 stars.
If you think outside the box, viewing the star pattern as a hologram,
raising the center point - it creates a pyramid of souls in color code blue.
You also see symbols for above and below - 'X' and a Diamond (Sacred Geometry)
The US One Dollar Bill depicts the Unfinished Pyramid at Giza
Golden Capstone, Alchemy of Consciousness
An Illuminated All Seeing Eye Above
Eye references the center of the Milky Way Galaxy
13 illuminated stars form a Star of David around a central source
Merkabah - Movement of Consciousness in and out of realities above the Eagle.
U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt said, "The only thing we have to fear is fear itself." He didn't like the number 13. He hated to travel on Friday the 13th or have 13 people at dinner. He died on Thursday, April 12, 1945, just before Friday the 13th.
The number 13 is probably the most common of all superstitions, considered a bad luck day unless you were born on Friday the thirteenth in which case it is allegedly your lucky day.
In many cultures, getting married on any day of the week that falls under number 13 is highly discouraged.
There is a superstition that should thirteen sit at a table to dine, one will die in the next year. This prompted the formation of The Thirteen Club to debunk it.
It was suggested by Charles A. Platt writing in 1925 that the reason 13 is considered unlucky is that a person can count from 1-12 with their 8 fingers, two thumbs and 2 feet, but not beyond that, so the number 13 is unknown, hence frightening, hence unlucky. This idea discounts the use of toes or other body parts in counting.
Early nursery rhymes stated there were thirteen months in a year because of the natural moon cycle that was used to count the lunar year. In England, a calendar of thirteen months of 28 days each, plus one extra day, known as "a year and a day" was still in use up to Tudor times.
In Scotland, there is no gate 13 in any airport, instead there is a gate 12B.
Inside of a Lufthansa plane with row numbers going straight from 12 to 14.
Some airplanes skip a row 13, going straight from 12 to 14.
Some tall buildings have resorted to skipping the "thirteenth floor".
Some streets do not contain a house number 13.
In some forms of motor sport, for example Formula One, there is no number 13 car.
The Apollo 13 spacecraft malfunctioned after being launched on April 11th at 13:13 CST, forcing it to return to Earth without a landing on the moon and imperiling its crew.
The Code of Hammurabi, a collection of laws created ca. 1760 BC, does not contain a thirteenth law.
The College of William and Mary claims 13 priorities, or achievements of the academic world, which they accomplished before any other university or college in the United States. For example, William and Mary was the first college in the US to establish an honor code. A marble plaque commemorating these 13 priorities hangs on the exterior wall of the Wren Building, the nation's oldest academic building still in continuous use.
13 is a Fibonacci Number.
13 is the 6th prime number. 6 is sometimes considered an unlucky number due to its association with 666 (18=9=closure).
13 is the second Star Number.
There are 13 circles in Metatron's Cube.
13 is the atomic number of aluminum. In chemistry and physics, the atomic number (also known as the proton number) is the number of protons found in the nucleus of an atom. It is traditionally represented by the symbol Z. The atomic number uniquely identifies a chemical element. In an atom of neutral charge, atomic number is equal to the number of electrons. The atomic number is closely related to the mass number, which is the total number of protons and neutrons in the nucleus of an atom.
The lunisolar calendar generally has 12 months but every second or third year has 13. According to another interpretation, the number 13 is unlucky because it is the number of full moons in a contemporary year, but two full moons in a single calendar month (mistakenly referred to as a blue moon in a magazine article of the 1940s) only happens about every 5 years.
(13 = 1+3) = 4. number 40, given significance throughout history. Year 40 was a leap year starting on Friday of the Julian calendar.
Reality is a consciousness matrix.
In 2000, 'The Thirteenth Floor' was nominated for
the Saturn Award for Best Science Fiction Film.
The award went to The Matrix.
12 Around 1 or 13
A clock is often 12 around 1.
13 people at the Last Supper 12 disciples around Jesus