The Summerlands Mac OS
Summerlands Victoria | |
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Coordinates | 38°30′40″S145°8′46″E / 38.51111°S 145.14611°ECoordinates: 38°30′40″S145°8′46″E / 38.51111°S 145.14611°E |
Postcode(s) | 3922 |
Location |
|
LGA(s) | Bass Coast Shire |
State electorate(s) | Bass |
Federal Division(s) | Monash |
- The Summerlands Mac Os 7
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The Summerlands is an American Entertainment Fanon television sitcom created by Danny Antonucci and produced by the Disney Channel. The show is based on three adolescent boys, Zack, Patrick and Double D. They hang around their suburban neighborhood of Peach Creek Estates, coming up with scams to con their peers for cash, so they can buy themselves a handful of their favorite treat, jawbreakers. In keeping with the traditions and ways of our ancestors, we offer you the hospitality of The Summerlands here at this Crossroads. This is a place of beginnings, as well as hospitality. Try the offerings below to get a sample of our World. It is our hope that within The Summerlands you will also find a new beginning. USB 3.0 WiFi Adapter AC1300Mbps for PC, Wireless Network Adapter Dual Band 5GHz 2.4GHz for Mac OS 10.6 -10.15,Windows XP $ 22.99 Generic I Personal Computer rqad $ 250.00 Majority Bowfell Small Sound Bar for TV with Bluetooth, RCA, USB, Opt, AUX Connection, Mini Sound/Audio System for TV $ 31.99. Cutbelly explains that it never rains in the Summerlands because two leaves of the Tree of Life are so close that two worlds exist there simultaneously. Trouble starts to happen when Coyote (who is known by many other names, including Satan), has an idea to poison the Tree of Life, the Tree that holds the whole universe in order. It highlights Somerset's hills and the wetlands of the ancient 'Summerlands'. Also featured are the giant effigies of the Glastonbury Zodiac. Glastonbury's spiritual heritage spans 5000 years or more, embracing the pre-Megalithic, Megalithic, Bronze Age and Celtic/Druidic cultures, Roman and Saxon times, the high Middle Ages, secular urbanism.
Summerlands was a residential subdivision on Phillip Island in Victoria, Australia, located in the south-west corner of the island, close to a little penguin breeding colony. In 1985, the Victorian government decided that, to protect the penguin rookery, further development of the subdivision would be prohibited and all the properties would be progressively purchased by the state.
History[edit]
In the early 20th century, the Summerland Peninsula had remained relatively untouched by European settlement compared to the rest of the island. Although chicory, mustard and oats for horse fodder were grown there, the land was of minimal pastoral or agricultural value.[1] As a result, the penguin colony there survived while others on the island did not.
Subdivision of the area was carried out from the 1920s until the 1960s.[2] The first subdivision consisted of 12 large allotments, along with features such as a roundabout and cypress trees that were still visible decades later. Between 1927 and 1931, 227 new blocks were created, and from 1929 to 1940 there was a nine-hole golf course on what is now the Penguin Parade car park.[1]
In the 1950s, a further 437 blocks were created, and the final subdivisions were carried out in 1958 and 1961 on land closer to The Nobbies. Much of the land was sold to speculators rather than those interested in building on it, and by 1974 only 11 percent of the 986 blocks of land had been cleared or built on.[1]
Land buyback[edit]
Progressive residential development on the Summerland Estate was considered a threat to the survival of the penguin colony. The 1989 Phillip Island Penguin Reserve Management Plan called the estate 'a major blight on the landscape'. In the early 1970s, the local shire had started to buy back land on the estate.[3]
In 1985, the Victorian government announced that it would purchase all 774 allotments on the Summerland Peninsula to protect the penguin colony, setting up the 'Summerland Estate Buy-Back Programme'. The programme had a projected end date of 2000, with the land to be added to the Phillip Island Nature Park. During this period, land owners could not build on their land, improve their properties, or sell them to anyone but the Government.[4] By 2007, 732 properties had been voluntarily sold by their owners, at a cost to the government of around a million dollars a year.[5]
The buyback process was finalised in 2007, with the compulsorily acquisition of the final 42 properties (20 empty blocks and 22 with houses, held by 34 private owners) to take place over the next three years, at a cost of $15 million.[5] In 2008, five property purchases were settled and agreement to purchase one property was reached, along with six negotiated purchase offers and one offer for compulsory acquisition.[6] In 2008-09, 14 properties were purchased, taking the total number to 25 and leaving 17 properties still to be acquired.[7]
In June 2010, the government announced that the buy-back programme had been completed, and the land involved was in the process of being added to the Phillip Island Nature Park and revegetated.[8] A few scattered houses remained on the subdivision.
References[edit]
- ^ abcLesley Head (2000). Second nature: the history and implications of Australia as Aboriginal landscape. Syracuse University Press. pp. 168–169. ISBN0-8156-0587-0. Retrieved 4 November 2009.
summerland peninsula.
CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link) - ^'Can there be a balance between tourism and protection of the environment?'(PDF). Ryebuck Media and Phillip Island Nature Park. Archived from the original(PDF) on 15 June 2011. Retrieved 24 February 2019.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^Lesley Head (2000). Second nature: the history and implications of Australia as Aboriginal landscape. Syracuse University Press. pp. 172–174. ISBN0-8156-0587-0. Retrieved 4 November 2009.
summerland peninsula.
CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link) - ^Kathy Bowlen (30 September 2005). 'Owners of prime waterfront property caught in a 20-year bureaucratic nightmare'. Stateline Victoria. abc.net.au. Retrieved 3 November 2009.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^ ab'Govt forces penguin reserve land buyback'. ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation). abc.net.au. 4 October 2007. Retrieved 3 November 2009.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^Department of Sustainability and Environment. 'Annual Report 2008 - Report of Operations 3'. dse.vic.gov.au. Retrieved 25 September 2012.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
- ^Department of Sustainability and Environment. 'Annual Report 2009 - Report of Operations'. dse.vic.gov.au. Archived from the original on 18 October 2009. Retrieved 25 September 2012.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link) CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
- ^'LITTLE PENGUIN POPULATION SET TO THRIVE IN SUMMERLAND WITH BUYBACK COMPLETE'. Media release from the Minister for Environment & Climate Change. parliament.vic.gov.au. 7 August 2010. Retrieved 4 November 2009.CS1 maint: discouraged parameter (link)
External links[edit]
a Course of Study Consisting of 14 Classes
This is one course in the long awaited, expanded coursework and study that waspreviously offered in the Summerlands and which was published in the Journal of the Henge of Keltria. It has been greatly expanded and is patterned on Udemy classes (and may well be presented there in the future). Ogham Keys to Wisdom is an introductory study into the ways of Druids that explores their hidden knowledge while also establishing a systematic approach to implementing that wisdom within modern Druidic practice. It does this through a nine fold investigation into the elemental qualities of everything as understood by the Celts and Druids.Currently there are three courses available to chose (through the link above) out of a total of nine. Each course and its class lectures has its own materials and audio/video presentations to assist you in attaining wisdom.
Sign up now!Classes start after the Summer Solstice 2014.
The Power of Truth
- In this course you will learn how the Druids perceived Truth
- You will develop an understanding of Truth as it was presented in Triads.
- You will develop an understanding of Truth as it was presented in Wisdom Literature.
- You will develop an understanding of Truth as it was presented in Traditional Tales.
- You will develop an understanding of Truth as it was found in Certain Druidic Practices.
- You will develop an understanding of Truth as it was taught in the Truth Against the World
- You will better understand the Act of Truth and its Basis in Creation.
- By the end of the course, you will be able to understand the spiritual basis of Truth and its Importance to being able to work on the Three Levels of the Physical World, the World of the Mind and the Lands of Spirit.
- You will perceive the connections between Death, Birth and Life as a Druid Would See Them
The curriculum follows the class topics itemized below for 14 weeks. Students will be assigned reading segments for each class, as well as being provided with video and audio presentation materials.
Class 1 -THE TRADITIONAL ROLES OF DRUIDS
The Druids were the intelligentsia of Celtic society and fulfilled many roles within it. They witnessed oaths and remembered feats and traditions. They were also the spiritual specialists and the traditional leaders of the sacrifices to the gods among the Celts. To guarantee that oaths would be faithfully remembered and that the traditions covering the basis of Celtic law would not be sullied, Druids served as official witnesses and were required to at all times hold to the truth. Any Druid found to be untrue would no longer be recognized as a Druid by the people and would effectively be caste out or exiled from their society. Truth and being are the oaken roots of Druids in the life of the people. A Druid’s truth is found in the strength and straightness of the ash and the ever-springing resilience of the yew.- Our Forms of Truth
- Truth, Magic and the Man in the Tree
- The Five Marks of a Druid
- A Few Words for Those Who Seek
- What is a Druid?
- 'What makes a Druid a Druid in today's world?'
- A Seeking of Wisdom
- The Beginnings of a Druid's Education
- Becoming a Druid
- The Truth Against the World
- The Imbas Experience
- The Underworld Journey
- You Can Be Called a Druid
- What are These Skills and Training?
- What Kind of Druid Am I?
- Draíocht!
- Beyond the World of Illusions
- Embracing the Name and the Way of Druids
Class 2 – SEEKING WISDOM
I have always maintained that Draíocht is a seeking of truth and a stewardship of harmony. I commend anyone (whether Druid, Christian, atheist or otherwise) on the overall harmony that is contained within their words or way of life. Their harmony in being speaks well of the communion that Nature has shared with them in their lives and workings. A triad that I am particularly fond of is that the three strong supporters of the wise person's pursuit of wisdom are knowledge, information and inquiry. It is my firm belief that these three come more readily to the person who maintains an open mind and a trained and discriminating memory.- Spiritual Harmony
- Transcending Ego
- Three Tenets of Draíocht
- What Druids Studied
- Druidic Art or Draíocht
- There is no escape from the Truth of Being
- We are all connected within the Warp and Weave of Creation
- We must give of ourselves so that we may receive of ourselves
- Druids are TRUTH SEEKERS and STEWARDS of HARMONY
- Responsibility and Spiritual Abdication
- The Testimony of our Enemies
- According to Caesar
- According to Dio Chrysostom
Class 3 - TRUTH AS CREATION
Truth is the power that creates. Words describing a thing paint a picture of its creation. Words are the tools and sometimes the roadmap. Words bring the image of a thing into our minds and create them there. They are also the smoke that leads to the fire as well as the signal itself given by the fire to thoughts and awareness. The source of that fire is to be found inherently within wood and will, as well as in the ability of life to store energy within forms that are harmonious to other life. Perhaps Carbon, Oxygen, Hydrogen and Nitrogen should be our gods (or at least our Dúile)? They are the forms that support life and our physical selves.- The Quest for Truth
- The Act of Truth
- The Truth of the Fountain
- Cormac’s Adventure in The Land Of Promise
- Another Telling of the Tale
- Fountain and Stream
- Cormac's Cup of Truth
- Risk and Judgement
Class 4 - TRUTH AS PHILOSOPHY
Much has been said about the idea of truth here in this work and especially as it is understood by Druids. The following early Irish remarks on the subject can provide us with a common point of discussion and reference. The treatise is found in one of the earliest Irish writings on the In King of Mysteries, Early Irish Religious Writings, is reproduced here as an aid to discussion and in hopes that others will be encouraged to further research both the book and the subject. The author of the book was an Irish Christian monk, Colmán mac Beónai, who was related to a line of Irish kings, Druids and Filidh. Carey says that the work itself seems to be drawn from the following sources: 'the monastic treatises of John Cassian (died 435) , on the sapiential books of the Old Testament and probably on native wisdom literature as well…'- The Idea of Truth
- On Knowing Truth
- Truth as a Refuge
- Evaluating Values
- The Joy of Truth
- Poetic Truth and Magic
- Finding the Stillpoint
- Finding Truth
- Finding Life
- Many Ways and Different Paths
- Truth and Sacrifice
- Human Sacrifice
- Historical References
- The Children of Crom
- Segda Saerlabraid, The Blameless Youth
- Life-force and Spirit
- A physical container of some kind
- Life-force/power
- Will/focus
- Life-force for Sacrifice
- Death of a Druid Prince
- The Three Fold Death
- The Dark Year
- The Power of Truth
Class 5 - THE TRUTH AGAINST THE WORLD
Is amlaid dogníthe in tarbfhes sin .i. tarb find do marbad & óenfher do chathim a shátha dia eóil & dá enbruthi, & chotlud dó fón sáith sin, & ór fírindi do chantain do chethri drúdib fair, & atchíthe dó i n-aslingi innas ind fhir no rígfaide and asa deilb & asa thúarascbáil & innas ind oprid dogníth. Díuchtrais in fer asa chotlud, & adfíadar a res dona rígaib .i. móethócláech sáer sonairt co n-dá chris derca tairis & sé ós adart fhir i sirc I n-Emain Macha.This is how that bull-feast used to be made: to kill a white bull, and for one man to eat his fill of its flesh and its broth, and to sleep after that meal; and for four druids to chant a spell of truth over him. And the form of the man to be made king used to be shown to him in a dream, his shape and his description, and the manner of work that he was doing.
- Tarbh Feis - The Bull Dream
- The Chant of Truth (Dichetal do Fírinne)
- TRUTH is FÍRINNE
- Cultural Truth
- The Tale of the Ordeals,
- Cormac's Cup.
- Morann Mac Main's Collar.
- Morann Mac Main's Second Collar.
- Morann Mac Main's Third Collar
- Sencha's Lot-Casting
- The Vessel Of Badurn
- The Three Dark Stones
- The Cauldron Of Truth
- The Old Lot Of Sen
- Luchta's Iron
- Waiting at an Altar
- Cormac's Cup.
- How One Determines Truth
Class 6 - PRESERVING SHRINES
There is a specific reason why Druids study to learn what is known about the world around us. This reason is very much like why we build databases for computers and software in the modern world. Druids study and databases are constructed so that resources are available when one is attempting to simulate or emulate life in a predictive or creative manner. Stated another way, the more accurate information one has, the better model of reality one can construct.- Centers of Spirit and Schools of Learning
- The Center of the Universe
- The Basis of Knowledge
- The Soul as a Preserving Shrine
- Coimgne, the Continuity of Tradition
- Truth and Druids
- Why Druids Study and Memorize Traditional Knowledge
- Truth as the Sustaining Power of the Universe
- The Center Of Truth And The Edge Of Uncertainty
- Truth as Law
Class 7 - NATURE’S TRUTH
Discovering a truth is a timeless instance of all times existing within one’s self. I thought I could better express this idea in a tale of kingship and sovereignty:He sat on a lush green mound rising out of the surrounding plain, itself shaped like a breast of nourishment for his people who were arrayed before him. Some were there for the games and the crafts. Others came to seek his justice or a boon. Still others were there to remind him and the people of the gods and the traditions of the old ones. As he gazed on the gathering, time stood still and took him to that fireside long ago when he had been on his own quest of seeking. A seeking of truth and self it was for this king of kings and sub-kings. For at that time he was but a youth and not the leading candidate to become a king at all. His brothers all outranked him in age, in stature and in the skills of warriorship and the lore of tradition. They sat around the fire with him, sharing the quest.
- A Love for the Land
- A Terrible Darkness
- The Land of Spirit
- The Land of Form
- The Land of Mind
- Death as Ultimate Truth
- Death as Liberation
- The Deceit of the Spear
- Order and Chaos, Slaying the Dragon
- Cnoc Fírinne the Hill of Truth
- The House of Donn
- The Land of Youth
- The Island of the Everliving
Class 8 - DRUIDIC TEACHINGS
The ancient Druids had specific stories in mind when they created such Triads for themselves and their students. In this way, each Triad could serve as an index to the tales in much the same way that some consider Ogham were used to index knowledge and memories. It is a matter of debate as whether there is an Ogham - Triad link. My position and the underlying foundation of what I’ve uncovered in my own studies demonstrates that there is such a connection. A linkage between Triads, Ogham and tales, would fit right in with the existence of the three phrase Ogham of Morann Mac Main, CúChulainn, and Mac ind Oic. The Briatharogan (as they are called) define the qualities of past, present and future, as well as land, sea and sky. These cosmic ideas and relationships can also be extended to the three components of body, mind and spirit in a person.The three phases of body, mind, and spirit are associated with the Word Ogham of Morainn (the physical), the Word Ogham of CúChulainn (the mental), and the Word Ogham of Aonghus (the spiritual). They can also be considered as being representative of Past, Present, Future; Tradition, Experience, Inspiration; Body, Mind (in an active sense), Spirit (in the sense of higher level mental states). A judge, such as Morann was; a warrior, such as CúChulainn; and a deity, such as Mac ind Oic; would each represent a different perspective in the lives of people and the world.
- Sacrificial and Healing Practices
- Iomarbhus (Sin)
- Doing no Evil
- Maintaining Right BehaVior
- Druidic Triads
- The Triads of Ireland
- Irish Triads
- A Few Words about Triads
- The Ogham Triads
- Other Triads
- Welsh Triads
- The North Britain Triads
- Iolo’s Triads from Barddas and Other Collections
- A Compilation of Pagan Triads
- The Welsh Triads from Llyfr Coch Hergest
- These Are the Noble Triads:
- These Are the Triads of the Horses:
- The Welsh Triads found in Peniarth MS
Class 9 - WISDOM TEXTS
Truth was valued above all else in Celtic society and by the Druids. Their teachings were almost completely oral and it s said that little survives of them. This would not be entirely the case. The truth be told, on the arrival of Christianity and its scribes and written language, a blossoming of wisdom teachimngs was created and preserved for later days and the literate world. These are often imbedded with Druidic wisdom that have been preserved for us from the past even if they are also a mixture of Biblical and classical sources as well. The new wise people and sages of the Irish incorporated wisdom wherever they found it but combined it with uniquely Irish and traditional teachings as well. Often these texts are interpreted beyond the scope of their foreign origins to form a window into the minds and teaching of the pre-Christian Druids and sages. The words that follow are a sample and an introduction to this wisdom that speaks to us across time.- Three Wise Druids
- Morann mac Main
- Cormac mac Art
- Cú Chulainn
- Three Testimonies of the Wise
- Audacht Morainn - Testament of Morann
- Teagasc an Riogh (Instructions of a King) - Cormac's Advice to His Son
- Bríatharthecosc Con Culaind - The Precepts of Cúchulainn
- Three Extra Wisdom Texts – Tri Forfessa
- Timna Chathaír Maír - The Testament of Cathair
- Old Irish Wisdom Attributed to Aldfrith of Northumbria: An Edition of Bríathra Flainn Fhína maic Ossu
- A Miscellany of Irish Proverbs
Class 10 - FINDING TRUTH
The expression “finding one’s truth” is sometimes an euphemism for dying, while “dying” is itself an older (more Shakespearian) euphemism for having sex, Beyond these two expressions for finding truth, there is an esoteric practice that is mentioned in conjunction with both sex and death, as well as with wisdom and magical abilities in the teachings of Amergin that is popularly called the “Cauldron of Poesy.” However it is that one finds one’s truth, it is certain that where truth exists, the source of creation, life and death, as well as knowledge, is also to be found. In Judeo-Christian mythologies, all of these values and gifts are found in the Garden of Eden story of Genesis. In the Irish Druid tradition, these wonder-sources are presented in groups of tales known as Imrama and Echtraí. The Imrama are daring voyages to islands and strange lands. The Echtraí are adventures into realms of wonder and the Otherworld. In a sense these two genre are descriptions that are akin to religious experiences.- Religious Experiences
- Sex as the Little Death
- Finding One’s Truth at Death
- Many Forms and Books of Death
- Being Reborn or Twice Born
- Nine Shades of Death
- Achieving Imbas
- The Three Illuminations
- Dichetal Do Chennaib
- Tenm Laida
- Imbas Forosna
- Outlawed by Padraig
- Tenm Laida and Imbas Forosnai Revisited
- Spirit, Divination and Animal Lifeforce
- Three Traditional Ways of Finding Knowledge
- Truth, Magic and the Man in the Tree
- Separating Bias from Perception
- Truth as Aims and Beliefs
- Understanding Belief
- The Beliefs of Others
- Many Pathways to Truth
- Finding Truth
- The Druid Way
- Religion, Faith, Discipline or Philosophy?
- The Beginning of the Journey
- An encounter with Christianity
- What Would Druids Do?
- Revivals of the Druid Way
- Unity that Transforms: Survivals, Changes and Availability
Class 11 - LOOKING BEYOND THE OBVIOUS
It’s maintained by most academics that not much survived about the practices and rituals of the Druids. This point is both correct and completely wrong. It’s true that there are no rituals and “how-to” manuals penned or scribed by the Druids that have survived until today or that have been discovered through the ages. However, it is also true that much was written about the Druids by their contemporaries and also by those who survived from their era. These writers and recorders of information about the Druids include classical historians, philosophers, military leaders, Christian monks and scribes, inheriting Poets and Filidh, as well as Brehons, Seanchaí and physicians. There are volumes and volumes of information about the ancient Druids, as well as myths, traditions and artifacts from their practices of the past. In addition to that, there are currents, streams and threads in the Celtic folklore and folk practices that seem to be echoes of Druidic practices of the past. Even today we have festivals, holidays and celebrations that originated or were performed and practiced by the ancient Druids. This is what we know about the Druids from the ***outside*** through folklorists, scholars, observers and historians. There are many additional worlds and insights to be known and learned about the Druids from the ***inside*** of their practices, techniques, ideas and mind-sets.- Hiding in Plain Sight
- Nede’s Pathways
- Eight Powers of the Lord
- The Eight Great Magical Attainments
- Opening to the Possibilities
- An Explosion of Awareness
- The Truth Beyond Demonstration
- Awen and Imbas as Truth
- The Clear Light
- Imbas vs Imagination
- The Power of a Geis
- Truth and Consequences
- Matters of Belief
- The Work of Truth
- Modern Differences and Ancient Similarities
Class 12 - UNDERSTANDING UNIVERSAL TRUTH
How does one understand a Truth so large that it is Universal? This is one of many questions that is asked, has been asked and will continue to be asked of, by and for Druids. The myriad answers to this question are varied in their scope and limited in their effectiveness by the realty experienced by those who address it. Simply put, the most universal answer is only given by a mind as large (or larger) than the Universe itself. Any more limited answer or mind will have its short comings in the ability to address all of the possibilities or the ultimate reality. The scope is simply not there in a limited mind, understanding and set of experiences. Before one gets frustrated with the impossibility of it all, there is a simple answer which resolves all of the difficulties inherent with the ripple effect of expanding knowledge and awareness. The answer is to remove the limits on mind, awareness and existence.- The Truth Makes us Naked
- More Truth of a King
- Why Druids Study and Memorize Traditional Knowledge
- Inner Calmness and Peace
- Sheltering in Truth
- Rightness and Harmony
- Light and Clarity
Chapter 13 - THE SPIRIT OF POETRY
In Patrick Ford's, The Celtic Poets, there is a story translated and retold that inspired me to present it here in my own worlds with hopes that its filidecht could work a change or two in the current surroundings. It speaks to what both newsgroups seek to discuss, the ways of Druids and their spirituality. Here is a story from the Irish traditions of the past that we would do well to embrace in today's artificial and illusory world:Senchán Torpéist was on a poetic circuit which took him to the Isle of Man. His retinue was large as befits the chief Ollamh of the Poets. His clothing was befitting his rank, the best that nobility deserved according to rank.
- Eitged
- Three Forms of Satire
- The Price of not Being True
- Glam Dicenn
- Briamon Smertach
- Singing in Balance
- Does Greth Eat Curds?
- Satire is Still a Power
- The King is a Bridge
- A Universal Spiritual Nature
Class 14 – BEING AND NON-BEING
The power of truth in the poem brings us to the ultimate questions of what does it mean to exist? What is life and what is death? The answers to these questions are found in the natures of the three deities of creation, destruction and being itself. Along with these three deities are the two additional being of everything and nothing. They are the fathers and mothers of all that can be. Druids put names to these deities in the abstract and as persons. The inherent strength within these names would give a person control of everything. For that reason, the names are hidden and only attainable by those who have realized their own truth in being. In the discussion that follows we will call the first three by the familiar Irish names of An Dagda,The Summerlands Mac Os 7
- Grief from the Heart
- Great Joy and Great Anguish
The Summerlands Mac Os X
- Spontaneous Truth
- What is a Soul?
- Soul Survivals
- What is Spirit?
- Family Spirit
- Good and Evil
- Ultimate Truth
- Birth
- Life-force and Sacrifice
- Death
- Celtic Beliefs in Spirit
- Other Lives
- 'How Cúchulainn was Begotten'
- 'Cauldron of Poesy'
- The Alexandrian School
- Multiple Incarnations
- Mirrors on Life
- The Afterlife
- Final Thoughts and Musings
- Reincarnation and Probability
The Summerlands Mac Os Catalina
- The Fear of Death
- Truth and the Obliteration of Individuality
- Boundaries and Journeys
- Places of Safety and Protection
- The Cycle of Reunion
- Passing the Barriers
The Summerlands Mac Os Download
- Reborn into Life
- Finding Deity
- A Druid’s Truth
- Druidic Reflections
- The Power of Truth