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Post by Spooky on Feb 20, 2007 10:32:45 GMT
Hi, Some of you already know I am back out in Delhi again at the moment but I thought I would let you know I have stuck some pics up on my blog at myspace. Been rummaging around lots of old tombs and temples again which are full of all sorts of energies which can whack you sideways if your not expecting them. See you all when it warms up a bit over there
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cj
EMF Fluctuation
Posts: 7
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Post by cj on Feb 20, 2007 17:47:21 GMT
Keep yourself safe over there mate... don't want to end up being a ghost yourself! P.S I don't suppose you have checked this place out yet have you? Several stories support the legend relating how the city came to be destroyed. Some seems true while some just rumours. In the first half of the 17th century, Madho Singh of Amber built his capital here with the sanction of an ascetic Baba Balanath, who meditated there, but not without his dire prescription: “Look my dear chap! The moment the shadows of your palaces touch me, you are undone. The city shall be no more!” In ignorance, Ajab Singh, one of the later descendants in the dynasty, raised the palace to such a height that the shadow reached the forbidden place. Hence the devastation. A second legend tells of a tantric battle waged between the lovely queen Ratnavali and that wicked sorcerer Singha Sevra, whose chhatri can be seen on the top of the hill. Desperately, he tried to trap her in his magical web, and failed every time, as the queen herself was a past-mistress in the tantric art. The last battle took place on the day when the queen losing eventually her temper, transformed a glass bottle containing the massaging oil into a big rock and flung it towards the hill-top, where sat the devil. In vain he tried to stall this glass missile. It was too late. Sensing his imminent death, concentrating all his powers, he spat his dying curse: “I die! But thou too, thou Ratnavali shall not live here anymore. Neither thou, nor thine kin, nor these walls of the city. None shall see the morning sun!” I suspect, it was after all, the demon who had the last laugh! The night was spent in hastily trying to transfer the palace treasures to the new site of Ajabgarh. In the morning came the tempest levelling everything to the ground. Thats Bhangarh in Rajasthan which is the most haunted Place in India as per Archeological Survey Of India. “STAYING HERE AFTER SUNSET IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED” is written on the board at city entrance www.limitthesky.com/?p=91or check this out for even more Haunted Places in India... maybe PT could do a weekender there... might take us a couple of days to get there like but you never know? ha ha www.theshadowlands.net/places/india.htmCJ ;D
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Post by Hartswood on Feb 21, 2007 7:53:44 GMT
Wow, you're so lucky Spooky, going to India again...always wanted to go there.
Business or pleasure this time??? ;D
CJ - that all sounds really interesting!
Teresa
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Post by Spooky on Feb 23, 2007 10:51:17 GMT
Interesting reading CJ Its business travel again but still getting out and about when I can. Im getting used to the weather though so will be a shock to come back to blighty
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