Seeing God in Nature? [Dream Stream Revisited Late Spring, Early Morning].mp4
Click here for newsletter & your Free Guide: https://bit.ly/MIntPineGuide
Seeing God in Nature? [Dream Stream Revisited Late Spring, Early Morning]
https://www.givesendgo.com/God-Flow-Outreach
Just a short, balancing visit to my back yard...mists swirling upwards. Thoughts about watching, and learning from, rhythms in the wilderness. Joy-filled Crows, soothing water, and the beautiful, healing Sun!!! Get out there, folks...and align to the you who God says that you are! EnJoy!!!
Seeing God in Nature
truth
Nature
light
God
Connect with all my other ideas, healthy hints, and wilderness adventures at this channel: https://www.youtube.com/user/hikingdruid
#SeeingGodinNature
#truth
#Nature
#light
#God
Thanks for all your love, prayers, and Blessings!!!
Here is the link for my Pine Needles: http://ebay.us/twY5ra?cmpnId=5338273189
Here is the link to my wellness/health coach business, products, and also contact info: https://andrew1.goherbalife.com
You may kindly donate here: https://bit.ly/donateHikingdruid
ALSO: Personalized, signed copies of my poems are available for a $25 donation or more to my paypal at: https://bit.ly/donateHikingdruid (Make sure to leave your email and/or address, and poem number/title in the "add a note" section when donating.)
(Original bookmarks are available for $15 donation.)
Thanks for all your support! EnJoy!!!
lady lazarus
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=98G2qKsTLMc&t=148s
" it derives from a Proto-Indo-European neuter passive perfect participle *ǵʰu-tó-m. This form within (late) Proto-Indo-European itself was possibly ambiguous, and thought to derive from a root *ǵʰeu̯- "to pour, libate" (the idea survives in the Dutch word, 'Giet', meaning, to pour) (Sanskrit huta, see hotṛ), or from a root *ǵʰau̯- (*ǵʰeu̯h2-) "to call, to invoke" (Sanskrit hūta). Sanskrit hutá = "having been sacrificed", from the verb root hu = "sacrifice", but a slight shift in translation gives the meaning "one to whom sacrifices are made."
Gaut
Further information: Name of the Goths
A significant number of scholars have connected this root with the names of three related Germanic tribes: the Geats, the Goths and the Gutar. These names may be derived from an eponymous chieftain Gaut, who was subsequently deified.[citation needed] He also sometimes appears in early Medieval sagas as a name of Odin or one of his descendants, a former king of the Geats (Gaut(i)), an ancestor of the Gutar (Guti), of the Goths (Gothus) and of the royal line of Wessex (Geats) and as a previous hero of the Goths (Gapt
greywolf does not belong to mankind ... therefore cannot invoke human right as cover for escaping extermination