
Beloved starseed family – calling all healers – calling all angels.
Majken has just texted me about a very urgent very critical situation that requires our FULL ON ATTENTION. Miracle needed now, right now.
Her friend’s young son is in the hospital after a case of pneumonia revealed a huge tumor-like mass over the lung and growing into the ribcage. According to the doctors it is inoperable and if they find malignancy they are going to want to start chemo. The mom does not want to undertake this horrible treatment and I am determined that we can create the miracle and destroy the mass.
Here is the plan:
We need to involve as many people especially remote healers as possible in this healing miracle event. Tomorrow 31 December at 17:00 gmt – 9 am California time for ONE ENTIRE HOUR and please check worldwide for your time. We are going to BOMBARD this growth with light – targeted light beams like LASERS of love light directed from us all and using the clock as our point of location (not as a measure of the time but rather as an indication of the location point from where we are sending our targeted beams.. We will start at the position of 1 o’clock and take 5 minutes, zapping the growth from that location and then move to 2:00, another 5 at that location etc alla round the clock which will take an entire hour until we reach 12:00, and then we just send as much light and love into this mass as we can gather, bringing in as many loving beings as we can, seeing the mass shrinking shrinking shrinking and letting go of this little beautiful soul.
This requires the kind of focus and love that we know we can create and we are capable of. Please tell all your friends, all your healers, this is an appeal for global help so that this beautiful child and his loving family can enter the New Year with hope for what we wish to create as a miracle intervention.
Please help with all your power and love and light. And if you know people in spiritual media, please ask them to spread the word around the world and spread the light. Even the whales are helping! They too have heard the call.
Attached is a CAT scan of his little body with the huge mass. Please start focusing now, please start seeing shrink from the minute you read this message, and then tomorrow join this immense campaign to heal this child.
Thank you for all you do and all you are
Love
Patricia
Blessings
Total validation of ATLANTIS RISING: THE STRUGGLE OF DARKNESS AND LIGHT
Planets can survive a star’s supernova by ‘being flung out to roam the galaxy’
By DAILY MAIL REPORTER Last updated at 7:49 AM on 9th August 2011
Planets can be ejected when a star dies during a supernova and be left to roam the galaxy, according to a new study. Experts led by astronomer Dimitri Veras at the University of Cambridge found planets can survive the blast when a star dies. Depending on the size of the star, the effect of the supernova will change a planet’s orbit and fling it out into space where it will float, permanently unattached to any star.
The theory is one explanation for the clutches of ‘free’ planets discovered so far and could mean many clusters exist across the Milky Way, according to National Geographic.
In rare cases, the planets that survive the blast can also remain tied to the remains of the star and find new orbits around what is left behind.
Supernova is the word given to describe a star exploding, during which its luminosity dramatically increases and most of its mass is blown away at high speed.
Researchers came up with a new theory based on what is known in physics as the ‘two-body problem’, which means two interacting bodies such as a planet and star.
Orbits can be charted using simple equations using the two objects’ masses, positions and velocities but the new chart spotted a kink in the approach.
Because stars lose mass when they go into supernova and die, the gravitational pull on planets in their orbit will change. Dr Veras said this change meant the researchers had to use computers to simulate their orbits instead based on a new model. The model indicated that inner planets orbiting several times the distance between Earth and the sun are destroyed when stars at least seven to ten times the mass of our sun explode.
However, planets orbiting 100 times the distance between Earth and the sun will be thrown into interstellar space as their orbits are altered by the blast.
The planets could end up in more distant orbits around what remains of the star but any survivors would be empty, dead worlds.
‘The observational evidence suggests that there could be more planets floating in between stars than orbiting them’
They could also easily be picked up by the gravitational pull of other nearby stars because they are no longer locked into a strong orbit elsewhere.
Dr Veras said: ‘Because every star dies, and many of these stars are massive enough to trigger planetary ejection, there is ample opportunity throughout the galaxy for stellar deaths to contribute to the free-floating population. ‘We don’t know yet how common these planets are, but the observational evidence suggests that there could be more planets floating in between stars than orbiting them.’
Steinn Sigurdsson, an astronomer at Pennsylvania State University, suggested the ‘free’ planets could also be down to larger planets knocking smaller ones out of their position.
But he conceded it is possible the two effects could work together with larger planets scattering the smaller ones more widely and the supernova then throwing them out.
Experts believe life could still exist on a planet ejected in this way as long as it still had enough heat and already supported ‘sub-surface life’.
The chances of locating planets around a dying star which is about to explode are minimal because of current technology and the timescale, making it almost impossible to see the process in action.
Dr Veras said: ‘All the ingredients are there. However, the time scale to actually observe a planet being ejected, in most cases, is longer than a human lifetime.’