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The Mount Shasta Mission

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In Dancing in the Shadows of the Moon , Machaelle wrote that what happened on Mt. Shasta in 1985 was "a book in itself." Well, here's the book! The Mount Shasta Mission is a story that starts slowly and quietly. Unbeknownst to Machaelle at that time, pieces that were seemingly unconnected but were later critical to the Mission were being put into place. This is where we see the importance of doing what we are supposed to do, even if we don't have a clue about the larger implications. By the time the Naked Man arrives on the scene (yes, there's a naked man in the book) and a commitment to the Mission is made, the story picks up speed and takes on the force of a high-speed train. You'll laugh, you'll cry, you'll be amazed, you'll want to scream, you'll probably even want to slug a few people--but mostly, you'll gain a new appreciation of life and all that is happening around us. And you'll know in new ways just how much we are not alone when we humans are faced with the sometimes daunting task of moving ourselves and our world forward. This book is not for you

Paperback

First published September 1, 2005

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About the author

Machaelle Small Wright

34 books39 followers
Machaelle Small Wright is a nature researcher, teacher, flower essence researcher and developer, and cofounder of Perelandra, a nature research centre in the Virginia countryside. Since 1976, she has been working directly with nature intelligences in a co-creative relationship.

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for Iona  Stewart.
833 reviews278 followers
August 7, 2011
Previously, long before I began to write reviews, I read Machaelle Small Wright's "Behaving as if the God in all Life mattered" and "Dancing in the Shadows of the Moon" and found them fantastic and fascinating.

Thus Machaelle and her two bodies, the one in Perelandra here on Earth and the other in the "Cottage" on a planet similar to Earth but "in a different reality" were no stranger to me when I read this book, and I didn't have to bother about accommodating that concept in my mind.

The present book deals firstly with describing the "Battle Energy Release Process" and the cleansing of Nature at the site of the Battle of Gettysburg, and secondly and even more importantly with reporting on the title theme, the Mount Shasta Mission.

Re "Battle Release", the energy of the various battles and wars fought on Earth throughout history have had an extremely deleterious effect on the energies of Earth. Nature has "served as a buffer" in relation to the damage done on these battle sites, and what Machaelle has carried out at the site of the Gettysburg battle has been to cleanse Nature by means of flower essences, which cleansing constitutes as it were her primary field of expertise.

The cleansing was carried out by opening a so-called "coning" and calling to herself the "overlighting" deva of the Battle, Pan, appropriate members of the White Brotherhood connected with the work, including Universal Light, and her own higher self.

In her body at the "Cottage" level (a body that once belonged to someone else but that she has taken over) Machaelle works with the members of the White Brotherhood, primarily David (aka Dwight David Eisenhower) and three others.

Re the Mount Shasta Mission, its primary aim was to deactivate Piscean government/military leylines, simultaneously activating a new leyline grid supporting Aquarian structures. This mission was planned to take place between July 15-17 1985.

This extremely ambitious and important mission was to involve the landing of a "mother ship" on Mount Shasta, a crew of about 35, David's lot from the Cottage including St Germain together with prominent (dead) guests (Winston Churchill, Franklin Roosevelt, Charles de Gaulle, Harry Truman, Joseph Stalin, Cardinal Richelieu, Mao Tse tung) and thousands of backup spacecraft. These prominent men, all of whom could not be classified as having been God's most well.behaved children, were the guardians of the governments during the Piscan era and it would be their task to formally release custodianship and all responsibility for government. (But these men in their present bodies apparently represented their souls.)

The whole process is described in tremendous detail, but with Machaelle's zany humour. What she calls "Foot people" were called in by Peter Caddy of Findhorn fame, who was also involved in the mission, to act as witnesses, but none of these turned up. Others turned uo instead and caused some trouble. Great effort was expended in balancing the bodies of all those concerned by means of flower essences, since the energy of the mother ship was extremely powerful and could have caused harm to those affected.

One detail I lacked an explanation of was where the prominent dead people (De Gaulle, etc.) got their bodies from. Trial mother ship landing processes took place where the mother ship on some energetic level was brought into the bodies of Machaelle, the witnesses and so on, their bodies then being tested and adjusted, and the "bodies" of the prominent world leaders were also tested. But what bodies were these? Machaelle talks of Stalin having a left-arm problem, so it seems that their bodies were supposed to be similar to their original ones. And De Gaulle had a heart problem. Perhaps the bodies they had were indeed similar to their original ones, and which they had recreated in some way after death. I would have liked the author also to have been specific about this matter.

We meet "Universal Light", facetiously termed "Igor" by Machaelle. He presents himself as "an intelligence beyond that which you have known" and additionally explains "We are massive and great and have existed since the beginning of time". How does such a being differ from God, and how would Universal Light have defined God? Though God is probably an antiquated term for that energy.

Pan was also an intriguing acquaintance. It was interesting to note that all the details of the mission had to be meticulously planned, and some did go wrong. Universal Light and Pan were thus not omnipotent by any means though they did have great powers.

An important factor was that the energies released by the Mission were transferred to a level beyond our universe. The mission thus constituted a momentous event.

One result of the mission, which I can reveal was successful, that can involve us all, was that owing to the leylines transfer we can now focus on specific situations and ask for and expect to receive new solutions, i.e. we will be assisted by the Cottage team and the new leylines.

Valuable appendices include details of the energy cleansing process and flower essence definitions.

This work describes the various processes in great detail and seems mostly like a sort of work book. So it will not prove to be the most exciting of books to everyone, and in fact it was not so for me either.

But the Mount Shasta Mission was apparently a world-changing event, and it was thus a privilege to be permitted to hear about it.

I would thus recommend the book to those really into such things. Now I will be trying to get hold of "Co-creative science", "MAP" and the "Perelandra Microbial Balancing program manual".





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Profile Image for Juliana Haught.
202 reviews1 follower
April 21, 2014
Let me start with, this book is not for everybody; I'd classify this in the "alternative section". So, having said that, I think someone reading this book is either going to think it's wacko, or brilliant, and I'm coming down on the side of brilliant. I'll just say this much - spaceships - and you can decide from that alone if you want to read this book.

Years ago, I read _The Secret Life of Plants_, which I found completely fascinating and compelling, and then I met someone who lived at the Findhorn community in Scotland and who told me the story of how that got going (and then I read the book), and from there I found Machaelle Small Wright's Garden Workbooks, in which she explains how to work with nature intelligences to create a balanced, healthy garden (a literal vegetable or flower garden, or just anything in your life that you want to cultivate.) Then I got swept up in family life and kind of forgot about all that. I came across the Garden Workbooks again recently, and it made me want to read more by Machaelle Small Wright. _The Mount Shasta Mission_ is another completely fascinating book, written with wit and a grounded style, and so while part of my brain wants to reject the things she describes, in another part the gears started turning, and I want to know even more. A few parts (some of the transcriptions of conversations) drag on a bit, but otherwise, I found I didn't want to put down this book. And, I have a new interest in and appreciation for Dwight D. Eisenhower.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews