
Visiting Lemuria
June 16, 2010http://101nights.wordpress.com/2010/06/13/ancestral-link-to-lemuria/
(Posted by Suzanne)
The wonderful thing about Lemuria is that you don’t need a Passport to get there.
Today I applied for my Australian Passport. Just getting the Application form approved has taken weeks.
The first issue was the fact that I have changed my name. “You need a paper trail to explain it,” a woman at the Post Office said. I spent time and money getting copies of my original Birth Certificate, Marriage Certificate, Change of Name Certificate and amended Birth Certificate.
“You must get authorised photocopies of these,” said a different woman at the Post Office. I took photocopies and got them verified at the Police Station.
I got my photo taken (at the Post Office). “You must get someone who votes, has known you for more than a year but is not a relative and who has lived in the same house for more than a year to sign the form saying that this is a true photo of you,” said yet another woman at the Post Office. Figuring out who met the criteria and would be willing to sign such an officious form took a few days. Explaining the form to her took ages. The question demanding to know the exact number of years and months she had known me had us both wandering down memory and counting on our fingers. After a fit of giggles my friend signed the form and I took it to the Post Office. I also took $208 to pay for the actual Passport.
“You have cut the photos too small,” said a woman at the Post Office (it was the one who’d demanded the paper trail but she didn’t remember me). “You don’t need all these documents,” she said. “The Change of Name Certificate and the amended Birth Certificate are enough. You need to fill out the form again.”
I filled out the form again and got my friend to sign it again. I took it to the Post Office this morning.
“These photocopies are not required,” said a woman at the Post Office that I’d never seen before. “We take our own here and authorize them ourselves.” She did that but had trouble understanding the Change of Name Certificate. She pondered it for a good ten minutes before accepting it. Even more worrying to her was the fact that I had once had a Passport in the 1970s. I misplaced it when it expired and do not recall the exact date on which it was issued.
Eventually she stamped the Application Form but I could tell she wasn’t very happy about it. I paid the $208 and left completely unsure as to whether I will get a Passport anyway because I can’t recall a date in the 1970s.
The idea of travelling overseas has lost some its appeal. I think I’ll travel to Lemuria instead. All I need is my imagination and my new computer.
During the time I was off line I read a lot of novels. In a fantasy novel I came across the idea that fairyland and ancient mystic sites have been desecrated with car parks, housing estates, MacDonald’s and the like. As a result the supernatural beings that inhabited them have left the physical plane and gone to live on the Internet. Many, I’m sure, have taken up residence in Lemuria. I think it’s time I paid them a visit. I have a feeling they’ll respond to me for who I am regardless of name changes and the fact I’ve never been good with dates.




Oh, Suzanne. What a chore! I can relate. When I got my photo taken for my passport application (US), I was told that the background of the photo was “too blue” and I had to go and retake the photo. And of course I had to seek out another official passport photo-taking agency and make sure the photos were not so blue.
Thank goodness the journey to Lemuria doesn’t require that much trouble.
It’s quite crazy the hoops ordinary citizens have to jump through these days and still the big bad guys are on the loose spreading mayhem.
I love the idea that ancient lands are either dormant or relocated to the internet. That over-reaching civilization and commerce have encroached upon the magical grounds. I wonder if there are certain “inanimate” objects that have fallen asleep, static where they are until a time when there is a less chaotic and domineering society. Is there a recipe for the natural sources of magic (e.g., Lake Tahoe, Mt. Shasta, and the like) to come alive and reorganize the cosmos, restoring balance and order to our world?
It is very alluring and totally addictive.
I like your idea that there is a magic formula that will reactivate the magical places of earth. The idea that things have fallen asleep corresponds with the idea that Merlin is asleep in a tree and King Arthur lies in statis awaiting the time when the earth needs him to awake. That time feels like now to me. Maybe it’s up to us to reactivate the old magick.
I can totally relate to the drama of acquiring a passport. It took me ages. The hardest part was getting a photograph that did not make me look like something out of bad movie. It became quite a saga. Joy of joys I do have said passport now but personally, it is far easier to slip and wander through the portal into Lemuria.
My photo makes axe murderers look kindly!
Sound about average!!–getting a Canadian passport with an Australian visa takes planning and the list of proper people eliminates accountants. Heather’s trouble to get a good looking one forgets the rule that all passports have to have ugly photos. One can control the weather in Lemuria too! Fran
After reading your account of obtaining a passport has put me off any idea of traveling overseas again. Why would I put myself through all of that when I can step into my special room where I am surrounded by my favorite books and music, and with just a flick of a switch step into Lemuria, and travel with so many like-minded but diverse individuals. Life is good.
Vi
I think getting a passport is like going through the various stages of an initiation process and only when you have said document in your hand are you deemed a fit person to travel. Thank goodness for Lemuria!