Cool experience no matter what you combine with it.  The universe is
an awesome place.  If it inspired awe then it was the spirit of Doug.
 Good enough.


--- In [email protected], off_world_beings <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
>
> --- In [email protected], bob_brigante <no_reply@> wrote:
> >
> > http://www7.nationalgeographic.com/ngm/0703/feature3/multimedia.html
> > 
> > March 2007 National Geographic magazine:
> > 
> > "Once a second somewhere in the universe a star explodes with the 
> > brilliance of an entire galaxy">>>
> 
> I saw one.  
> No-one will believe this but, I saw one the day Doug Henning died. (I 
> should point out I had, and have, no sense of interest or connection to 
> Doug Henning or anything he did whatsoever...totally uninteresting to 
> me). On the day Doug Henning died, I walked out of the dome in the 
> evening, happened to look straight up, and I saw a bright point of 
> light come alive and then fade slowly over about 2-3 seconds. I 
> thought: "Wow, I just saw a supernova - amazing". I had studied 
> astronomy in-depth as a teenager, and I could think of nothing else 
> that would do that, so deep in the evening sky. It was like a silent 
> beacon from deep deep in the warmth of space, there was a warmth and 
> bliss to everything in those moments. And I thought, maybe I imagined 
> it, but I'll just check its position and see if there are any reports 
> in astronomy magazines. So I noted its position between Orion and 
> Casseoppeia. A few weeks later I was in a bookstore browsing, and 
> decided to look the position up, to see where it was. I was amazed to 
> find that the constellation it was in was Auriga (which I had forgotten 
> since my teenage studies), and further that Auriga meant "The 
> Charioteer", so I thought that was neat, because Maharishi had always 
> been going on about Brahman being the Charioteer. But further I looked 
> and then I discovered that within Auriga, right around the region where 
> I saw the supernova (or whatever it was) was a tiny constellation I had 
> never heard of called "the Magicians". How funny, since it was the day 
> Doug Henning died who was so close to Maharishi's heart. I don't know 
> the exact time Doug died or wether it coincided at all with me walking 
> out the dome around 6.45 - 7pm in the evening, but that is my story of 
> having seen (maybe) a supernova.
> 
> OffWorld
>


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