Here's an interesting Sign:
- Wolves: I said 2/19/2006 that Scott and I are Wolves
- Rolf Peterson: (R)olf = (W)olf when Gemini(R) = Final(W)
- There's mention of a turncoat wolf that helped beaten up female Wolf:
- Subconscious Scott was the turncoat wolf
- I said 3/23/2006 about the pack of Wolves being Bliss' Wolf Gang
- I was the Fe-Male Wolf that got attacked
- Scott Wolf: I said 3/21/2006 about Scott Wolf who got married 5/29 for my B-Day
- Updated: 07:23 PM EST:
- Harry Potter is born 7/23
- I said 3/10/2006 that Harry Potter is a hybrid of me and Scott
- When Scott is wearing his glasses, he even looks like Daniel Radcliffe as an elderly Harry Potter
- Scott Peterson Trial:
- (Rolf) Peterson = (Scott) Peterson:
- I said 2/9/2006 about Scott Peterson
- The wife was pregnant and got murdered. I said I'm the Pregnant V-IR/G-IN Ma/R-y
- When Scott tried to "abort" what he was learning from my Journal, that was equivalent to me as Laci Peterson getting killed
- That's why the head was missing.
- They were looking for clues around Point Isabel in San Francisco
- Scott is now in San Francisco
- Bay Area:
- Wolves "bay" when they bark. That's why they're "Baying Wolves"
- I said 2/28/2006 that Bay City Blues is named after the Bay Area, which is San Francisco
- Scott's Girlfriend is K/B born 11/2, which translates to the Letters K/B
- 11/2 = 112, which looks like IR
- 03/23/06 18:20 EST:
- 18:20 = 6:20 pm
- I said Nicole Kidman is born 6/20.
- I said two years ago that Isabella Valentine is the real Satine from "Moulin Rouge"
- Nicole Kidman:
- 6:20 pm = Dark Nicole Kidman
- K-Id/Man = Aquarian(K/11) Selfish(Id) Male(Man)
- I said Davis is a K/Id because he's Aquarius
- My name is Isabelo. I said 11/8/2005 that Nicole Kidman has an adopted daughter named Isabella
- Valerie: I said 3/14/2006 that I made a Wolf Character named after Valerie who recently resurfaced in my life after 4 years
I said that if Scott or Bliss ever found out that I was telling the Truth about Psychic Phenomenon, they would not be behaving the way they are. In fact, they'd start talking to me again. Possibly even apologize. I said they're good people.
However, good people can turn nasty if they think you're lying to them or full of shit. People get insulted when they think they insult your intelligence.
On one hand, it's kind of sad because I leave
grue23 alone. I had to choose between my Principles and Friendship. People were getting hospitalized and killed. So I had to stick to my guns regarding Psychic Phenomenon and pull away from Scott when he was telling my mom I should get Psychiatric Help and be put on Medication.
I know my Readings and that my Psychic Abilities are indeed real. That's why I feel our friendship was severely crippled because of this Sacrifice I had to make on behalf of the people of Earth where you give up your best friend in the whole wide world because you don't see eye to eye.
That's why there's grief and you'll always see an outpouring that is reflected in the news regarding my own sorrow over Scott. That's why sometimes I feel sad because I can't talk to Scott because I know he doesn't believe me, and it's hanging there putting a strain on the friendship because we don't see eye to eye.
Scott is too practical. Sadly enough, Scott would've been the best candidate to have understood Psychic Phenomenon easily because he's read all the literature I have and knows what I'm talking about. In fact, he's smarter than I am. He's more well-read and knows more about Computer Programming than I do.
That's why
I said 3/19/2006 that I had recruited his Subconscious to "serve aboard the U.S.S. Enterprise" (my mind). He's down in the Engineering Bay. Scott is now in the Bay Area (Engineering Bay).
That's why I just watch from afar on AIM and don't bother Scott because I don't want to be an intrusion on his life. I still talk to Subconscious Scott and keep him close to my heart. He knows I love him like a brother and always will. Nothing will ever change that no matter what happens or if we disagree.
Scott has always looked after me and taken care of me like an older brother while I was growing up. That's why I have such a huge attachment to him. It's also the reason why there was the deepest pain that came with him not believing me about Psychic Phenomenon.
I told him that if the situation was reversed and he had told me he was Psychic, I would've believed him and been excited for him. I told him I was hurt that he went behind my back to contact my mom and not tell me.
I also was sad that he could find time to re-read "Alice in Wonderland" and the "Lord of the Rings" Trilogy, but he couldn't find the time to really take my Journal Entries and Psychic Research and Notes seriously to try and understand how Psychic Phenomenon worked.
The hardest thing about this is that you can't even get mad at people like Scott because they meant well, but they don't realize what it is they're doing. That's why Scott's Subconscious left me hints 13 years ago when he lent me two of his CDs by Erasure and Echo and the Bunnymen.
It was the closest Subconscious Scott could get to dropping hints about what the future had in store without giving away the "Game." If I had known early about what was going to happen, it would've screwed things up and I wouldn't have done the things I needed to do to cross over into the Psychic Realm two years ago.
Even Subconscious
celticblissy hinted it two years ago when it came to this "Drama" unfolding and written out. She said, "Everybody knew I loved you." She said, "Sometimes you don't have to say I love you."
That's how you get that poignant song of "White Flag" by Dido. Dido's in England where Bliss is from and it reflects how Subconscious Bliss has to pretend she doesn't think anything and force her Conscious Mind to hate me and be turned off because it was part of the Character's Role and the way the script was written.
You have to follow the Script. Same with Subconscious Scott. He has to follow the Script. Everyone does and do it the way it's supposed to play out like a well-orchestrated Plan. That's Complex Psychological Behavior done at its finest.
If you want to understand a concept such as "God's Plan," this would be it and the way the Planet has to choreograph things. It's the same way with a Job Promotion. Sometimes you have to go through tests or put in the Work to show you're qualified. You can't just have the Promotion handed to you. You have to earn it and show you're worthy of the title.
Biologist Never Tires of Watching Wolves
(March 23) - Rolf Peterson has watched a bleeding female wolf struggle to survive, helped by a turncoat male from the rival pack that had mauled and left her for dead.
By John Flesher, AP
Rolf Peterson, a wildlife biologist at Michigan Tech University, poses some of the hundreds of moose antlers he has collected during three decades of studying moose and wolves at Isle Royale National Park.
He has come face to face with a wolf while lying on a forest path shooting video; the animal casually detoured around him.
He and his wife have spent three decades of summers in an old fishing cabin without electricity or running water. The nearby storage shed is jammed to the rafters with moose skulls and antlers.
And he has chronicled with endless fascination the not-so-peaceful coexistence between wolves and moose on Isle Royale, a wilderness national park in Lake Superior whose isolation provides a rare setting for predator and prey to interact with minimal human contact.
"I've seen a lot of amazing things," Peterson said Thursday in an interview with The Associated Press, summing up his life's work as a wildlife biologist in one understated sentence.
He has no intention of stopping, although he'll officially retire as a Michigan Technological University professor at the end of May. His "second career" is already lined up: continuing to study moose and wolves on Isle Royale as a faculty researcher.
"It's something he'll do as long as he physically can," says his wife, Candy, who shares her husband's love of nature and cheerfully welcomes park visitors to their waterfront cabin.
Peterson, 56, is sometimes likened to the legendary primatologist Jane Goodall, although he notes that - for obvious reasons - he can't develop close-up, affectionate relationships with wolves and moose as Goodall does with chimpanzees.
But in one respect they're definitely alike: Both try to demystify animals that are often misunderstood.
"The wolf is a hot-button species," Peterson says. "It never fails to ignite passions, either for or against."
Feared and vilified by European settlers and Western ranchers, the wolf was driven almost to extinction in the 20th century until rescued by the Endangered Species Act. Nowadays, most people recognize the crucial role played by wolves and other predators in the balance of nature, Peterson says.
Wolves are not the efficient killing machines portrayed in myths, he says - at least when going after moose.
"They have a very poor success rate," he says.
With powerful kicks, young moose can fight off a pack of hungry wolves - or simply outrun them in winter. Wolves have better luck with old, sick moose or calves.
"Moose can trot through two feet of snow at 20 miles per hour," Peterson says. "That's faster than the world champion cross-country skiers. Wolves cannot keep up if the snow is soft."
The "selective nature" of wolf predation is among the discoveries Peterson and his research associates have made, he says.
Another is that Isle Royale moose are uniquely susceptible to arthritis, which he learned by examining their bones. Malnutrition in infancy is known to be one cause, but Peterson suspects there's a genetic link - and that his moose research may eventually have crossover benefits for humans.
"We know things about arthritis in moose that we don't even know for people," the Minneapolis native says. "It's time we try to bridge that gap."
Peterson's fascination with wolves and moose was triggered in part by a high school graduation present: a book by Durwood Allen, a Purdue scientist who in the 1950s began studying the two species on Isle Royale.
Moose are believed to have swum to the 45-mile-long archipelago from Minnesota in the early 1900s. Wolves apparently migrated across the frozen lake a half-century later.
Peterson enrolled at Purdue as a graduate student after earning a biology degree at the University of Minnesota at Duluth and began working with Allen on Isle Royale. When Allen retired in 1975, Peterson took over the program and moved it to Michigan Tech in Houghton, a Michigan town about 60 miles southeast of Isle Royale.
He has spent summers on the island ever since, doing field work such as gathering moose bones and scouting wolf dens. For seven weeks each winter, he returns for aerial observations.
The National Science Foundation is the research program's primary sponsor. The National Park Service also provides funding, although a Department of Interior official who hated wolves tried to kill the program during the Reagan years, Peterson says. Park Service personnel pulled out in the middle of the winter study, leaving him with only an airplane pilot for help.
"The Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources flew in some food for us," Peterson says, adding dryly, "Foreign aid was important that year."
Peterson and his assistants compile a yearly census of the wolf and moose populations, which are influenced by factors such as weather, disease, parasites and food availability.
At present, the wolves number a healthy 30, while moose are at an all-time low: 450. But Peterson says wolves are sure to decline in the next few years as the scarcity of vulnerable moose reduces their food supply.
Despite the moose's slump, Peterson says the wolf is more vulnerable to extinction. Should that happen, he hopes the National Park Service will transplant more wolves to Isle Royale.
In a 1995 book, "Broken Balance," he argues that people have an obligation to keep wolves in the park because a tourist who illegally brought a dog there 15 years earlier caused a parvovirus outbreak that nearly wiped out the wolves and has affected them since.
Peterson promises to continue making the case for the wolf's recovery in the Upper Midwest and elsewhere, a job he's uniquely qualified to perform, says David Mech, founder of the International Wolf Center in Ely, Minn.
"He's the amiable, plain-spoken fellow who gets along well with the general public, gets his points across very well," Mech says.
Despite his love of wolves, Peterson isn't among those who oppose lethal control to keep them from killing livestock and pets.
"If you don't provide those tools, you really undermine public support for having any wolves," he says. "Their best chance for recovery is to keep them in the wild. The worst thing for them is to lose their fear of people."
Editor's note: John Flesher is the AP correspondent in Traverse City, Mich., and has covered environmental issues since 1992.
03/23/06 18:20 EST
Updated: 07:23 PM EST
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