The all-important Why

16 A boy from Wales He was born in 1959 in a small town in mountainous Wales. With his example I am able to convey to you how the visible and the invisible world touch one another. This young man is not an exception, because people with “second sight” have always and still do exist. They are able to see the invisible. I selected to this Paul Meek, because I was able to get to know him relatively well. I read his four books and I was able to look at a whole series of videos about him on the internet. He gave me the impression of being modest and above-board. If you were to encounter him in the street, now that he is in his early sixties, you would not see anything special about him: He is small and somewhat “stockily build” as he himself would say and he has an alert, round face. He looks completely inconspicuous, but he is one of those that really has “second sight”. In his first book “Heaven is only one step away”(translated title) he reports amongst other things about his childhood and youth. It was quite natural for him to see the beautiful colours (and sometimes less beautiful) around people, their aura, from early childhood onwards. Maybe you don’t know what an aura is? The soul inside people emanates something. One could call it delicate energies. That is the aura. We cannot see it, but someone like Paul Meek could see it since childhood. When his father was ill, Paul saw his aura had suddenly turned colourless and the boy could ascertain from this just how bad the situation with his father was. Paul loved the atmosphere in the Church ever since he was a child. He perceived the singing and the sound of the organ as lovely colours. He then also saw angelic beings. He was naïve enough to think that all of this was a part of it and that all the others could also see what he saw. He only later gradually recognised that he was “different” in this respect. He was clairvoyant. Paul Meek writes that apart from this, his childhood and youth was far from being rosy. He was the oldest of six children. He father was a miner, like almost all the men in Wales at that time. They lived in their own house, but money was always tight. When his father became ill and lost his job due to pneumoconiosis (dust in his lungs), money became even tighter. The mother did what she could, but life was at time very difficult. As the oldest, little Paul had to diligently help. And as overly sensible as he was, he sensed the thoughts

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