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Post by drpepperwood on Sept 23, 2018 10:19:35 GMT -5
Did I hear or read that right? I thought someone ask the question if studying history would be necessary to solve the poem? Was there a FF answer to this? And was it the one he said geography might help?
I can't remember and does anyone have that quote from FF?
If so then what do we do with our research. Don't study history?
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Post by Jenny on Sept 23, 2018 11:13:15 GMT -5
Did I hear or read that right? I thought someone ask the question if studying history would be necessary to solve the poem? Was there a FF answer to this? And was it the one he said geography might help? I can't remember and does anyone have that quote from FF? If so then what do we do with our research. Don't study history? Here is a link to the quote. It was posted on MW: mysteriouswritings.com/featured-questions-with-forrest-warm-waters-and-geography/
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Post by drpepperwood on Sept 23, 2018 11:32:06 GMT -5
Did I hear or read that right? I thought someone ask the question if studying history would be necessary to solve the poem? Was there a FF answer to this? And was it the one he said geography might help? I can't remember and does anyone have that quote from FF? If so then what do we do with our research. Don't study history? Here is a link to the quote. It was posted on MW: mysteriouswritings.com/featured-questions-with-forrest-warm-waters-and-geography/Thank you Jenny! "Mr. Fenn, Is there any level of knowledge of US history that is required to properly interpret the clues in your poem. ~Steve R" "No Steve R, The only requirement is that you figure out what the clues mean. But a comprehensive knowledge of geography might help." FF. So the answer is "no" by Mr. Fenn. This tells me a lot. That would mean to me no Mr. Meek, no Mr. Brown or person of history. No need to study the famous fur trappers (even-though I enjoy this history very, very much. I love the books I am reading about and the magnificent surrounding of the geography of the many places in the Rockies.) "might help."? Wonder what that "might" means? "The only requirement is that you figure out what the clues mean" FF. Clues mean? I hope this doesn't mean the finding the mean of the clues in math. Take the 9 clues and find each mean. The middle.
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Post by drpepperwood on Sept 23, 2018 11:46:24 GMT -5
How many knots in the rope that are tied together. The end of the strings being tied together in tight focus. Taking the 9 clues on the map = rope (string). Pull them together tightly.
There are two ends of each clue. A beginning and end. In the middle is the mean.
What is the beginning end tied to? (lighting both ends on a candle). Beginning is the hard part because what do I tie that to? Is this the loop? It would work if one goes around the whole Rockies because you would end up where you started.
Tying the nine clues together in a knot to make one path. Like grabbing the ends and pulling them in to tighten them together. Stitch them together. There are lots of this examples in his TTOTC book.
When I imagine this in my mind on a map pulling the strings on the ends and tying them together. It's like making tight lines pulling at the cloth of the map towards or away from the center?
That does kind of represent the growth of the Rockies. Once flat in the past and then it pulls itself together and rises. Bunched up like a cloth. A ruffle. A riffle.
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Post by mikemarcum879 on Oct 7, 2018 10:59:54 GMT -5
How many knots in the rope that are tied together. The end of the strings being tied together in tight focus. Taking the 9 clues on the map = rope (string). Pull them together tightly. There are two ends of each clue. A beginning and end. In the middle is the mean. What is the beginning end tied to? (lighting both ends on a candle). Beginning is the hard part because what do I tie that to? Is this the loop? It would work if one goes around the whole Rockies because you would end up where you started. Tying the nine clues together in a knot to make one path. Like grabbing the ends and pulling them in to tighten them together. Stitch them together. There are lots of this examples in his TTOTC book. When I imagine this in my mind on a map pulling the strings on the ends and tying them together. It's like making tight lines pulling at the cloth of the map towards or away from the center? That does kind of represent the growth of the Rockies. Once flat in the past and then it pulls itself together and rises. Bunched up like a cloth. A ruffle. A riffle. Tie it to the canyon down. And you can go straight to the TC and reture back to your car and know it for the first time.Is knowing where wwwh started. When you arrive any where it's knowing it for the first time no matter how many times you have been there.
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Post by mikemarcum879 on Oct 7, 2018 13:12:26 GMT -5
How many knots in the rope that are tied together. The end of the strings being tied together in tight focus. Taking the 9 clues on the map = rope (string). Pull them together tightly. There are two ends of each clue. A beginning and end. In the middle is the mean. What is the beginning end tied to? (lighting both ends on a candle). Beginning is the hard part because what do I tie that to? Is this the loop? It would work if one goes around the whole Rockies because you would end up where you started. Tying the nine clues together in a knot to make one path. Like grabbing the ends and pulling them in to tighten them together. Stitch them together. There are lots of this examples in his TTOTC book. When I imagine this in my mind on a map pulling the strings on the ends and tying them together. It's like making tight lines pulling at the cloth of the map towards or away from the center? That does kind of represent the growth of the Rockies. Once flat in the past and then it pulls itself together and rises. Bunched up like a cloth. A ruffle. A riffle. Tie it to the canyon down. And you can go straight to the TC and reture back to your car and know it for the first time.Is knowing where wwwh started. When you arrive any where it's knowing it for the first time no matter how many times you have been there. Tieing the knots together with the string that ff found on the way home one string is being tie to another when ff is walking. Not driving.
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Post by robjohnson on Oct 9, 2018 7:19:07 GMT -5
Yeah, the mean. First line ttotc - "as one man can average out the truth,"
I've thought a lot about the mean.
And even though history is not required, why can't it help. FF does talk about history and the future. And then he says, we forget.
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Post by heidini on Oct 9, 2018 15:33:24 GMT -5
Yeah, the mean. First line ttotc - "as one man can average out the truth," I've thought a lot about the mean. And even though history is not required, why can't it help. FF does talk about history and the future. And then he says, we forget. I believe the question given to Forrest said “US” history.
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Post by drpepperwood on Oct 9, 2018 18:53:06 GMT -5
Thank you Heidi. That would be nice.
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Post by goldwatch on Oct 10, 2018 8:17:10 GMT -5
I think that if I look up a hint, and find something in the history of that hint, I'm not going to throw it out with the bath water, ya know?
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Post by Deleted on Oct 10, 2018 13:31:47 GMT -5
Did I hear or read that right? I thought someone ask the question if studying history would be necessary to solve the poem? Was there a FF answer to this? And was it the one he said geography might help? I can't remember and does anyone have that quote from FF? If so then what do we do with our research. Don't study history? Yes thewolf I agree about the water fall he does won't you to see the picture of a water fall in your mind when you come to heavy loads and water high. None of the 9 clues are misleading. Example. How are you picturing the heavy loads and water high is the question. Are you looking for a water fall that has rushing water pouring off of a cliff in to the creek .or are you looking for a water fall that straches out like a creek meaning its dropping in elevation the same thing for both on dropping in elevation. But both looks referent in heavy loads and water high in a water fall
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Post by Deleted on Oct 10, 2018 13:44:23 GMT -5
Did I hear or read that right? I thought someone ask the question if studying history would be necessary to solve the poem? Was there a FF answer to this? And was it the one he said geography might help? I can't remember and does anyone have that quote from FF? If so then what do we do with our research. Don't study history? Yes thewolf I agree about the water fall he does won't you to see the picture of a water fall in your mind when you come to heavy loads and water high. None of the 9 clues are misleading. Example. How are you picturing the heavy loads and water high is the question. Are you looking for a water fall that has rushing water pouring off of a cliff in to the creek .or are you looking for a water fall that straches out like a creek meaning its dropping in elevation the same thing for both on dropping in elevation. But both looks referent in heavy loads and water high in a water fall Put that one the wrong page.
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