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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful True Spiritual Autobiography !!
I had heard of Earlyne Chaney before, but have never read any of her books till now. I am SO glad I found this book!! What an amazingly inspirational and moving story. I just loved this book! It's a story about Earlyne's poor, but stable childhood, during which she meets her discarnate spiritual teacher who appears to her one day, informing her of events that will happen...
Published on June 2, 2002 by Tootsiebelle

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2 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Kundalini rising to a bride like on her wedding night
As I have said many times before, my gender does not know how to write a decent book. There is only one way to get through this tome, speed read. You'll never miss anything, because all the points are repetitiously, hundertfold recurring. The first half of the book is her grief over a pilot named Mervin who was shot down in WWii. In her exclusively self-centered way, she...
Published on July 21, 2008 by Gerburg Frick


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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful True Spiritual Autobiography !!, June 2, 2002
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Tootsiebelle (Kailua-Kona, Hawaii United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Remembering: The Autobiography of a Mystic (Paperback)
I had heard of Earlyne Chaney before, but have never read any of her books till now. I am SO glad I found this book!! What an amazingly inspirational and moving story. I just loved this book! It's a story about Earlyne's poor, but stable childhood, during which she meets her discarnate spiritual teacher who appears to her one day, informing her of events that will happen in her lifetime, and that he will be with her through it all. Her adventures lead her into Army volunteer work during WW11, where she meets her true love, a pilot. Tragedy strikes suddenly, and her world falls apart. She feels forsaken by her teacher, and plummets into despair. She then resolves to find out what happened to her beloved pilot....how can she find him on the "other side". She is determinedly drawn into a metaphysical quest which leads to many many surprises! I stayed up until 4:00 in the morning to finish this book.....I just couldn't put it down! It's a bargain for the price, I would have paid more for this enchanting book! I also learned alot of fascinating things that I didn't already know, and I'm an avid reader of this genre. Somehow, I feel like Earlyne Chaney is now a friend of mine even though she has since passed. She was probably smiling down at me as I read her wonderful book!!
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An Inspirational, Substantial Story, April 21, 2004
This review is from: Remembering: The Autobiography of a Mystic (Paperback)
Remembering other lives, loves, and her life mission.

Throughout her childhood Earlyne senses the presence of a Master, she calls "father" and tells how along her life this Master guides, reassures and encourages her. (the "father" turned out to be Ascended Master Kutumi)

Many of the questions most spiritual seekers ask themselves were present in her thought: why does life exist? ... Is there is really a hell? ... Do traditional theologies have the answers or are most of them really off course? ... What is the meaning of visions and dreams?

This is an attention-grabbing narration, she tells about her humble beginnings, and her love for the Truth. As a child and into her tender years there was thrust the need for a philosophical understanding of death and an afterlife. Evidently there is conflict in her mind: on one hand the attraction of personal success, and on the other hand the gentle pressures from her spiritual call

Eventually she meets a man, an airplane pilot, whose sudden accidental death turns out to be the opportunity to have answers to several of her queries. The deceased pilot telepathically conveys the message he is not dead but alive in other planes, that life continues after death.

Her endless search for the soul mate is over when she meets a man who is destined to become with her the organizers of a mystical group.
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2 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Kundalini rising to a bride like on her wedding night, July 21, 2008
This review is from: Remembering: The Autobiography of a Mystic (Paperback)
As I have said many times before, my gender does not know how to write a decent book. There is only one way to get through this tome, speed read. You'll never miss anything, because all the points are repetitiously, hundertfold recurring. The first half of the book is her grief over a pilot named Mervin who was shot down in WWii. In her exclusively self-centered way, she emphasizes in the middle of the book her Hollywood ambitions, which seem not to be remarkable rather than being a model, she then embarks on visiting mystics, mediums, gurus in California. The grand master who eventually after another half of the book is kind enough to unveil himself goes by the name Kut-hu-mi. Everything in this book shows an outmost self-centered individual named Earlyne Chaney. From the beginning, her sparse observations could have been described in a couple of pages. Except her three Kundalini accounts; and they are dangerous to the human mind!
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Remembering: The Autobiography of a Mystic
Remembering: The Autobiography of a Mystic by Earlyne Chaney (Paperback - December 1, 1981)
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