For thousands of years dragons have been depicted within the art and artifacts, folklore and music of cultures ranging from South America to the Orient and from Europe to Malaysia. Our global fascination with them, however, has yielded little information and the mystics that could see or communicate with them have kept their secrets to themselves for the following reasons:
Any allies gained from the magic kingdoms have added to the power of mystics who, for the most part, have been power seekers. Sharing such information was, for obvious reasons, not desirable.
The mystics who fell into the category of perception seekers (like the Taoist immortals or the Toltec seers) focused their teachings on achieving enlightenment, with the specific purpose of not wanting their apprentices to become side-tracked by the unseen realms’ lure of power.
For these reasons combined, therefore, very little detail was produced about these highly evolved and amazing beings.
Dragon above Glastonbury
Brilliant and duty-oriented within a world of impeccability and protocol, dragons have been taught great pride in the abilities of their race. To quote the words of the dragon called The Beautiful One when I asked her about Twitches, “They look like dragons, but don’t have the same intelligence. They came from a distant star system through the inner earth. Almost every large cave has one in it. They’d like to be dragons but then, who wouldn’t?”
There are currently 110,000 dragons that have their world among and yet apart from us, ruled by a God-conscious two-year-old dragon with whom I have become friends. He is known simply as “The Dragon”. I am always amazed at his ability to rapidly come from his world to visit. It takes him about one-half hour, while other dragons take 3-4 days, depending on how much magical power they have.
Dragons have inhabited the earth for 3.127 million years. Since they’ve been here 818 waves of civilization have lived on the earth.
General Information
Dragons are very colorful and their color choices, based on what pleases them, are their distinguishing features. When you ask their name, they give you their colors (which they occasionally change).
The foods I find to be some of their favorites are tulips, also used in tulip and beeswax tea (The Dragon likes pink ones best), mice and garlic stew and various dishes cooked with horses. Ghost horses are very plentiful and the dragons I work with cook these. They can, however, produce food with thought.
Injuries occur as in humans – not irregularly. The one known as “Black” has had a broken tail and the yellow one I call “Daisy” has injured her back and can now hardly carry anything. It is, however, disease that frightens them. They very seldom get sick and when they do, it’s often fatal. They seldom catch cold, for example, and are therefore not well-equipped to deal with the condition. There is a record kept where dragons can go to get help when they’re sick. Four human names are listed in it as people who know how to heal dragons (my own was just recently added when I healed the Beautiful One of measles).
I find dragons to be superb healers; they de-materialize tumors and do the most amazing healing surgeries on humans. I was very surprised to find they don’t trust being healed by other dragons as much as I do. When I asked The Dragon what should be done when the Beautiful One got measles and claimed she was dying, he said, “Please, no dragon healers! You can heal her and I’ll bring some blue tea. Tell her to stop thinking about dying!” She responded quickly to the healing, even though she hated the tea.
Dragons get embarrassed very quickly when you praise them publicly and their feelings get hurt when you in any way imply they need help performing their duties. The Beautiful One is 8,000 years old, young but mature. A dragon of 40,000 years is considered old and one of 25,000 years is aging.
“We do not understand the human function of laughter”, the Powerful One had said to me. But during the earth’s ascension they had to start using their feeling bodies or perish. Now we hear them laughing and even crying. Sneezing, however, is a different story:
The Beautiful One protects my home and lies curled around it. She approached me in a bashful manner: Could I possibly build a fire with a lot of smoke for her to inhale? She needed to sneeze. It couldn’t be in the fireplace; the flames would shoot up 18 feet. With a sneeze that shook the house, we reached our goal. Days later when I asked whether she could feel how much I loved her, she said she could tell because of the trouble I went through to help her sneeze!
Dragons don’t build buildings or need instruments of any kind. They live in nature and materialize their needs with thought. Their food, for example, is cooked by thought. Their ability to breathe fire, as depicted in the ancient drawings of diverse global cultures, is used for protective purposes only. As in all areas of their lives, the strictest protocol governs its use.
Most dragons live in the Asiatic regions and a slang version of the dragon language has developed, influenced by Chinese (never to be spoken to The Dragon). The language has no future or past tense, only a present tense. They don’t conjugate verbs. In other words, it would be as though they were saying, “I is, they is, he is”, etc.
Frequency is a very important factor: for example, the word “I” has 101 different dragon words, depending on the frequency. “I am happy” has a much higher frequency than “I am sad”, and so a different word for “I” would be used in each case. Frequency also determines word order, much as in English. “Do come here!” has a more imperative nuance than “Won’t you come here?”
Nouns
There is no word for “a” and the word “the” does not change as in French or German. There are, therefore, no genders associated with nouns.
the world = xit yataam
the dragon = xit zayagasong
the tree = xit yit
the ocean = xit aaw
the grass = xit limansangtriug
and = simmat, liyong, zuganyg (different words used for different frequencies)
Sentences
It is pretty = etti sa krimsaet
You are pretty (plural) = riysunis sai krimsaetyi
I am tired = li wtang ma
They are tired = lisuun wtang r
He is glad = uusaat ro nsto
We are glad = nstoyan uusaat
She is old = osoyizat ro osozatin
You are old (singular) = riysu osoyizat z
I am hungry = adu ma we
Within the earth = firma to sa
I command you to = ma tum se a (used for young dragons)
Adjectives
sad = sontt
happy = song
tired = wtang
strong = ghrun (h is silent)
tasty = yess
delicious = yattumsaw
scared = tarraeng
respectful = lizetxya
large = parrat
small = par
hot = solt
cold = brisolt
good = czriyattgan
sick = pust
well = yamasatuung
We were having a class at Almine’s house, when her dragon, whom she called Beautiful One, got into a fight with another dragon. Pots and pans flew off their racks, the house trembled at times and thuds against the wall could be heard. Blue lightning could be seen around the house, but nowhere else along the street.
The fight went on for the whole day we were there.
Mystical Knowledge of Dragons
Introduction
For thousands of years dragons have been depicted within the art and artifacts, folklore and music of cultures ranging from South America to the Orient and from Europe to Malaysia. Our global fascination with them, however, has yielded little information and the mystics that could see or communicate with them have kept their secrets to themselves for the following reasons:
For these reasons combined, therefore, very little detail was produced about these highly evolved and amazing beings.
Dragon above Glastonbury
Brilliant and duty-oriented within a world of impeccability and protocol, dragons have been taught great pride in the abilities of their race. To quote the words of the dragon called The Beautiful One when I asked her about Twitches, “They look like dragons, but don’t have the same intelligence. They came from a distant star system through the inner earth. Almost every large cave has one in it. They’d like to be dragons but then, who wouldn’t?”
There are currently 110,000 dragons that have their world among and yet apart from us, ruled by a God-conscious two-year-old dragon with whom I have become friends. He is known simply as “The Dragon”. I am always amazed at his ability to rapidly come from his world to visit. It takes him about one-half hour, while other dragons take 3-4 days, depending on how much magical power they have.
Dragons have inhabited the earth for 3.127 million years. Since they’ve been here 818 waves of civilization have lived on the earth.
General Information
Dragons are very colorful and their color choices, based on what pleases them, are their distinguishing features. When you ask their name, they give you their colors (which they occasionally change).
The foods I find to be some of their favorites are tulips, also used in tulip and beeswax tea (The Dragon likes pink ones best), mice and garlic stew and various dishes cooked with horses. Ghost horses are very plentiful and the dragons I work with cook these. They can, however, produce food with thought.
Injuries occur as in humans – not irregularly. The one known as “Black” has had a broken tail and the yellow one I call “Daisy” has injured her back and can now hardly carry anything. It is, however, disease that frightens them. They very seldom get sick and when they do, it’s often fatal. They seldom catch cold, for example, and are therefore not well-equipped to deal with the condition. There is a record kept where dragons can go to get help when they’re sick. Four human names are listed in it as people who know how to heal dragons (my own was just recently added when I healed the Beautiful One of measles).
I find dragons to be superb healers; they de-materialize tumors and do the most amazing healing surgeries on humans. I was very surprised to find they don’t trust being healed by other dragons as much as I do. When I asked The Dragon what should be done when the Beautiful One got measles and claimed she was dying, he said, “Please, no dragon healers! You can heal her and I’ll bring some blue tea. Tell her to stop thinking about dying!” She responded quickly to the healing, even though she hated the tea.
Dragons get embarrassed very quickly when you praise them publicly and their feelings get hurt when you in any way imply they need help performing their duties. The Beautiful One is 8,000 years old, young but mature. A dragon of 40,000 years is considered old and one of 25,000 years is aging.
“We do not understand the human function of laughter”, the Powerful One had said to me. But during the earth’s ascension they had to start using their feeling bodies or perish. Now we hear them laughing and even crying. Sneezing, however, is a different story:
The Beautiful One protects my home and lies curled around it. She approached me in a bashful manner: Could I possibly build a fire with a lot of smoke for her to inhale? She needed to sneeze. It couldn’t be in the fireplace; the flames would shoot up 18 feet. With a sneeze that shook the house, we reached our goal. Days later when I asked whether she could feel how much I loved her, she said she could tell because of the trouble I went through to help her sneeze!
Dragons don’t build buildings or need instruments of any kind. They live in nature and materialize their needs with thought. Their food, for example, is cooked by thought. Their ability to breathe fire, as depicted in the ancient drawings of diverse global cultures, is used for protective purposes only. As in all areas of their lives, the strictest protocol governs its use.
Excerpt from Secrets of the Hidden Realms
Dragon Language
Image courtesy of Renee Everhart
Click here to download the Dragon Language (PDF).
Excerpt from The Gift of the Unicorns.
Most dragons live in the Asiatic regions and a slang version of the dragon language has developed, influenced by Chinese (never to be spoken to The Dragon). The language has no future or past tense, only a present tense. They don’t conjugate verbs. In other words, it would be as though they were saying, “I is, they is, he is”, etc.
Frequency is a very important factor: for example, the word “I” has 101 different dragon words, depending on the frequency. “I am happy” has a much higher frequency than “I am sad”, and so a different word for “I” would be used in each case. Frequency also determines word order, much as in English. “Do come here!” has a more imperative nuance than “Won’t you come here?”
Nouns
There is no word for “a” and the word “the” does not change as in French or German. There are, therefore, no genders associated with nouns.
the world = xit yataam
the dragon = xit zayagasong
the tree = xit yit
the ocean = xit aaw
the grass = xit limansangtriug
and = simmat, liyong, zuganyg (different words used for different frequencies)
Sentences
It is pretty = etti sa krimsaet
You are pretty (plural) = riysunis sai krimsaetyi
I am tired = li wtang ma
They are tired = lisuun wtang r
He is glad = uusaat ro nsto
We are glad = nstoyan uusaat
She is old = osoyizat ro osozatin
You are old (singular) = riysu osoyizat z
I am hungry = adu ma we
Within the earth = firma to sa
I command you to = ma tum se a (used for young dragons)
Adjectives
sad = sontt
happy = song
tired = wtang
strong = ghrun (h is silent)
tasty = yess
delicious = yattumsaw
scared = tarraeng
respectful = lizetxya
large = parrat
small = par
hot = solt
cold = brisolt
good = czriyattgan
sick = pust
well = yamasatuung
Excerpt from Secrets of the Hidden Realms
The Dragon Fight
We were having a class at Almine’s house, when her dragon, whom she called Beautiful One, got into a fight with another dragon. Pots and pans flew off their racks, the house trembled at times and thuds against the wall could be heard. Blue lightning could be seen around the house, but nowhere else along the street.
The fight went on for the whole day we were there.
B. from California