Image generated by Gemini

I have explained many times that for many years I had no awareness of being a medium.

Despite this, I have come to understand the activities of activists who communicate messages through graffiti on walls on the street because the spirits of hell continue to confess loudly themselves.

There have been no reports or preaching from unrelated people in the spirit world.

A few years ago, a building along a national highway was graffitied with the Japanese hiragana "coloring book." In Japan, it seems that people in the underworld communicate in some way through graffiti on walls on the street.

However, since graffiti occurred simultaneously all over the world, it may be the same in your country. Is it impossible to "clearly confirm something" when it is so obvious, not through "radio waves" but in a visible form? I certainly don't think so.

The spelling of "Nurie" is "塗り絵"in Japanese kanji, "ぬりえ" in Japanese hiragana, "ヌリエ" in Japanese katakana, and "Nu-ri-e" in Roman letters.

At the time, I never even considered that someone who recognized this spelling might share some kind of secret information. However, now, seven or eight years later, I have decided to explain this spelling.

For example, do people with names that have this spelling, or cryptic messages that have this spelling, have special meanings in the underworld (such as assassination or torture consultations, orders, or agreements)?

In this case, the spirits of the gorillas have given me "million-dollar tears."

Around the time the graffiti was written, I had just found a beautiful coloring book with a motif related to Nara Prefecture, the ancient capital of Japan. Of course, the people who wrote the graffiti are making fun of me.

By the way, I recently noticed that coloring books for adults are very popular. There are so many beautiful "coloring books" created by artists to choose from.

I'm always busy, so I can't do it, but there are a lot of traditional Japanese colors (colors expressed by Japanese names), so you can create coloring books that correspond to them. I haven't seen many yet, but collectors might like them.

Back to the original story.

At that time, I borrowed an art dictionary from the library that had pictures of Nara's national laws, and traveled back in time to the Nara period. I looked for glass beads with an ancient atmosphere and made accessories, and I was curious about what people in the Nara period ate, so I made and ate sweets from that time.

If you heat milk in a pot and keep stirring and kneading it with a wooden spatula, you can make a very sweet solid sweet that doesn't require sugar. You can adjust the hardness, and above all, it's very easy to make, but it takes time. (It tastes similar to the Japanese candy "Milky".) It might be good practice for controlling the heat of cooking.

I also felt like I was connected to spirits from the Nara period, but maybe it was just my imagination.

Speaking of spirits, around the same time, when I cooked a meal using a cookbook from the Edo period, I felt like spirits from the Edo period or those who liked the Edo period gathered there, but maybe it was just my imagination. I felt like I was connected to spirits from the Kanto region of the Edo period.

By the way, the spirits of that time want to recreate restaurants from that time as a place to meet up.

In historic England, where even haunted spots have been turned into tourist destinations, it would be popular to run a restaurant serving Japanese historical cuisine where Japanese ghosts openly appear.

In fact, the usually modest Japanese ghosts who gather around me want to appear in such a place.

The spirits are very nostalgic for their local cuisine, so I'm sure the spirit world would welcome such a "not-so-new restaurant".

I like ancient capitals, and I used to go to Kyoto, Nara, Kamakura, and other places in Japan when I lived nearby.

In some parts of Nara, deer walk along subway corridors and crosswalks with people. In recent years, Chinese tourists who are violent towards deer have earned the dislike of Japanese people.

I have actually been to see the Shosoin exhibition at the Nara Museum, and I thought it was a place where you could spend the whole day. If it's your first time visiting an art gallery or museum, isn't it something you should spend the whole day to see? When I see young people going on overseas trips without doing much research, I think it's a real waste.

The spirits want to tell you important stories from that time if you are interested, so if you are a medium, I would like you to try a "medium trip".

I once asked a spirit at the ruins of the Dazaifu government office in Fukuoka Prefecture, and got inspiration for the "conflict between bureaucrats" of that time. It seems that foreigners also visited the place at that time, and mediums can use the stories of the spirits as a reference when doing historical research.

I'm busy with my own journey, so I'm always pressed for time and heading to my next destination… There are also spiritualists overseas who take historical walks through ruins and other places.

If you are interested in traveling through time, please check them out. If you find that certain spirits do not lie, you will be able to make historical discoveries.

Now, former Prime Minister Abe was assassinated in Nara, the ancient capital of Japan, but I personally think that the location and date were not a coincidence.

It is often the case that people in intelligence agencies somewhere in the world know more about you than you do, but…

Similarly, if your family members have extreme views, they will often say things that are not true. In the worst cases, even mhis grandchildren say that their grandfather was that kind of person, even though he was not. Dead men tell no tales.

I also remember well that my grandfather, who is usually calm, would get angry when his family kept nagging him about such things. My grandfather was a World War II survivor and belonged to a generation that did not have a left-wing atmosphere. Therefore, I know that the Japanese people of my grandfather's time did not necessarily have any particularly right-wing ideology.

Everyone may have likes and dislikes about politicians. However, people who hold excessive rallies and work in political organizations are considered activists.

So, what on earth are all these activists from around the world discussing through the mysterious "graffiti on the wall"?

If you know (including spirits), please let me know through the "Yokai post box" where you can deliver letters to Kitaro, the yokai from the Japanese yokai "GeGeGe no Kitaro."

However, if you pray to Jesus Christ, your letter will of course be delivered directly to me.

おすすめの記事