The Deaths in 2013 site lists under October 26:
And the word "Co" comes from "com":
Note the following from Gabriel of Komana's wiki page:
Note the following from Wikipedia re http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maastricht:
Co$t vs. TU$$H
Gabriel of Komana, 67, Belgian-born French bishop.It's hard to pass up a surname like that... I definitely detect a cryptic "Phrases in Names" Pattern-cluster. Break it down in two and you get "Koma na" or in other words, "no coma" and then there's also "Ko mana" or in other words "Co mana" , note the etymology:
mana (n.) "power, authority, supernatural power,"...
com-"with, together,"PIE *kom- "beside, near, by, with" (cf. Old English ge-...And now for coma:
coma (n.2)"head of a comet," 1765, from Greek kome "hair of the head,"...I get the sense that the inner twin world are $peaking to the Powers that Bee in our outer world, encouraging them to wake up and do their part as the inner twin world have done theirs... because, if they don't, the bigger powers that bee, as in God/Goddess/Nature, have prepared the way for a Coma... deep sleep... as in DEE-DEE-DEEATH!! So "no want coma" then "co Powers that Bee"-- unite with the inner twin world for the great task at hand of saving our conjoined/parallel world.
coma (n.1) Greek koma (genitive komatos) "deep sleep,"...
Note the following from Gabriel of Komana's wiki page:
Gabriel of Komana (born Guido de Vylder, June 13, 1946 – October 26, 2013)June 13th is my birthday Tou, hence an addition to the "Targeting Family Birthdays" pattern-cluster. This next excerpt also stands out:
In January 2013 Archbishop Gabriel retired for health reasons, having been suffering from cancer, and returned to Maastricht.Something about Maastricht... perhaps an addition to the "Phrases in Names" pattern-cluster... "May Strict". Keep in mind that my name is May (also synonymous with our outer twin world), and then note the etymology of strict:
strict (adj.) 1590s, "narrow, drawn in, small," from Latin strictus "drawn together, tight, rigid," past participle of stringere "draw or bind tight"Perhaps the inner twin way of saying that our outer world is caught between a rock and a hard place... or, they have us in a tight hold. I'm certainly feeling the pinch.
Note the following from Wikipedia re http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maastricht:
The name Maastricht is derived from Latin Mosae Trajectum, meaning 'crossing at the Meuse', and referring to the bridge built by the Romans.So now we have an addition to the very recent "Bridge" pattern-cluster. And of course the word Meuse is phonetically identical to our English word "muse", note the etymology:
muse (v.) from Old French muser (12c.) "to ponder, dream, wonder; loiter, waste time," literally "to stand with one's nose in the air" (or, possibly, "to sniff about" like a dog who has lost the scent), from muse "muzzle," from Gallo-Romance *musa "snout," of unknown origin. Probably influenced in sense by muse (n.). Related: Mused; musing.Now that's interesting, muse comes from "nose" ... after all our noses do have a "bridge"... hmmm, the bridge to our minds... our dual minds. There is another etymology linked to the same word:
muse (n.) late 14c., protectors of the arts, from Old French Muse and directly from Latin Musa, from Greek Mousa, "the Muse," also "music, song," from PIE root *men- "to think, remember" (see mind (n.)).
mind (n.) late 12c., from Old English gemynd "memory, remembrance, state of being remembered; thought, purpose; conscious mind, intellect, intention," Proto-Germanic *ga-mundiz (cf. Gothic muns "thought," munan "to think;" Old Norse minni "mind;" German Minne (archaic) "love," originally "memory, loving memory"), from PIE root *men- "think, remember, have one's mind aroused," with derivatives referring to qualities of mind or states of thought (cf. Sanskrit matih "thought," munih "sage, seer;" Greek memona "I yearn," mania "madness," mantis "one who divines, prophet, seer;" Latin mens "mind, understanding, reason," memini "I remember," mentio "remembrance;" Lithuanianmintis "thought, idea," Old Church Slavonic mineti "to believe, think," Russian pamjat "memory").So Coma vs. Co Mana
Co$t vs. TU$$H
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