RECONNECTING WITH YOUR ELEMENTAL SPIRITS – THE PATH TO YOUR DESTINY By Knight Fredel – Part 1

Listen, the human body is like a cloak, and when it wears out, the Soul (which is you) will drop that body through a process we all refer to as death, and after that? Reincarnates by picking another body, therefore, the person you were in that past life, was actually you in another body, and so you do not in any way need to offer sacrifices to that “you in the past” because, you are that spirit incarnate and today you are here in another body, now do you see where I am coming from?

A GOOD LUCK CHARM: JUST ADD A DROP (PART 1) – By Knight Fredel

As I have seen so far that, everyone on earth requires some good amount of luck and success in order to grow in whatever path of life/career they choose. Without good luck, we will experience failures and failures leads to suffering in many cases, although we might need good luck so much in our life, however we should also know that, certain failures are intentionally ordained by nature in order to make us perfect, if we attempt the first one, and we fail, then it certainly means we are to learn from such failures then try again, we are to learn by realizing why we failed in the first place, when we find that thing, that cause of our failure then we must not give up, instead we must try again, and again and again until we succeed.

THE OGBANJE CHILD: AND THE FOUR ELEMENTS – By Knight Fredel

OGBANJE is an African concept that states that there exists some set of spiritual and advanced special souls who come to earth for a more special reason, these sets of Souls are known as the Ogbanje (in Igbo language).

These set of people are widely believed in traditional African written and oral mythology to be people who incarnated from the Marine World and possesses some sort of magical powers to command their desires.

They are highly revered and at the same time discriminated in the society because of the mysteries surrounding their births, lifestyles and deaths. Ogbanje’ s as we know it in Igbo speaking areas of Nigeria has the same meaning in Ndoki language as “Owu”. Yorubas calls it “Emere”. Many other tribes and people of the black race are aware of their existence and their names vary depending on language and dialect but they exist in our tradition even as I write this article. An Ogbanje has no definite sex. An Ogbanje can be a female or a male child as I am one myself.