Blogs, Chatrooms and Forums
(published 2017 June 2)
It's probably important to have at least two ways for members to dialog with each other, several open forums or chatrooms, and at least one blog.
Forum or chatrooms would be free-wheeling and allow members to open up with their feelings and opinions, edit their own postings, and say what they want to say. The advantage here would be freedom to express. The disadvantage would be the possible running-wild of opinions and emotions... of egos and personalities... thus sending lots of members back into their personal workspaces to polish up their attitudes. :-)
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_forum)
Example of a good afterlife chatroom: http://afterlifeforums.com/forums/instrumental-transcommunication-with-stations.11/
A blog would be moderated by a facilitator or small team of facilitators assigned to the task. These moderators would write articles, and members could post comments at the end of each article. Only the moderator can edit the content. Those who post comments would fit everything into a more structured format, and it would be up to the facilitator(s) to try to keep things on an even keel.
(macyafterlife.com/2017/05/27/calling-earth-couldnt-be-better/comment-page-1/#comment-19808)
Note: I'm testing this approach (using blogs and chatrooms to monitor and sustain resonance) on my macyafterlife website, which you can view here....
It's probably important to have at least two ways for members to dialog with each other, several open forums or chatrooms, and at least one blog.
Forum or chatrooms would be free-wheeling and allow members to open up with their feelings and opinions, edit their own postings, and say what they want to say. The advantage here would be freedom to express. The disadvantage would be the possible running-wild of opinions and emotions... of egos and personalities... thus sending lots of members back into their personal workspaces to polish up their attitudes. :-)
(https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_forum)
Example of a good afterlife chatroom: http://afterlifeforums.com/forums/instrumental-transcommunication-with-stations.11/
A blog would be moderated by a facilitator or small team of facilitators assigned to the task. These moderators would write articles, and members could post comments at the end of each article. Only the moderator can edit the content. Those who post comments would fit everything into a more structured format, and it would be up to the facilitator(s) to try to keep things on an even keel.
(macyafterlife.com/2017/05/27/calling-earth-couldnt-be-better/comment-page-1/#comment-19808)
Note: I'm testing this approach (using blogs and chatrooms to monitor and sustain resonance) on my macyafterlife website, which you can view here....