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Post by iameye on Oct 21, 2007 7:37:53 GMT -5
Because of their haircuts, reminding mushrooms, the Beatles were called "Pilzköpfe" in Germany. www.scribd.com/doc/8961/York-David-Christ-and-the-Sacred-Mushroom for a read Fly agaric fruiting bodies emerge from the soil looking like a white egg, covered in the white warty material of the universal veil. As the fungus grows, the red colour appears through the broken veil, and the cap changes from hemispherical to plate-like and flat in mature specimens. Dionysian rites were conducted under the influence of this mushroom. John Marco Allegro argues in The Sacred Mushroom and the Cross that the Christian religion is derived from a sex and psychedelic mushroom cult, although his theory has found little support by scholars outside the field of ethnomycology. In Magic Mushrooms in Religion and Alchemy (formerly called Strange Fruit) Clark Heinrich interprets A. muscaria usage by Adam and Eve, Moses, Elijah and Elisha, Isiah, Ezekiel, Jonah, Jesus and his disciples, and John of Patmos. In the book Apples of Apollo the mushroom is identified in a wide range of mythological tales such as those involving Perseus, Prometheus, Heracles, Jason and the Argonauts, Jesus and the Holy Grail. en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Amanita_muscariaThe Apples of Apollo: Pagan and Christian Mysteries of the Eucharist"So we come full circle, back to the Cosmic Tree beneath which Perseus slew Medusa, harvested mushrooms, and picked apples. We know why mushrooms are associated with pine, birch, and oak..... And what on earth do apples, golden or otherwise, have to do with these four trees? When apples are ripe, the reddest, ripest ones drop to the ground. If one were to approach a forest of pine at the right time of the year, one might see beneath some of the trees what also look like fallen apples on the ground. But one would be mistaken. In its early stage of growth, just after splitting open its own veil-enclosed "egg" and popping its head into the open air, the Amanita muscaria resembles a round, red fruit. The stipe, or stalk, is usually hidden at this stage. The fruits - for mushroom is a fruit - appear to be lying on the ground. At the appropriate time, this same scene can be found beneath all the mushroom's other host trees as well. Returning to the same forest a week or so later, one would find a different landscape. There would still be red "apples" lying about, only new ones; the former apples will have changed color and shape. If there had been a lot of rain in the intervening days, the older mushrooms would be soggy, discolored, and rotting. But if it had been clear and warm, these same mushrooms would have turned a beautiful and metallic golden-orange, the warmer and winder the weather, the more golden and metallic the mushroom. This is the optimum time to harvest. Careful drying produces the same effect. So, figuratively speaking, all the host trees of Amanita muscaria produce "apples" that later turn to gold. Apples and golden apples have long been code names for the mushroom wherever both the mushroom and apples are known, even to the present day. Now we can see why it was that Perseus harvested not only the Medusa's head and entheogenic mushrooms from beneath the tree of the Hesperides, but golden apples as well..." The raven's love of Amanita muscaria was noted in antiquity: in ancient Egypt the Amanita muscaria mushroom was called "Raven's bread" Another "Liberty Cap" is a famous psychedelic magic mushroom by the same name, so called because of its unmistakable resemblance to the Phrygian cap. Or, as we shall see vice versa... mushroom-atlantis.blogspot.com/ for a movie mushroom-atlantis.blogspot.com/2006/09/magic-mushroom-and-stargate.html ".....the ancients used to preserve mushrooms in using honey as presrvative......Could this honey mushroom connection explain in part the fascination and veneration of bees by the ancients, still found today in the beehive symbol of the Freemasons and the French Fleur-de-Lis?
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Post by iameye on Oct 21, 2007 11:16:30 GMT -5
The primary distinguishable feature of most psilocybin containing mushrooms is that they bruise blue when handled.
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Post by horseloverphat on Oct 21, 2007 14:56:32 GMT -5
I see you picked up on Crowley's image as a 'mushroom' in his 'Vir (O): N.O.X sign' ....lol
Just like the sort of thing he served up @ Caxton Hall...that smelt like 'Rotten Apples' (a la IAAP)....in his Rite of Eleusis.
The shrooms that act as an opener (well, one way...sexual rites can too for example, as can musical rythmn) to entering the 'ethereal' world, whereby through trance like states the magickian can ply his trade more readily....amongst the elementals and spirits/enochian angels or daemons etc, etc, etc....depending on the magickians slant.
Similar substances have commonly been equated historically with shamanistic and mystical religious rites to bring about 'altered states'....for access to these realms. Peyote (aztecs) and other cacti like plants can be used for similar purposes.
As you are no doubt aware....Lsd, a synthetic form (although strictly based on Ergot of Rye, a type of mold found on the ears of the cereal...called rye), channelled in through agents in areas like, for example 'Haight-Ashbury'/merry pranksters in the 60's.... is a more modern incarnation of the mushroom.
We know that LSD featured heavily in the lives of the Beatles.
Ergot of Rye...the 'cere-al rye' from 'ceres' goddess of the field/grain as also found in the root of the word cere-mony.
,The Catcher in the Rye....Mark David Chapman, a mind controlled stooge programmed in part imo, by the aforementioned literary work (and no doubt Lsd and not the only person to have had this as a form of programming either...Salinger did apparently have ties to Intel)...that he was found with after apparently shooting John outside the Dakota (remember John in the early publicity photo with Billy J Kramer & The Dakota's....) where John ended up living....also the setting of Polanski's Rosemary's Baby (where Farrow discovers that a girl was actually found dead in the entrance of this building and not where she'd been told originally by the old couple of witches...probably the same place as John. And where in the party scene we see Sharon Tate, one of 'the family's' victims... flash across the screen when Farrow talks off losing her own baby as per the script) about the conception of a demonic 'moon child' (rumours still persist that Lavey had a technical role in the film during the ceremonial rape scene), ala Hubbard and Parsons in their Babalon Working....the idea of this conception of the 'moon child'... being inspired by the works of Crowley (Hubbard & Parsons were disciples)....whose source was probably the kabbalistic notion of the golem or the humunculus.
There is more to that too....what with Farrow being linked to The Beatles and the trip to India....in fact, there are probably many more facets.
Weird eh....?
Aye.... the stuff with the 'Fleur de lis' is interesting....an emblem used these days for example, by Prince Charles and with a vast history connected to many ruling and royal dynasties.
I've often compared the sybolism of the 'fleur de lis' to insects and particularly bees....and sometimes from the angle of 'the hive mentality' that is associated with the species...a mentality that is in some ways is reflected in humanity and the structure of society itself.
What is a beehive...but something that be compared to a form of matriarchal servitude performed by automaton like group of neutered workers all pulling for the beneift of the queen host.....that she may continue the reproduction for the entire colony.
This analogy...fits in quite snuggly with recent 'Empire's' and the somewhat 'hive-like' nature of the social and economic systems built up around them...whereby automaton like workers are pulling for the benefit of the system itself.
Thanks iameye... an interesting contribution.
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Post by skyward on Oct 21, 2007 15:22:19 GMT -5
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Post by iameye on Oct 21, 2007 18:11:52 GMT -5
You can throw in IAAP's lightening bolt also, as it is associated with the Magic Mushroom Myth
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Post by iameye on Oct 21, 2007 22:02:03 GMT -5
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Post by iameye on Oct 21, 2007 22:28:47 GMT -5
alterdudes.blogspot.com/2004/06/glastos-magic-shrooms_28.html Glasto's magic 'shrooms Glastonbury's 'third summer of love' fuelled by magic 'shrooms A loophole in the law allowing the sale of hallucinogenic mushrooms is providing trippy hippies with a legal high at the Glastonbury festival. But how safe is it? Anthony Barnes reports 27 June 2004 Glastonbury Festival was awash with rain yesterday, turning fields to mush and drenching the masses. But spirits remained high, and it wasn't just the power of the music played by Paul McCartney and Oasis. Festivalgoers, as well as thousands of other people around Britain, have turned on and tuned in to the all-natural hallucinogenic kick of "psilocybe". The magic mushroom is back. Last week, NME, the music bible, pronounced that 2004 is "the third summer of love" thanks to the resurgence of the "'shroom", previously out of favour for decades. Fans of the magic mushroom praise them as a natural alternative to ecstasy, which is declining in popularity. A curious loophole means fresh magic mushrooms are legal, whereas the sale or possession of dried or cooked mushrooms are prohibited. This weekend there were several stalls around Glastonbury as well as wandering vendors selling numerous varieties - Mexican, Colombian and Hawaiian. Small-time dealers made hundreds of pounds within hours of the festival kicking off on Friday. Dreadlocked Mary "the Mushroom Seller" took £600 from the sale of Yorkshire-grown liberty cap mushrooms and others on the first morning alone. "It's a good living for the weekend," said Mary, who tours the summer festivals selling her wares. The use of mushrooms is extending beyond the 900-acre site to towns and cities around the UK. LSD fuelled the first summer of love in 1967; ecstasy and LSD the second in 1988. NME has hailed the rise of the mushroom as the spark for the third summer of love.
This week it published a "top tips for top trips" guide to magic mushrooms in its Glastonbury edition, although it did add the rider that they are best consumed in a familiar environment. Concern has been raised about the use of mushrooms because of their unpredictable effects. Professor John Henry, a drugs expert at St Mary's Hospital in London, warned that vomiting, an increased heart rate and flashbacks could result. "You can't predict what is going to happen," he said. "You may have a nice trip where all the lamp-posts are wailing at you or a horrible one where the lamp-posts are threatening you. People respond in different ways and the same person may respond differently depend-ing on their mood - scared out of their wits or running over a cliff. You can also have terrible flashbacks weeks later." A spokesman for Avon and Somerset police said: "The advice we always give is that for your own benefit don't try anything new here. If you're in an area you don't know, with people you don't know, be very careful. " The NME's editor, Conor McNicholas, defended the paper's mushroom guide: "A minority of young people will at some stage of their lives experiment with drugs. You have to talk in a way that young people will relate to - you don't want someone coming on like your mum or dad and being told not to do things." Certainly, 'shroom fans were much in evidence at Glastonbury. Chris Coul, an electrician from Slough, said: "They're a nice natural buzz. There is no aftermath which you get from chemicals. Pills are a cheap, quick, synthetic buzz. For the same price, mushrooms give you a mind-altering high." Lucy Scones,(no relation ) 23, had stocked up with 80g of Hawaiian mushrooms from London's Camden Market before heading to the festival to beat the price mark-up. "They're perfect for the festival; with a good crowd and your ego hit by the mushrooms, the magic can happen." The trade in fresh magic mushrooms is thought to be a multi-million-pound business and growing rapidly. Chris Territt, business manager of supplier Psyche Deli, said his staff has doubled in the past few months to cope. Online orders had doubled as a direct result of people stocking up for Glastonbury.
His company checked with the Home Office last year to establish the legal position and was told fresh mushrooms and growing kits were acceptable. Mushrooms were also easily available in London last week. At one café in east London they were dispensed from a fridge in tin trays. A 20g bag of Mexicans costing £10 was said to be enough for two potent trips. The stronger Colombian strain cost £15. A Home Office spokesman confirmed the mushrooms were not illegal: "If they're fresh it's not a problem." Macca hits the right note It was going to take something special after a Glastonbury day when the rain and the grey skies had persisted for more than a dozen hours and every highway and byway had turned to a sticky brown adhesive. But special was what Sir Paul McCartney provided, in a performance that lifted the great festival up from a wet Saturday evening and took it on beyond the high that Oasis had provided the evening before on the same platform. It was the introduction to The Beatles' classic "All My Loving" that signalled this was going to be a historical Glastonbury moment. Sir Paul had begun, predictably enough, with a Wings track, "Jet". He then told his audience that he was struggling to "drink in'' the vast assembly before him. It was when he sat down at the piano for "Maybe I'm Amazed" that the scale of the occasion became apparent. "Hey, it's great to be at Glastonbury ... standing at the confluence of the ley-lines tonight and tonight we have come here to rock you!" Macca told the crowd.
An acoustic version of "Blackbird", eccentrically introduced as an anthem for African-American womanhood, led into "We Can Work It Out", with everyone singing along. Appreciating the scale of the occasion, Sir Paul dedicated tracks to John Lennon and George Harrison and even a few bars of "Yellow Submarine" to Ringo Starr. " 28IF It should be noted that the existence of section 28 of the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971 mitigates, to a certain extent, against the conviction of 'innocent' fungi gatherers. Section 28(3)(b)(i) provides that the accused shall be acquitted: 'if he proves that he neither believed nor suspected nor had reason to suspect that the substance or product in question was a controlled drug'.
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Post by horseloverphat on Oct 22, 2007 4:40:04 GMT -5
well he got that bit right......a magickian's will knows how to manipulate the subtle earth energies....and there are plenty of those around the 'magickal' and 'mystical' glastonbury area.
Was he on the 'pyramid' stage....lol???
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Post by iameye on Oct 22, 2007 22:01:43 GMT -5
(McCartney) Rinse the raindrops From your head Wipe your eyes Go back to bed In the morning Skies'll clear And I'll be here
See the sunlight Break the ice For the birds of paradise Listen to the song they sing Awakening
RepeatA harvest/love song? www.youtube.com/watch?v=VguEpMf-Rt0www.amazon.com/Magic-Mushrooms-Religion-Alchemy-Heinrich/dp/customer-reviews/0892819979 "Here's an example of a series of connections, from mushroom natural history, to known lore, to speculation, to "seeing is believing": the mushroom first emerges as a white "egg" shape, then grows to maturity, the cap eventually inverting so that its margins are higher than its center. If one slices across the cap, the view explosed is like that of uplifted wings of a white bird. Birds and eggs are of course an association pair, and there are reports of users of the mushroom giving it bird nicknames. In addition to this appearance of wings, there is the association of the psychoactive mushroom with visionary flight. And so Heinrich and others suggest that where we see winged angels or descending doves in words or pictures in mythology, we may be seeing psychoactive mushroom referents. It sounds like perhaps a stretch. But then we open another book co-authored by Heinrich, "The Apples of Apollo" and find photographs of ancient Greek vase paintings of the winged Gorgon Medusa (whose blood was medicinal), and of Hyakinthos riding to Paradise on the back of a swan, and quite clearly the depicted wings bear much more resemblance to sliced mushroom caps than to the pattern of feathers on bird wings, which the artists were fully capable of rendering, had that been their intention. It appears obvious that these vase painters were communicating to an initiated audience traditions into which they were themselves initiated. If the mapping of mushroom lore onto religious symbolism is simply a "confusion" created by drug-addled minds, it appears that this "confusion" has existed a long time and surfaces again and again where we have glimpses into esoteric traditions which may have been carried on continuously for thousands of years. "
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Post by The Deceptionist on Oct 23, 2007 11:03:22 GMT -5
I've often compared the sybolism of the 'fleur de lis' to insects and particularly bees....and sometimes from the angle of 'the hive mentality' that is associated with the species...a mentality that is in some ways is reflected in humanity and the structure of society itself. What is a beehive...but something that be compared to a form of matriarchal servitude performed by automaton like group of neutered workers all pulling for the beneift of the queen host.....that she may continue the reproduction for the entire colony. The first thing I'm reminded of when I see it is Scouts (as in Baden Powell) Can't get much more hive-like than them lol
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Post by The Deceptionist on Oct 23, 2007 11:32:10 GMT -5
Last week, NME, the music bible, pronounced that 2004 is "the third summer of love" thanks to the resurgence of the "'shroom", previously out of favour for decades. Lol NME are always so five minutes ago; as far as I'm aware Mushies have always been extremely popular up and down the country - since... forever. I don't know a time when they weren't 'in favour'... But thats by the by, as this post reminded me of my first proper shrooms experience - which I will get to in a minute. As an addendum to that article I'd like to mention that mushrooms were in fact made wholly illegal here just one year later (not that that stops them growing EVERYwhere!! ) but fortunately for me I was at a psychedelic summer festival (Glade 2005) the very night before the ban was put into place and the dealers were selling their stock off at unbelievably low prices. I believe I consumed around 110g fresh Cubensis - which cost something like £30-40 - after creaming our tiny Eurohike tent out with a few J's and I had one freakin' unbelievable trip... it was quite hard to retain the memories, I was beyond wasted... my friend couldn't even rouse me to get out of the tent and listen to any of the music once I was deep deep deep in my head. I was seeing in ultra-violet at one point and in pixelated NES-style vision another. Seriously, anyone who feels they might freak out on acid - go for the shrooms! Totally amazing. Most memorable quote of the night: "Dude... I think I'm in another dimension, possibly even a different universe - are you there?" "Totally..."
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Post by horseloverphat on Oct 23, 2007 12:44:45 GMT -5
Exactly...and that is the point...of this type of imagery.
Hivemind mentality is a central theme of A.C.Clarke's Childhood's End.
In the real world....'hivemind' mentality is packaged into mainstream movies for children.....like 'Antz' for example.
I don't think it is coincidental that ruling Monarch's and dynasties have adopted the use of this particular image....over the years.
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Post by skyward on Oct 23, 2007 17:38:23 GMT -5
Here's a new one from Seallion, there are plenty of cross-references, eg Crowley, Aiwass, Sirius, 2001 A Space Odyssey... Al Noah and the Committee of 9/11 Moon Men Isn't the Fleur-de-Lis also associated with the Lotus flower? ---- Futura is the name of the "robot" in Fritz Lang's "Metropolis". Futurama, (Futura Ma) is the name of the weekly animated series by The Simpsons creator, Matt Groening. Futura was created and underwent a process to represent a copy of a main character, Maria: Metropolis, Futura and pentagram
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Post by iameye on Oct 26, 2007 11:01:01 GMT -5
In Egyptian mythology Osiris was sometimes called Wepuat or Un-nefer and portrayed with a hare's head. Osiris was sacrificed to the Nile each year in the form of a hare to guarantee the annual flooding that Egyptian agriculture (and indeed their entire society) depended upon. A minor Egyptian goddess named Unut or Wenet also had the head of a hare. There is a city that bears Wenet's name, meaning 'District of the Rabbit'. Its primary deity was Thoth. The hare is often depicted greeting the dawn, and he sometimes serves as messenger for the god Thoth. On a more spiritual level, the hare could symbolise the very essence of life itself: the hieroglyphic 'Wn', depicting a hare on top of a single blue-green ripple means 'to exist'. Returning to the theme of the Moon, Pliny expressed the belief that the hare was androgynous and in Egypt this was depicted as the Moon being masculine when waxing and feminine when waning. One of the first researchers to draw attention to the hallucinogenic purposes of the mushroom was Andrija Puharich. Puharich worked for the American government and is specifically famous for his involvement with the psychic Uri Geller, who he brought to the United States for testing. Puharich learned about the hallucinogenic mushroom through his mediums, specifically the Dutch Harry Stone, who spoke and wrote ancient Egyptian while he was in a spontaneous trance. He identified himself as Ra Ho Tep, an Egyptian priest from the times of the pyramids. He described a ritual that centred on mushroom worship. He claimed that the mushroom was worshipped in ancient Egyptian times for its hallucinogenic power, allowing entrance into another dimension, the dimension of the Gods.
The Egyptian Underworld was named Amenta; the mushroom was named Amanita. Coincidence? Perhaps. What is clear, is that the Egyptian Book of the Dead makes numerous references to food of the soul, which allowed Mankind the opportunity to meet with the Gods. Stone told Puharich that the Egyptians labelled this substance “the plant of life”: ankh khut. The ankh-sign is the predecessor of the Christian cross. It is the symbol of life. The symbol also resembles the shape of a mushroom. Are mushrooms “stargates”? Arthur believes he has identified symbolism in the Mithras cult that depicts such “stargates” and which form a link between mushrooms and religion. archive.dailypicture.net/magic_mushrooms_spiritual_experience_effect_on_people_study.htm "liberty cap" red and yellow, yellow and red Rupert the Frog, entirely about a mushroom trip, watch video look for butterFLY tree www.youtube.com/watch?v=q1WgqGJymcM The colorful mushrooms grow, pushing themselves up through the pine needles, and at a certain stage of development look a lot like eggs in a nest. Once harvested, the remaining hole resembles a rabbit hole.[/quote] "harrison" "love bunny" and Palm Tree
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Post by stevenchrist on Oct 26, 2007 11:11:51 GMT -5
John once called the Beatles by interesting last names.
George Parasol.
I love you George.
The moon is a parasol.
It will cover Chicagoland.
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Post by horseloverphat on Oct 26, 2007 12:57:39 GMT -5
para- meaning near sol - meaning sun parasol. para - near dis - meaning god therefore....paradise. In fact the story of Rudolph The Red Nose Reindeer (The 9th reindeer)also ties straight in to the lore of mushrooms.....I remembered this from when I was looking into aspects of the festival of Christmas. The Red Nose indicative of being switched on and the red colour of the mushroom itself....and the 'flying' also alluding to this aspect. The reindeer would eat the mushrooms (fly agaric mushroom ,Amanita muscaria) from under the pine (pineal is shaped like a pine cone hence the name) trees in the forest. It was not an unusual custom of the 'herdsmen' to drink the urine of the reindeer which had munched on these funghi (and vice-versa apparently)....for it contained the psychoactive ingredient. webhome.idirect.com/g/globalnet/cmas/reindeer/index.htmlwww.washedashore.com/rants/xmas/www.christmaspast.info/stories/realstory/hallucinogenic.htmlgatesofhorn.com/blog/santa_s_clothes_mushrooms_reindeer_and_alice_christmas_series_number_3As for Santa.... Patrick Harding of Sheffield University in England argues that the trappings of the traditional Christmas experience owe a great deal to what is probably the most important mushroom in history: fly agaric (Amanita muscaria), the recreational and ritualistic drug of choice in parts of northern Europe before vodka was imported from the East. Each December this mycologist dresses up as Santa and drags a sleigh behind him to deliver seasonal lectures on the toadstool. The garb helps Harding drive home his point, for Santa's robes without doubt honor the red-and-white-dot color scheme of this potent mind-altering mushroom. nice cap Santa....where did you get that cap, where did you get that cap....answer from under a pine tree...lol In Victorian times travelers returned with intriguing tales of the use of fly agaric by people in Siberia, Lapland, and other areas in the northern latitudes. One of the first was reported by the mycologist Mordecai Cooke, who mentioned the recycling of urine rich in muscimol in his A Plain and Easy Account of British Fungi (1862). Harding points out that Cooke was a friend of Charles Dodgson (Lewis Carroll), the author of the fantastic children's story Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (1865). Almost certainly, this is the source of the episode in Alice where she eats the mushroom, where one side makes her grow very tall and the other very small," Harding says. "This inability to judge size—macropsia—is one of the effects of fly agaric." Is this what the Bible meant in respect of Jesus being born...when they said....There isn't mushroom in the Inn. ;D
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Post by iameye on Oct 26, 2007 13:07:45 GMT -5
www.youtube.com/watch?v=iy9MMHfd-akC Moon C Moon C Moon Is She. C Moon C Moon C Moon To Me. How Come No One Older Than Me Ever Seems To Understand The Things I Wanna To Do? It Will Be L7 And I'd Never Get To Heaven If I Filled My Head With Glue What's It All To You? C Moon, C Moon, C Moon Is She C Moon, C Moon, C Moon To Me Bobby Lived With Patty But They Never Told Her Daddy What Their Love Was All About She Could Tell Her Lover That He Thought But She Never Was The Type To Let It Out What's It All About? duality of the moon, being both male and femaleC Moon, C Moon, Oh C Moon Are We C Moon, C Moon, C Moon Are We How Come No One Older Than Me Ever Seems To Understand The Things I Wanna To Do? It Will Be L7 And I'd Never Get To Heaven If I Filled My Head With Glue What's It All To You? C Moon, C Moon, C Moon Is She C Moon, C Moon, C Moon To Me Bobby Lived With Patty But They Never Told Her Daddy What Their Love Was All About She Could Tell Her Lover That He Thought But She Never Wanted To Let It Out What's It All About? choosing to live an unbalanced life /male/female duality
C Moon, C Moon, C Moon Are We C Moon, C Moon, C Moon Are We Well What's It All About? C Moon, C Moon, C Moon Are We C Moon Are We www.youtube.com/watch?v=iy9MMHfd-ak
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Post by stevenchrist on Oct 26, 2007 13:26:20 GMT -5
para- meaning near sol - meaning sun parasol. para - near dis - meaning god therefore....paradise. very good. btw, the moon is bowl shaped. C moon.
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Post by tafultong on Oct 26, 2007 13:28:17 GMT -5
www.youtube.com/watch?v=iy9MMHfd-akC Moon C Moon C Moon Is She. C Moon C Moon C Moon To Me. How Come No One Older Than Me Ever Seems To Understand The Things I Wanna To Do? It Will Be L7 And I'd Never Get To Heaven If I Filled My Head With Glue What's It All To You? C Moon, C Moon, C Moon Is She C Moon, C Moon, C Moon To Me Bobby Lived With Patty But They Never Told Her Daddy What Their Love Was All About She Could Tell Her Lover That He Thought But She Never Was The Type To Let It Out What's It All About? duality of the moon, being both male and femaleC Moon, C Moon, Oh C Moon Are We C Moon, C Moon, C Moon Are We How Come No One Older Than Me Ever Seems To Understand The Things I Wanna To Do? It Will Be L7 And I'd Never Get To Heaven If I Filled My Head With Glue What's It All To You? C Moon, C Moon, C Moon Is She C Moon, C Moon, C Moon To Me Bobby Lived With Patty But They Never Told Her Daddy What Their Love Was All About She Could Tell Her Lover That He Thought But She Never Wanted To Let It Out What's It All About? choosing to live an unbalanced life male/female duality
C Moon, C Moon, C Moon Are We C Moon, C Moon, C Moon Are We Well What's It All About? C Moon, C Moon, C Moon Are We C Moon Are We www.youtube.com/watch?v=iy9MMHfd-ak You may already know that CMoon is loosely based on this song from 1965 (Note the use of the term L7 and the connection between Hatty & Matty vs. Bobby & Patty. And of course we have the Egyptian Connection which is really beginning to creep me out): Sam The Sham And The Pharaohs
WOOLY BULLY (Domingo Samudio)Uno, dos, one, two, tres, quatro Matty told Hatty about a thing she saw. Had two big horns and a wooly jaw. Wooly bully, wooly bully. Wooly bully, wooly bully, wooly bully. Hatty told Matty, "Let's don't take no chance. Let's not be L-seven, come and learn to dance." Wooly bully, wooly bully Wooly bully, wooly bully, wooly bully. Matty told Hatty, "That's the thing to do. Get you someone really to pull the wool with you." Wooly bully, wooly bully. Wooly bully, wooly bully, wooly bully. Some additional facts from www.songfacts.com/detail.php?id=4366:There were a few theories as to what the phrase "Wooly Bully" meant: - An expression people used as a way of congratulating each other. - Sam's pet cat. - A random phrase that sounded good. This was the best-selling song of the year in the USA despite not making #1. The song starts off with Sam the Sham counting off the tune "one two three four," in Spanish. This was featured in the 1987 film Full Metal Jacket. "Sam" was Domingo Samudio. The term "Sham" mean jive talk. His backup group The Pharaohs wore strange Egyptian outfits. They had 5 more Top 40 US hits including the #2 song "Lil Red Riding Hood." Samudio recorded solo for Atlantic Records in 1970, reformed The Pharaohs in 1974 and later became a street preacher in Memphis. (thanks, Edward Pearce - Ashford, Kent, England, for all above) The Mexican rhythm helped bring that sound into the mainstream. Songs like "Tequila" and "La Bamba" did so in the '50s, but this may have been the bridge between those songs and "Macarena." A sequel to the song titled "Wooly Bully Again" was recorded in 1966 by a Winston-Salem, North Carolina group, The Soul Brothers. Domingo Samudio was contacted, but showed no interest in it. (thanks, Jimmie - Pinellas Park, FL) ___________________________________________________ Plus the fact that Wooly Bully showed up in a Kubrick film is weird. Talk about pulling the wool over our eyes!
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Post by horseloverphat on Oct 26, 2007 14:04:06 GMT -5
"Samudio recorded solo for Atlantic Records in 1970, reformed The Pharaohs in 1974 and later became a street preacher in Memphis.. "
lol....you couldn't make this up...you really couldn't!
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Post by iameye on Oct 26, 2007 14:12:42 GMT -5
Exactly...and that is the point...of this type of imagery. Hivemind mentality is a central theme of A.C.Clarke's Childhood's End. In the real world....'hivemind' mentality is packaged into mainstream movies for children.....like 'Antz' for example. I don't think it is coincidental that ruling Monarch's and dynasties have adopted the use of this particular image....over the years. plus it was used as a preservative, Honey-Pie ;D Right on w/ the Santa connection, Hor's Basically, from my research, I sense that there were specific days of enlightenment, holidays, "christmas" time and Easter. Mushrooms were preserved in Honey, which turned to mead. We were weaned from this knowledge with a nudge and a wink
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Post by horseloverphat on Oct 26, 2007 14:35:47 GMT -5
"We were weaned from this knowledge with a nudge and a wink"
I think that is due to the fact that only certain types of people were privvy to this information...or supposed to be....just from the idea that the 'shaman' (literally the religious leader) would be the one who mainly ingested it for the benefit of the tribe/group....it wasn't for anyone and everyone.
Personally i think the whole 'mushroom' thing is about accessing other worlds.....the astral mainly....hence the term astral flying/projection.
It wouldn't....imo make your pineal gland operate @ 100% or something like that, or magically turn it on (but there must be a connection of some sort, as the gland itself is said to connect to religious like experiences in humans)....that imo, is acheived through the kundalini force rising through the spine and to the brain....this is what causes the activation ( then the telepathic/auric views, like 'former'), at least that is what I think up to this point.
Yes.... i've done mushrooms and lsd in the past....all allegedly of course!!!!
btw...Great thread you've got here Iameye....some superb work and connections...well done.
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Post by B on Oct 26, 2007 18:40:36 GMT -5
horseloverphat wrote: "It was not an unusual custom of the 'herdsmen' to drink the urine of the reindeer which had munched on these funghi (and vice-versa apparently)....for it contained the psychoactive ingredient."OK, now I know you're tripping. And vice-versa? Meaning the reindeer drank the urine of the "herdsmen" ? What? And as for Rudolph, his origins are known, and are as commercial and mundane as can be: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rudolph_the_Red-Nosed_ReindeerC Moon:
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Post by horseloverphat on Oct 26, 2007 18:51:25 GMT -5
Straight up serious....just drinking your own urine (first thing in the morning) was at one time considered to be a tonic, a healthy thing to do once in a while...possibly the enzymes in it or boosting the immune system or something....so that's without the benefit of the shrooms!!!
I've known about 'herdsman' drinking the urine of reindeer for a number of years now (the process of excretion actually causes the funghi's contents to be leach of the toxins and can be re-cycled like this....I don't do it, but I've read about cases and old customs that relate to it.)
The linkage is all there pine trees, funghi....reindeer & herdsman....it seems to have a long history.
;D
Well...I came across an example whereby during or around ceremonies which involved the 'Shaman' ingesting the mushroom...well, when he then urinated in the snow, yellow frozen patches would form (the urine contains the psychoactive ingredient) and the reindeer would be attracted to these patches and ingest them.....!
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Post by horseloverphat on Oct 26, 2007 19:04:37 GMT -5
"C Moon:" Clavius Moon.....!? The third largest crater on the visible near side of the Moon and also one of the oldest lunar craters. Clavius measures about 225 km (140 miles) across and was formed by an asteroid impact some 4 billion years ago. Though it is well-preserved, Clavius shows its age by the many smaller craters within it formed by impacts that happened later. In both the film and novel versions of 2001: A Space Odyssey, Clavius is the site of a lunar settlement known as Clavius Base. Most of the Base is located underground. It is to here that Dr. Heywood Floyd goes to learn more about the discovery of an alien artifact referred to as TMA-1 (Tycho Magnetic Anomaly 1) at the nearby crater Tycho. Following his meeting with officials at Clavius, Floyd departed for Tycho in a Moonbus. ;D This is a fun game.... You know....I've always thought that image looks like it could be based on the inside of one of the chambers in the great pyramid. never bothered to really find out though.... "The Blue Danube Waltz resumes as we follow ( Pink)Floyd (darkside of the moon) in another spacecraft, the spherical Aries-1B ( the Ram/hermes/apollo/archer/bowman/faul ;D), to Clavius base on the Moon (isis). Most of the base has been built underground to protect it from micrometeoroid impacts and solar radiation."
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