|
Post by aperiloushint on Jun 27, 2011 1:45:36 GMT -5
Was doing research late at night the other night and came across a writing by Crowley about 'driving vehicles' etc. That was metaphors for the magus/individual. Put 'baby you can drive my car, yes I'm going to be a star' in a whole new perspective. Unfortunately, I lost the link. Can anyone knowledgeable in these matters direct me to the quote/passage? Thank you.
|
|
|
Post by iameye on Jun 27, 2011 2:03:29 GMT -5
Was doing research late at night the other night and came across a writing by Crowley about 'driving vehicles' etc. That was metaphors for the magus/individual. Put 'baby you can drive my car, yes I'm going to be a star' in a whole new perspective. Unfortunately, I lost the link. Can anyone knowledgeable in these matters direct me to the quote/passage? Thank you. Merkabah (Hebrew: מֶרְכַּבְ ,מרכבה, and מִרְכֶּבֶת "chariot", derived from the consonantal root r-k-b with general meaning "to ride") is the throne-chariot of God, the four-wheeled vehicle driven by four "chayot" (Hebrew: "living creatures"), Crowley's last words were said to be: "I am perplexed" huh? en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guide_for_the_PerplexedWe have frequently mentioned in this treatise the principle of our Sages " not to discuss the Maaseh Mercabhah even in the presence of one pupil, except he be wise and intelligent; and then only the headings of the chapters are to be given to him." We must, therefore, begin with teaching these subjects according to the capacity of the pupil, and on two conditions, first, that he be wise, i.e., that he should have successfully gone through the preliminary studies, and secondly that he be intelligent, talented, clear-headed, and of quick perception, that is, " have a mind of his own", as our Sages termed it. Guide for the Perplexed, ch.XXXIII lol I'll slip ya the answer, anyway. It's the Pearly White ticket to ride
|
|
|
Post by B on Jun 27, 2011 20:52:30 GMT -5
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ka_(Egyptian_soul)#Ka_.28life_force.29"The Ancient Egyptians believed that a human soul was made up of five parts: the Ren, the Ba, the Ka, the Sheut , and the Ib. In addition to these components of the soul there was the human body (called the ha, occasionally a plural haw, meaning approximately sum of bodily parts). The other souls were aakhu, khaibut, and khat." Catch up khats and kittens Don't get left behindka ba lalalalala a plural haw: ha ha! ;D
|
|
|
Post by iameye on Jun 28, 2011 5:34:36 GMT -5
I was alone, I took a ride, I didn't know what I would find there Another road where maybe I could see another kind of mind there
|
|
|
Post by aperiloushint on Jun 30, 2011 1:29:02 GMT -5
Liber 418. The Song of Horus. Read it.
|
|
|
Post by aperiloushint on Jun 30, 2011 1:35:13 GMT -5
While there are more 'maybe, maybe not' lyrics and interpreted clues out there, I prefer obvious references and smoking guns. I don't believe in synchromysticism. I believe in occult adepts and intentional conspiracies. Seeing Paul as a returning Christ figure? That's rich. Seeing Paul as Crowley's replacement as the head of Thelema? That I can buy. It's why he sought out Crowley adept Youth from 'The Killing Joke' to work with.
Stick with the 'magick/Crowley/Masonic/Thelema' angle and we'll get somewhere. The rest are red herrings.
By the way- anagrams are fun
|
|
|
Post by 65if2007 on Jun 30, 2011 2:31:56 GMT -5
While there are more 'maybe, maybe not' lyrics and interpreted clues out there, I prefer obvious references and smoking guns. I don't believe in synchromysticism. I believe in occult adepts and intentional conspiracies. Seeing Paul as a returning Christ figure? That's rich. Seeing Paul as Crowley's replacement as the head of Thelema? That I can buy. It's why he sought out Crowley adept Youth from 'The Killing Joke' to work with. Stick with the 'magick/Crowley/Masonic/Thelema' angle and we'll get somewhere. The rest are red herrings. By the way- anagrams are fun What do you think then, aperiloushint? I'm curious. That Paul was never replaced? That it's always been the same individual with Crowleyesque notions? And the famous car-crash clues -- Crowlesque metaphors, rather than hints at an actual event which killed the "original" Paul?
|
|
|
Post by iameye on Jun 30, 2011 6:45:37 GMT -5
Liber 418. The Song of Horus. Read it. Cry, Baby, Cry. Make your Mother sigh.
|
|
|
Post by iameye on Jun 30, 2011 6:51:16 GMT -5
While there are more 'maybe, maybe not' lyrics and interpreted clues out there, I prefer obvious references and smoking guns. I don't believe in synchromysticism. I believe in occult adepts and intentional conspiracies. Seeing Paul as a returning Christ figure? That's rich. Seeing Paul as Crowley's replacement as the head of Thelema? That I can buy. It's why he sought out Crowley adept Youth from 'The Killing Joke' to work with. Stick with the 'magick/Crowley/Masonic/Thelema' angle and we'll get somewhere. The rest are red herrings. By the way- anagrams are fun What do you think then, aperiloushint? I'm curious. That Paul was never replaced? That it's always been the same individual with Crowleyesque notions? And the famous car-crash clues -- Crowlesque metaphors, rather than hints at an actual event which killed the "original" Paul? And there is a voice: thou knowest not how the Seven was united with the Four; much less then canst thou understand the marriage of the Eight and the Three. Yet there is a word wherein these are made one3, and therein is contained the Mystery that thou seekest, concerning the rending asunder of the veil of my Mother. Now there is an avenue of pylons (not one alone), steep after steep, carved from the solid rock of the mountain; and that rock is a substance harder than diamond, and brighter than light, and heavier than lead. In each pylon is seated a god. There seems an endless series of these pylons. And all the gods of all the nations of the earth are shown, for there are many avenues, all leading to the top of the mountain. Now I come to the top of the mountain, and the last pylon opens into a circular hall, with other pylons leading out of it, each of which is the last pylon of a great avenue; there seem to be nine such pylons. And in the centre is a shrine, a circular table, supported by marble figures of men and women, alternate white and black; they face inwards, and their buttocks are almost worn away by the kisses of those who have come to worship that supreme God, who is the single end of all these diverse religions. But the shrine itself is higher than a man may reach.
|
|
|
Post by iameye on Jun 30, 2011 7:12:05 GMT -5
And a voice comes: That which is above is not like that which is below.
And another voice answers it: That which is below is not like that which is above.
And a third voice answers these two: What is above and what is below? For there is the division that divideth not, and the multiplication that multiplieth not. And the One is the many21. Behold, this Mystery is beyond understanding, for the winged globe is the crown, and the shaft is the wisdom, and the barb is the understanding. And the Arrow is one, and thou art lost in the Mystery, who art but as a babe that is carried in the womb of its mother, that art not yet ready for the light.
And the vision overcometh me. My sense is stunned; my sight is blasted; my hearing is dulled.
And a voice cometh: Thou didst seek the remedy of sorrow; therefore all sorrow is thy portion. This is that which is written: "God hath laid upon him the iniquity of us all." For as thy blood is mingled in the cup of BABALON, so is thine heart the universal heart. Yet is it bound about with the Green Serpent, the Serpent of Delight.22
|
|
|
Post by iameye on Jun 30, 2011 8:35:49 GMT -5
Etymology Nephthys is the Greek form of an epithet (transliterated as Nebet-het, and Nebt-het, from Egyptian hieroglyphs).The origin of the goddess Nephthys is unclear but the literal translation of her name is usually given as "Lady of the House," which has caused some to mistakenly identify her with the notion of a "housewife," or as the primary lady who ruled a domestic household. This is a pervasive error repeated in many commentaries concerning this deity. Her name means quite specifically, "Lady of the [Temple] Enclosure" which associates her with the role of priestess. This title which may be more of an epithet describing her function than a given name probably indicates the association of Nephthys with one particular temple or some specific aspect of the Egyptian temple ritual. Along with her sister Isis, Nephthys represented the temple pylon or trapezoidal tower gateway entrance to the temple which also displayed the flagstaff. This entrance way symbolised the horizon or akhet. crab a locker fishwife akhet In ancient Egyptian, the place where the sun rises and sets; often translated as "horizon" or "mountain of light". It is included in names like "Akhet Khufu" (Ancient Egyptian name for the Great Pyramid) and Akhetaten. Betrò's book names the hieroglyph: 'Mountain with the Rising Sun', and the hieroglyph is used as an ideogram for "horizon".[1] In ancient Egyptian religion, the Pylon mirrored the hieroglyph for 'horizon' - akhet, which also was associated with recreation and rebirth.
|
|
|
Post by iameye on Jun 30, 2011 8:44:43 GMT -5
To infinity and beyond!
Woody and Buzz Aldrin LightYear
|
|
|
Post by iameye on Jun 30, 2011 10:27:03 GMT -5
And did we tell you the name of the game, boy? we call it Riding the Gravy Train. We're just knocked out. We heard about the sell out. You gotta get an album out, You owe it to the people. We're so happy we can hardly count. Everybody else is just green, have you seen the chart?It's a helluva start, it could be made into a monster if we all pull together as a team. And did we tell you the name of the game, boy? we call it Riding the Gravy Train. www.etymonline.com/index.php?term=grave
|
|
|
Post by iameye on Jun 30, 2011 10:36:50 GMT -5
under the Rainbow Oh, How I Wish You Were Here!
|
|
|
Post by iameye on Jun 30, 2011 10:48:31 GMT -5
Here, have a Cigar The UnIdentified Flying Object
|
|
|
Post by e99man9 on Jun 30, 2011 12:16:56 GMT -5
|
|
|
Post by P(D)enny La(i)ne on Jun 30, 2011 13:31:46 GMT -5
under the Rainbow Oh, How I Wish You Were Here!
|
|
|
Post by iameye on Jun 30, 2011 14:03:45 GMT -5
I hear it "tis the end of the 7th season Cornelius \c(o)-rne-lius, cor-nelius\ as a boy's name is pronounced kor-NEEL-yus. It is of Latin origin, and the meaning of Cornelius is "horn". From "cornu". www.corneliamarie.com/ Marie
|
|
|
Post by iameye on Jun 30, 2011 21:34:43 GMT -5
BUILDING BRIDGES ACROSS TIME half time show pregame sign the mural or you'll have to answer!
|
|
|
Post by aperiloushint on Jul 1, 2011 2:31:38 GMT -5
Yeah. Kubrick and Polanski both know what's up.
So did I get a response from Iamaphoney himself? Or is 65if2007 someone else?
|
|
|
Post by aperiloushint on Jul 1, 2011 2:32:20 GMT -5
For that matter so did Jodorowsky.
|
|
|
Post by iameye on Jul 1, 2011 6:23:07 GMT -5
Yeah. Kubrick and Polanski both know what's up. So did I get a response from Iamaphoney himself? Or is 65if2007 someone else? King Shot is an unrealized film by Alejandro Jodorowsky. It was to have been co-produced by David Lynch and was scheduled for release in 2010. The cast included Nick Nolte, Asia Argento, Marilyn Manson, Udo Kier, and Santiago Segura. In a November 2009 interview with The Guardian, Jodorowsky revealed the project had been cancelled due to lack of funding. Jodorowsky described the film, which would have been his first since the 1990 film The Rainbow Thief, as a "metaphysical gangster movie." The story was set in a casino in the desert and involved gangsters, the discovery of a man as big as King Kong, and Marilyn Manson as a 300 year old pope. 300 years? seems like www.biblewheel.com/gr/gr_300.asp May I climb on your back and go for a ride in the sky?
|
|
|
Post by iameye on Jul 1, 2011 8:53:48 GMT -5
Behold, I come quickly. Double trouble between my paws. Rēgulus is Latin for 'prince' or 'little king'. The Greek variant Basiliscus is also used. It is known as Qalb Al Asad, from the Arabic قلب لأسد or Qalb Al-´asad, meaning 'the heart of the lion'. This phrase is sometimes approximated as Kabelaced and translates into Latin as Cor Leōnis. It is known in Chinese as 轩辕十四, the Fourteenth Star of Xuanyuan, the Yellow Emperor. In Hindu astronomy, Regulus corresponds to the Nakshatra Magha.
A Nakshatra (Devanagari: नक्षत्र, Sanskrit: nakshatra, 'star', from Sanskrit: naksha, 'approach', and Sanskrit: tra, 'guard')
|
|
|
Post by iameye on Jul 1, 2011 9:41:02 GMT -5
lol let's look through the telescope eye The Egyptians saw Cancer as the sacred scarab, a beetle which rolls its dung in the dust, making pellets in which its eggs are laid. The scarab was a symbol of resurrection and immortality; mummies often had a carving of the scarab in place of the heart. The Greek word for scarab is karabos. “The Encircling Arms” The next constellation in the sign of Leo is Cancer, the “Crab,” but this sign is not really a crab at all. The Arabic name is Al Sartan, or “who binds” or “holds,” and may derive from the Hebrew “to bind together” (Gen.49:11). The Hebrew word for “binding” in this verse is awsar, a primitive root meaning “to yoke, or hitch; by analogy, to fasten in any sense; bind, fast, harness, gird, hold, keep, make ready, prepare, prison, put in bonds, set in array, tie.” It signifies “binding” or “holding together.” The Syriac Sartano means the same thing. The Greek name Karkinos, meaning holding or encircling. The Latin “Cancer” has the same meaning. (The crab, with its claws, seems to “encircle” its prey.) In the ancient Denderah Zodiac, this constellation is represented as a “scarab” or “sacred beetle,” used by the ancients as an identifying sign or seal of its owner. It was also a symbol of the resurrection, to the ancient Egyptians. The Denderah name is Klaria, or “the cattle-folds.” now approaching the Arena, Lion Heart!
|
|
|
Post by B on Jul 1, 2011 11:12:24 GMT -5
P(D)enny, your video is banned again.
|
|