Tag Archive: psychedelic


Prophetic Conspirators * Psychedelic Water

Prophetic Conspirators
*
Psychedelic Water
*

photo“How are you enjoying Oz?” the shaman asked the intrepid visitors. Cheers
and laughter erupted from the sparking bonfire on the other side of the party-strewn paddock, where flittering gouts of flaming starlets poured up to greet the Milky Way.

“It great,” Zen beamed through the smaller campfire. “We want to live here, but our visa run out soon.” He turned to his partner Shi, who was briskly nodding her agreement. The Japanese couple was obviously enjoying this taste of tribal tepee life in the hippified Rainbow Region of Oz, yet they’d shifted an arm’s length apart amid the small circle of newfound friends. Despite their recent exposure to naked hippies and public lovemaking, the shaman surmised the couple’s rigidified Nipponese upbringing still ensured they betrayed no overt signs of physical affection.
   “You can always come back, bud,” Cameron assured him.
Zen balanced Shi’s hand on his knee. “I want to. We want to.”

“You’ve had no trouble here?” asked Cameron. The young travelers looked to one another before Shi answered for them both; “No, not trouble. Just some old people swear at us in Queensland.” She shrugged her slight shoulders while flying foxes screeched through the treetops.

“You may encounter that with many older people here, particularly in Queensland – because of World War Two. You know what I’m talking about?” Ram felt like Basil Fawlty attempting to be diplomatic as the thought ‘Don’t mention the war’ flitted through his bedazzled noggin. The visitors glanced at each other again before Zen nodded. “Yes, we hear of it,” he affirmed.
   .

“Well… older Queenslanders and other people in the north of Oz will never forget that the rest of the country was willing to hand them over
to Japan if New Guinea fell.”

“Everything north of Brisbane,” Cameron agreed. “And – well, no offence, but there were some hideous atrocities committed in that war
and a lot of older people don’t forget that, either.”
   Zen tilted his head to one side. “Really?”

“There certainly were,” the shaman prince carefully enunciated each word through the flickering firelight. “Almost a lifetime ago now. There
is a new generation in Japan that has been told nothing of it – and isn’t responsible for any of it. We certainly do not hold it against
you. But the generations before us will never forget and many will never forgive – and the fact that nothing is taught about it in Japan is a
real concern to much of the world.”

“That’s right,” Cameron agreed. “Most of my older relatives hate Japan to this day. We grew up hearing horror stories about guys being carved up and tortured from my uncle. He was in the Pacific…”
“You have to remember,” Ram said with a glance to Cameron, “propaganda was at least as bad on all sides as it is today. Even worse in wartime, of course. The history we read and were taught isn’t very accurate either – it was written by the victors, after all…”
“Always is,” concurred Cameron.
“…There were atrocities on all sides – though the ruling caste of the Japanese government considered themselves superior to all other races, just like the Nazis. They treated everyone else just as badly as the S.S. did the Jews and Gypsies.
“Japan created a slaughterhouse all around them before Hiroshima was bombed,” Ram continued, holding Cameron’s firelit gaze. “But you know, they were actually forced into the war.”
   “They were? I’ve heard that, but what do you mean? What about Pearl Harbour?” Cameron’s interest flared with the firelight.

“The West cut off their oil supplies and just about everything else they needed to make themselves self-sufficient in a colonial world. The
Japanese elite realised they could take the Western Pacific only if they could destroy the US military there in just six months – by wiping out its Pacific fleet in one stroke. Their plan actually unraveled right at the beginning at Pearl Harbour, when some of their targets escaped; but it’s all a long story, like the Opium Wars…”

“Ah,” Zen nodded. Shi was obviously struggling to keep up with the conversation and he translated in a rapid burst of Japanese. “This very
difficult, but interesting for us,” she said as comprehension dawned on her pretty face.

“Mind you,” Ram continued, “Japan took Manchuria – though they may have had ancestral links to the place – and the shocking war against China was fought in a despicable manner. Japan hadn’t signed the Geneva Convention…”
   “No…” Zen asked the question as a statement.
  
“No,” Cameron averred.
   “You don’t mind discussing this?” the Prince belatedly asked the young couple.
   “No, we not mind,” Zen sayid for them both. “We want to know.”

“Well… you know that Japan bombed the city of Darwin, in the north of this country? Destroyed it completely?” Cameron asked. The visitors shook their heads in confusion. “Bombed many, many times. Or that midget submarines attacked Sydney Harbour?” The visitors were nonplussed.
   “No…” Shi breathes. “We not know…”

“It cuts both ways,” Ram observed. “Australians weren’t told the truth about Darwin either, thanks to the excuse of wartime censorship. And we know so little about Nippon or its history – and everything we think we know is twisted out of true by the media, intelligence agencies and
politicians.” Watching the Japanese couple feel the pressure of the past, bowing their heads toward the fire and frowning in consternation,
he decided to change the subject; “You’ve had no trouble with young people here?”
   “No,” Shi smiled, looking up from the flames. “Mostly it’s great.”

She turned to watch Mandy emerge from the night and pull a deckchair up by the fire. Ram’yana was aware that the feral had been silently
observing the conversation while twirling her blond dreadlocks in the shadows. He watched her watching the Japanese. She and her beau were slowly constructing their place in the Sun on the Star Earth tribal land, after their shady love shack mysteriously burned down a few weeks before the festival.
“When you come back from Japan you’d better arrange to bring some more of those young hippies with you,” Cameron laughed. “Save them by bringing them here to this hippy preserve.
   “If we make it back,” Zen said, “Before something bad happen.”
   “You think something bad is going to happen?” Cameron leaned forward into the heat. “Like what? War with China?”
Zen looked him in the eye. “Maybe that. Maybe something else. Not know what – but something. Many feel it in Japan. Things cannot go on as they are – something big is coming.” The Westerners sat in silence as he continued. “Maybe the Earth will rebel… But it good for me – it probably necessary for enlightenment, to go into the next… dimension?” *
“That’s the word,” the shaman assured him.
“Next dimension is where we all need to go. The next level.”
“I understand,” Ram said slowly, “but you know – it isn’t necessary to die to achieve enlightenment.” He caught Mandy’s approving smile across the flames. Zen appeared nonplussed. “And if there are another series of dimensions beyond this one – not parallel universes, but higher geometric dimensions – you know what I mean?” Zen nodded, hanging on every word. “Then we must already be in them, they must be accessible to us from here.” He saw he was moving beyond the visitors’ comprehension of English and took another tack that dovetailed with Zen’s interest in physics. “If eleven dimensions exist then how can we only exist in three or four of them? We must extrude, project, into all of them already. Understand?”
“Hmmm. This is very interesting. It not be necessary to die to be there… but how?”
“You know that the way out is always in?” the shaman asked him. Zen nodded in time with Shi. “Meditation, and the conscious development of the wider supersenses available to us; conscious exploration of those realms that we already extrude into, learning to see with new eyes… Armageddon isn’t necessary to achieve enlightenment.  Purification by fire is not something you need to go through. You are free now.”
“Many people in Japan think we must die to go on,” Zen said. “They think it a good thing. This is very interesting. I must think about this…”
“Many people think the same thing here, too,” Cameron sympathised. “But we have to go on and endure. It’s too easy the other way. ‘Nobody gets off until the mess is cleaned up.’ ”
The visitors nodded more profusely at this sage pronouncement.

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The mess accumulates and energy swells as adventurous travelers strut toward the promise of a truly psychedelic experience – an indelible climax to the weekend’s hedonistic foreplay. By midday throngs already amass in the painted streets and shaded byways of the far out little village of Nimbin. Saturday’s brilliantine noonday heat transforms the vibrant subtropical splendour of the verdant landscape into a viridian radiance of enervating humidity. The autumnal atmosphere verges back into the sweaty green steambath
conditions common during the last few years’ runaway greenhouse summers.

Yet untrammeled vigour still imbues the eagerly expectant assembly of freaks, straights, tourists and wannabe contenders with unabated intensity as they mingle and jostle for the year’s best buds, heads, colas and other less combustible comestibles. A demi-multitude straggles into town along gravel tracks and bitumen arteries, undeterred by the heat of climate catastrophe or police state shenanigans.
The locals are thoroughly outnumbered. Garbage bins overflow along the crowd-filled footpaths as thousands of camera wielding, fast food chomping visitors from despoiled lands of drear normality throng and mix, deal and fix, see and be seen beneath banners of the rainbow tribes and the all-seeing eyes of robotic surveillance cams. Spectrum-spanning painted faces stud the baseball capped crowd in chaotic arcs of rainbow colours, a well laundered shimmering sea of shiny black-and-blue-clad suburbanites.
   Why don’t you speak of what you’ve seen? The shaman muses as he rises from his seat to leave the Oasis. Is it just egotistic concerns over credibility – or a matter of not speaking of things which don’t want to be known?

photoMany of the visitors exist under a perennial stupor of paranoia in ‘normal’ workaday lives -  fearing loss of station or job, marriage or children, afraid of peer or parental disapproval and
all the other snares and grasping adhesions of the noxious social glue that holds the hive in which they’re enmeshed together – even, particularly, while walking and gawking down the main and almost only street of World Hippie Central. The alternative-minded but socially camouflaged throng
doesn’t yet
realise that they represent most of the world’s people – non-conformists at heart, who all live under the self-imposed harness of unnecessary fears, weighed down by the pointless guilt so keenly felt by true innocents deprived of normal human requirements, and made to feel inferior when they seek to satisfy their needs.
All yearn for release from the straightjacket asylum of a barely post-feudal civilisation run by lunatic control freaks.
The ages-old witch and shaman ride within us all, suppressed or oppressed or free as a bird and all of us are hankering after a flavour that lead to the taste of other dimensions, fresher views – zestier, more riveting impressions of the sumptuous reality through which we otherwise drift like limbo-bound wraiths and automatons.
Most Mardi Grass revelers couldn’t give a damn about hypocritical, unjust laws and certainly know they’re not damaged or damned, but blessed to be out and about in one of the brightest,  freest times and places in all the vast murky realms of human history.
Everyone’s here to party and experience unseen sights and untried delights; hippies, yuppie ‘aspirationals’, dreadlocked Rastas and dreaded ferals, priests, politicians, students, TV crews and reporters and backpacking travellers from all round the globe, shopkeepers, soldiers, big and little old men and women, checkout chicks, lawyers, bureaucrats, proud parents carrying brightly bedecked newborn babes, emigrant Greek fishermen, Indian software writers and call centre voices, emo Goths – and anyone else not interested in being an active part of the subtly feudal friendly fascist police surveillance state of impersonal corporate Big Brother clones and militant industrialists – and all are seeking the selfsame source of the philosophers, stoned. A broad cross-section is represented, as they say, and just about everyone’s
smiling.
Fleecy clouds begin coalescing in the wide open sky’s more distant margins, blowing apart in this late Interglacial Age’s inexorably rising winds. The Rainbow Region is multiply blessed with rich soil and sunshine, sea breezes and rain, luxuriantly lush and deliriously green even at the end of a historic nationwide mother of all droughts, and for the first time the annual parade will be free of the double-edged benison of rain.
A good year for curing the mull, if you look on the bright side… Could be a good vintage… The shamanic prince’s thoughts flit hither and yon while he makes a sine wave beeline for the great Strangler Fig. The Tree of Life beckons, arching across the market ground’s outdoor stage as he strides through streams of fossicking punters hovering round myriad stalls and jewellery-strewn blankets. The future’s so bright we’ll have to wear shades…
He reaches the Chai Tent and gratefully slides into a mismatched litter of comfy cushions on the hempen expanse of canvas flooring. Each and every Mardi Grass, the space beneath the market site’s grand old fig is reserved for the Chai Tent, right beside the covered stage. The chai’s always good – if you wait for it to properly brew – gingery and purifying for the partied-out and jaded throng recovering from the pleasant excesses of Friday night. 
After taking a breath Ram’yana rises to inspect a tasty array of homemade organic cakes while John ladles some brew into a varied menagerie of ceramic cups. Muzza and John are regular fixtures at most alternative events, their friendly bearded familiar faces ever beaming behind fluttering prayer flags and political messages. They help their latest batch of eager helpers mix chai, coffee, teas and munchies beneath the generously shady green canopies of tree and marquee.
These days only half the food vendors in the ‘alternative’ township pay any attention to actual human or environmental health,
beyond ubiquitous legal requirements of sanitation, hygiene and the like. Most of what they sell to paying consumers is toxic crap, just
like the stuff most human folk will eat before, during or after reading these words.
But in Nimbin the other half are still wonderfully fastidious and most local produce is fairly organic. It’s been decades since aerial spraying of Agent Orange was common in these parts – in a saleable form with a slightly different brand name, of course, sprayed
directly into the waterways and everywhere else when the hippies first arrived; one more lasting legacy of war’s fine record of ongoing
‘technological advancement’.
In Vietnam the peasants had no idea what was happening to them, but in Oz and other ‘advanced’ nations they sprayed tetragenic
toxic herbicides on their own cropland, water, animals and farming families and newcomer hippies alike. Still do. Even in the ‘developed
world’, the peasants are too ignorant or naive to
realise that poison is poison is poison, and that all the products of Big Pharma and Big Oil and Big Brother are noxious, toxic, persistent carcinogens and/or other agents of insidious slow death. Speed kills. So does strychnine, arsenic, Agent Orange, Roundup and irradiated food. So do preservatives, colourings, bleaches, flavours, microwave radiation and most of the other shit floating around in human bloodstreams in the early Third Millennium.
And people wonder why they feel stoned all the time, why so many promising lives end so quickly.
It’s worth remembering, even if it’s unbelievable to most – three quarters of everything you eat, drink, breathe, touch, paint on yourself or wear is toxic, carcinogenic and debilitating. In a world where you rely on others instead of nature, all the crap you buy is made for making money, not for your health. As any individual toxic compound combines with all the other stuff in a ‘modern’ human body in ever more chaotic synergy, it’s no surprise almost everyone in the modern world is walking wounded, half asleep, barely here – role-playing the parts of automata in an industrial nightmare instead of being here now. Not to mention living ridiculously short, painful lives, in constant fear of the puzzling rebellion of the unknown, unstudied territories of their own bodies and minds.
The only way out is in, to create an inner place of peace unaffected by the turmoil, the inner sanctuary from which all imagination and creativity and immunity spring – and OUT, moving far away from the worst crap, stuff and nonsense of feudal capitalism, to at least attempt a different life in the last remnants of a healthier world. To bring every ‘lost’ dream all the way back from the last seed-source heartlands that
still survive, and grow new lives that keep those heartlands sacred and inviolate. To grow a healthy world with a whole glowing soul. That’s
the dream that most pursue or seek or view complete on the busy streets of Nimbin.
Here in the Rainbow Region a generation of brave beings has largely succeeded in their attempt to change the world within their horizon. The Nimbin Mardi Grass is barely a tenth of a greater green iceberg lurking just out of sight of The Grey Man and his equally hideous hidebound mate, the all-consuming Shopping Bitch. Alternative notions have evolved into a hidden yet subtly influential nation nestled within the recovering rainforest canopy. Its denizens have no need to officially secede from the larger notional paradigm of Oz – nothing secedes like success.
The Prince of Centraxis allows a multitude of voices wash over him through the amplified reggae horn section while Celtic harpists work the crowd from the psychedelic stage; “We all have the Buddha and the Troll within”, a bearded man in saffron is saying to a group of escaped students beneath the hemp tarpaulin. “Which do you prefer to give rein, and allow to reign through you?”
A high-pitched squeak obtrudes from a dozen paces distant; “Have you really looked at the shots of the twin towers exploding before they fall? Come on, it’s a crock of shit…”
“He’s selling ounces for a hundred but we have to be quick, it isn’t seedy…”
“Did you see those three girls doing it together at the doof?”
“Draw me a mud map and I can find it. Can we camp there, do y’reckon?”
“…working on a flow form whereby the superfine patterning embossed, as it were, on the metal substrate energises the water flowing across it…”
“What kind of metal?”
“…nuclear dump site for the rest of the world because that’s the only way we can have nuclear power plants and vice versa…”
“…but also draws slight but measurable and ultimately usable energy from the interaction…”
“…it’s all a little unclear if you ask me…”
“It’s all about money – we’ll make a motza from the storage fees – pay off the national debt…”
“You guys don’t remember, do you?”
“I’m going to hear that bloke from Canadia talk – you know, the one who got the medical exemption that says he can smoke?”
“I and eye don’ have t’worry, bud. Jah Rastafarii!”
“You mean it? How does that work?”
“You seen Narla? I lost ’er last night at the dance…”
“You mean your little girl?”
“Nah – her mum. Here – try some o’ this…”
“You know they had to let Rusty off all the charges?”
“Why? Because he was picked up by that flying saucer?”
“…the real question is, is scratching an itch or a willed act?”
“Huh?”
“O’ course it is! Yer just don’ notice the instant that it takes f’ yer to decide to do it.” It’s all too fast unless yer pay attention…”
photo
“Ram!” Phico grabs the shaman prince’s left bicep, beaming and grinning and passing him a spliff that’s seen better
moments. “I knew you’d be in the Chai Tent – already ready for the parade, I see.” With a twinkle in each eye he scans the winged hat that
surmounts wild ringlets of stream-washed hair cascading over Ram’s traditional Green Tiger Snake ensemble.
“Born ready. This is probably the only way you’ve seen me for the past few years, isn’t it?” He passes the joint back as he exhales and Phico points to a stranger seated beside them; the Danish youth is more than happy to take the smoke off Ram’s hands., and shares it with a trio of Iberian backpacking feral girls he’s enthusiastically regaling with a tale of a bust at a recent extralegal outdoor gig (ganja works wonders in overcoming all language barriers).
Cones burn brightly beneath the shade of trees and tarps and the sounds of burbling bong water occasionally drown out the acoustic mandolin player now braving the stage.
“It’s a year since we last met – right here, in fact.” Ram’yana begins to roll while watching an attractive acrobat twirl on a thick
rope overhead, and long strands of auburn hair trail down between him and Phico.
“So it is. I’ll have to come visit you in the rainforest again. How’s it all going out in the wild, anyway?”
“Growing. The river’s perfect and there’s a bag of mandarins waiting for you at Star Earth.”
“Really? Thanks. It’s unusual that the river’s still doing well in the drought…”
Ram’s eyes crinkle with his grin. “Wonderfully unusual….”
A bearded harlequin with a starkly delineated clown face joins them, creating a tiny circle amid circles of other festival-goers. His eye
sockets are molten blue streaks that descend past a radiant plastic rose of a nose. “Hey, bro, how’s it doing?” he shakes Phico’s spidery hand. “Hasn’t the weather been strange?” Ram’yana can’t resist responding; “‘Could it be… a warning?’” Phico laughs while the younger man looks puzzled. “Sorry,” Ram’ explains, “it’s a line from an old movie…”
“‘The Last Wave’, wasn’t it?” Phico recalls.
“That’s the one – the Peter Weir movie about a tidal wave presaged by weird
weather, among other things. It’s a book as well, of course.”
“You don’t think we’re having one of those, do you?” The harlequin asks. “Not up here? What’s the altitude, anyway?”
Ram looks up and smiles at the sky. “Right here? A couple of hundred metres. Fine for just about anything except a bolide in the Pacific…”
“Mind you,” Phico observes as the remnant number returns to him, “the Pacific’s pretty big – about half the planet’s surface. Hitting it’s a fifty-fifty bet. Oh – Ram’yana, this is Wanji.” Clown and shaman nod to each other while a police patrol attempts to wade around them,
negotiating a path through the chaotically seated audience with mildly distressed expressions.
“They look really uncomfortable.” Wanji smiles at the muscled men in their new camouflage riot gear, standing out like sullen depressed dog’s balls amid the happy campers. Everyone ignores them as they walk through fragrant clouds from the flagrant crowd. No-one even offers them a toke.
“Wouldn’t you be?” the pink-skinned alchemist asks rhetorically.
photo“Hey, man, you’re looking really good.” Wanji claps Phico on the back.
“Thanks. It’s been a good year – but this has helped.” He produces a clear stoppered bottle filled with a viscous pink fluid.
“What is it?”
“Seawater, converted far less than halfway to the Philosopher’s Stone.” He passes
the bottle to Wanji, who inverts the thick fluid and rolls it around in the sealed bottle. “Huh? Sodium chloride that’s been enhanced, or what?”
“That’s close. More like gold chloride. How much do you know about alchemy?”
“Not a lot.”
“Well – that’s what cured my skin cancers. Some of my hair’s even growing back – see?” Phico bows his crown for their perusal.
“I thought you looked kind of pink and new or something…”
“In the pink, that’s a certainty,” Ram’yana agrees.
“Well
– that’s one early physical manifestation of the Great Work,” Phico beams with modest intensity. “As is that bottle in your hand. I don’t
have much, but use some of it if you feel the need.”
“How?”

“Just smear it on.” Wanji eyes the pink goop dubiously.

“Worked for me,” Ram’yana assures him. “See?” He raises his hat and lifts his hair to display his smoothly lined brow. “Last year there was a
big grey splotch here. One application of that stuff and it’s still gone. Faded away in a couple of days.”

“Really?”
“Of course. I normally use saliva… and the most important aspect is the concomitant visualisation. You have to imagine yourself in perfect, robust health – and really feel it.”
“Your own spit is best,” Phico explains. “Or your urine will do.” Wanji opens the bottle and sniffs. “Or you can use that.”
“Chai?” Ram suggests, and rises to procure more of the rainbow market’s beverage of choice. A flock of two-foot tall, fairy-winged green toddlers surrounds his knees with star-spun magic wands held proudly aloft. They stream through the crowd of reclining smokers, recovering partiers, kissing lovers, munching tourists and dancing girls that surround the front of the stage in age-old homage to the latest bard while the acrobat spins on her rope three body lengths above their heads. Three ornately sequined, coin-draped, silk-clad belly dancers
weave a rhythmic path through the audience with an earthy, sensual physicality, following the retreating cops while the aerialist twists
and spins graceful helices.
“How’s it going!?” white-bearded Muzza calls from behind the counter, enthroned on a director’s chair that straddles a huge snaking root from the two hundred year old fig that buttresses the mobile caravanserai. Each night the Chai Tent houses squadrons of crashing night owls who can’t make it to their tents, or don’t have any other place to lay their heads. The sage-like elder isn’t expecting an audible reply, so Ram merely nods. “Already ready for the parade, I see!”
“Enough time for a chai – or three if you don’t mind.”
“Good timing,” says Muzza, “it’s perfect right now! Cow or soy?”
“Cow.” The prince selects the lesser of two evils; the dire toxic reality behind soy’s bright corporate promise has finally become evident, and now the hippy cognoscenti are aware that unfermented soybeans strip the human body of its capacity to absorb minerals from food, just as the plants they spring from strip nutrients from the rocky exoskeleton of Gaia. Soy products seemed like such a good idea at the time – during the short-sighted, fraudulent ‘green revolution’ that fed a fraction of yesterday’s world at the expense of tomorrow’s, and only succeeded in entrenching arms manufacturers in profitably toxic ‘agribusinesses’ that destroy the world’s ecosystems… and besides, the Chai Tent uses organic milk.
He barters for three steaming mugs and carries them to the cushioned floor where his associates are locked in conversation with a young barefoot dreadlocked woman half clad in an ornate batik sarong. “Ah, Ram’yana!” Phico hails, “Thank you! Do you know if HAARP is up and running?”
“You mean ‘HAARP’ as in ‘Angels Don’t Play This HAARP?”
“That’s the one.”
Ram’yana is again reminded of how much verbal communication is merely a holographic carrier signal for much more deeply enriched concepts, carrying telepathic messages within encapsulated shorthand – signals that usually pass unnoticed and unremarked in all apparently mundane conversation. He passes the cups to the men and hands his own to the woman who accepts it gratefully. “It’s been up and running – supposedly being tested – for about a year now,” he replies.
“Thanks. So what’s it stand for?” asks Wanji. “‘Hypnotic Attack Array Removing Primates’, or what?”
“‘Hyperspace Activation Arc Resonating Portal’, perhaps?” the unknown woman suggests.
“‘High Frequency Active Auroral Research Project’, I believe,” Phico explains. “It’s capable of doing many things. It alters the local frequency of the ionosphere, for a start, and therefore alters the threshold of alpha and beta waves in the human brain.”
“And it can fuck up the weather, too, can’t it?” Wanji asks.
“A full-scale demonstration of concept would raise or lower the atmospheric envelope,” Ram elucidates as a flock of rainbow lorikeets
call loudly to one another overhead, “and that would automatically alter the Schumann Layer and the resonant frequency girdling the ionosphere…”
“…as well as create localised high or low pressure systems and possibly a whole lot more,” Phyco continues. The acrobat spins and contorts her fine, lithe body between earth and sky as the mandolin trills like a metallic songbird.
“Tell me,” Ram says between sips of steaming chai, “have you noticed an increase in apathy lately?”
“What,” Wanji smiles, “you mean like my get-up-and-go has got up and went? Funny you should mention that…”
“I’ve
heard a lot of people saying the same thing lately,” the dreadlocked feral adds, “like everyone feels unsettled, like they don’t know what to
do. Or want to do anything. So most of them are just keeping on doing what they normally do, but noticing that something’s not right… or
something. Is that what you mean?”
“I thought it was just my libido,” surmises the clown.
The woman’s brown eyes twist to Ram’yana beneath the puzzled furrows of her frown. Wise eyes, Ram reflects as he nods; she continues after a sip of her tea. “A few people have mentioned the same thing. So what do you think it is?’
“What do you think?” he bats the question back to her.
She looks down into the swirling chai. “It feels to me like everyone realises that the game is about up, you know? Everyone knows the climate is up shit creek and the weather’s gone crazy and water’s running out and food’s probably next. So they’re all kind of in shock, you know?”
“I’ve noticed the same thing,” Phico agrees as she silences herself with a sip, “and that could be what’s behind it… but it could be something else, as well.”
“It’s a little like the shock that everyone felt during the Cuban Missile Crisis. Remember that?” Ram’yana asks the alchemist, noting the blank looks from the younger man and woman. “You’re a Baby Boomer, aren’t you?”
“That’s right, I know what you mean – now that you’ve jogged my memory,” Phico agrees. “Everyone was in shock and just kept going to work – well, most of them – and that was one major genesis of the mass social changes that followed, I reckon…”
“…During the ‘dawning of the Age of Aquarius’ in 1962 – just after the big line-up…” Ram’yana reminds him.
“That’s right,” Phico avers, “but I think this is something different as well. Sure, everyone seems to be grokking what the hippies and
environmentalists have been telling them for yonks, but this is somehow different…. A deliberate, mass hypnotic zoning out…”
“‘Angels don’t play this harp,’” Ram says.
Phico eyes him seriously. “You may be right.”
“So you think this American array in what, Alaska, is responsible?” Wanji asks.
“The two phenomena seemed to start around the same time,” Ram replies noncommittally, still facing Phico. “You know what Burkie said about all this years ago?”
Phico enfolds the cup in his fingers, eyeing the shaman over his broth. “John Burke you mean? I thought this was after his time?”
“Or he was before his, perhaps,” Ram’yana smiles from beneath his white winged cap. “He said that it was equally possible that a great ‘error’ could occur – that the perpetrators could easily accidentally strum the right harmonic key to bring about full resonance, instead of creating global hypnosis…”
“And enlighten everyone accidentally! Of course!” Phico laughs. “What an intriguing possibility…”
The impromptu gathering of the New Illuminati ponders the moment, regarding the concept and vision that fill their momentarily multifocal consciousness with a unified withheld breath. The fragrant chai infuses them with its fiery inspiration and the acrobat twists and turns, spiraling around the rope suspended from the ancient fig tree while the
band plays on…
*
A True Story
Continues…
- R.A.

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* Note – the Fukushima disaster had not yet occurred – R.A.From The Prince of Centraxis @ http://centraxis.blogspot.com.au/2012/02/prophetic-conspirators-psychedelic.html – be aware! This link leads to xplicit & implicate concepts & images! 

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Congratulations, Pet’s Paw, Wander Woman, Eagle Rocker

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Congratulations

You Have Survived Another Aeon   

 


Perry the Lace Monitor 

 

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Nimbin Mardi Grass 2012 

 

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Eagle Rocker

Nimbin Mardi Grass 2012

images – author’s

click to enlarge and feel free to share

Hypereality


The Day Fluoridation Ends 

 

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The Time It Takes Falling Bodies To Catch Light

 

- images – author’s

Cheeky Faerie, Palm Faerie, Coolest Costume

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Cheeky Faerie

Nimbin Mardi Grass 2012


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Palm Faerie

Nimbin Mardi Grass 2012


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Coolest Costume

Nimbin Mardi Grass 2012

 

Images – author’s

Welcome To Your Afterlife, Beetle’s Whirledview, Cones


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Welcome To Your Afterlife 

See The Light with the New Illuminati @  http://nexusilluminati.blogspot.com 

 

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Beetle’s Whirledview

This rainforest beetle hasn’t been altered; it looks like this in ‘real’ life

 

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Cones 

See the Nimbin Mardi Grass @ http://www.nimbinmardigrass.com


images – R. Ayana

To Infinity and Beyond: This Is the Afterlife

 To Infinity and Beyond

This Is the Afterlife 


 

 

Turning inside out, the young shaman falls though a long swirling tunnel formed of his inverted self, his unbodied mouth and eyes agape in a primal rush toward extinction.

He accelerates through a tightly wound vortex that shifts and bends to accommodate his course, always centred in the swirling tube which never touches his falling, disembodied perspective. The tunnel is made of light, and of his own bloodstream, and of all the memories and unremembered details of materiality and personality that made up his life – yet not merely ‘his’ life.

Every human, fish, bird, animal, insect, cell and blood corpuscle that has ever lived is there with him, all at once – the dying shaman can feel their bright fear and ecstasy pouring through him as they all rush toward an unseen destination around the curving, translucent bends of the primal vortex. Even though every being dies alone – no matter if a multitude of witnesses is present – the moment of death itself is one great screaming orgasm experienced simultaneously by every one, every single thing that has ever lived – all our eyes and mouths and ganglia agape at the same simultaneous culmination of our material existence.

The tunnel is an eternally vivid living record of past events and future dreams, all memories and visions embroidered into the seamless fabric of its swirl – and Ram’yana’s private past and the panoply of his personal memories are displayed most prominently to him, brightly livid episodes which emerge from the tubular walls as he passes. His strongest experiences – the most impressive ones, that imprinted themselves most brightly into the palimpsest of his being – leap out at him in high relief as he turns and twists and falls and flies, a singular eye of consciousness accelerating toward the endless end of the convoluted time tunnel that’s leading him home.

As the world we experience slips past us at the periphery of our sensoria, an ongoing tunnel vision moves with us at the extremity of our perceptions, whether dying, dead or alive. Journeying out of the physical plane, outside the material matrix of the world, Ram’yana is beyond time and the ken of time-bound beings; as he leaves four dimensional Timespace and approaches the speed of light everything twists into a tunnel which lengthens fore and aft.

He sees his grandfather and grandmother, Mickey Mouse and Pluto, all the dogs and cats and mice and goldfish that shared his boyhood years, the smells of his houses and the flavours of his lovers. He hears the laughter of his kindergarten friends, their bright faces visible all around him singing ‘Twinkle Twinkle Little Star’, while pretty little Abigail jumps over a spinning rope twirled by Gina and Hannah, her long blonde pink-ribboned pigtails rotating around the sides of her head.

He holds his mother’s huge hand, grasping her finger through the wooden bars of his bassinet while she sings to him in the sultry evening air. He witnesses the expression of semi-resigned shock on his father’s face during the Cuban missile crisis and again when Kennedy was shot, sees the squashed remains of mosquitoes on the wall above his crib, watches the strange lights moving in the sky while all the neighbours point and speculate, sinks again with a collapsing sandbank on Bondi Beach, swept away with hundreds of panicking faces being pulled out to the deep sea along with him, while hundreds of man-eating sharks are driven off by the beating, splashing oars of desperate lifesavers.

He sees his mother’s eyes for the first time all over again and screams at the hard slap on his bottom as he hangs before Doctor Traub’s thick-lensed glasses in the bright, antiseptic birth theatre. His paternal grandmother smiles at him as she leans over and obscures his view of the magnificent giant yellow flowers of the magnolia tree while she wheels him in his pram; he can still smell the cloying fragrance of the flowers. His mother’s mother screams as he holds a dingo puppy up for her inspection and she tumbles over backward in her bedroom, breaking her hip while his eight year old eyes wash the scene away with tears that burn through the illusory years.

The Cat in the Hat and the Mighty Thor; the smell and Hungarian accent of alcoholic Uncle Tony, putting him off beer for years with his first taste of bitter ale at the age of six, and the bright laughing face of his babysitter Wendy by the blazing wood fire; the spray of blood when he cut his wrist falling onto a broken bottle at the age of three and the dizzying view from the emergency surgeon’s high private balcony; the first time he kissed a girl and the first time he dreamed of kissing a girl, all bound up together; flying through the sky in a propeller-driven passenger plane, watching circular rainbows following him in the clouds below.

White sulphur-crested cockatoos and sparrows circle his yard while kookaburras laugh in the gum trees; the first terrifying time his father holds him up high in the air to place him in the fork of a tree; his first night after he ran away from home, reclining on a beanbag in a Kings Cross commune reading Philip Jose Farmer’s pertinent To Your Scattered Bodies Go – everything is there, each scene and sensation embedded within and revealing a multitude of others. Everything. His dying mind seeks out everything he’s ever experienced, seeking a way back into the womb of living as he falls through something else entirely, riding a rollercoaster beyond the imagination of the most topologically tormented tycoon.

As Ram’yana falls he flashes before the eyes of his whole life – as others fall with him, many others, all others, sharing the time tunnel with his self-judging awareness. In the eternity of the Fall everything hidden or repressed is exposed in the Divine Light of clear sight and each being is their own Judge, emerging from the blindfold of their material existence to weigh their own soul on the ineradicable scales of justice and mercy. Conscience is the soul and the soul is immortally, inescapably honest with itself when released from the fetters of self-deceit and delusion.

Beyond time, at the singular moment of the great primal rush that is the birth and death canal leading from one world to the next, everyone experiences the same thingat the same time. We all come and go together in a mind-blowing orgasm; dreaming or screaming, laughing or crying, all emotion quails and pales before the rush of unstoppable motion that dwarfs any and every trivial concern.

No thought of gods or devils, life or death in the primal scream toward the Light at the end of the tunnel – the only thing that matters is holding onto your headless hat and the wordless regrets felt toward all the people, animals and conscious entities you ever knew deeply, or ever loved – and still love, deeply, tenderly, with a perspective of forgiveness, understanding and compassion never vouchsafed to your flesh-bound, in-coiled, emotion-embroiled mortal personality.

Ram is every human who ever lived and died, every fish ever caught in a current to swirl down into lightless depths beyond its control, every bird caught in a whirlwind that flings it to flinders, every animal diving for cover into cloaking vegetation from an inescapable predator, every individual blood corpuscle flinging itself on the way to the crushing pressure at the heart of its warm, pulsating cosmos. As he pours through the end of the world the tunnel twists and whirls, always hiding the point of it all, the point of no return, the heart of the matter, the source of every thing and being – and his mind expands to simultaneously see his spiraling course as a single thread in a vast interwoven image.

The tunnel is one thread among myriad drab and colourful strands in a great uncharitable tapestry, an inextricable part of its intricate pattern. The dying shaman follows the course of his life along its undulating strand and sees that his thread rises and falls above and beneath uncountable other interlocking threads, a spectrum of hues and textures in the enormously unfathomable tapestry. As his thread rises above another he is ‘conscious’, while the thread it occludes is ‘dreaming’; where his strand is covered by another thread, his mortal body sleeps and dreams while the other strand lives their waking life. Everyone and everything is there, all at once, simultaneously, lain out and displayed before him with no need for the flow of time to elucidate the infinite multiplicity of being.

Turn the tapestry around. The thought comes unbidden and the cloth reverses itself around him in a loopy topological twist; the implicately shared complementary nature of consciousness becomes apparent to his blown mind as he sees himself dreaming the lives of others, and others dreaming through his waking eyes and flesh. The intermingling pathways wind around the curving delineaments of their divine co-creation, which turns into itself like a Moebius strip until the beginning of one thread seamlessly winds into the end of another. The falcon is the hunter is the arrow is the feather is the truth. All is alive and whole; nothing is partial or frayed.

The tapestry is vast, but he’s able to follow his individuated thread through the colourful patterns and sees that the enormous conglomeration of dreams and lives is incomplete – not completed by the path of the single thread that is his experience of existence, rising from the tapestry to enter him as him. At the same timeless moment, Ram’yana approaches the plexus of light that is the destiny of all nations, women and men – the future and past of all that are born to fall along with him, minds blown in the blinding light of the immortal portal.

An immaculate blazing white-hot sun glows at the end of the tunnel. He can see it ever more clearly through the transparing walls of the vortex, thinning and fading in the face of the overwhelmingly brilliant source and core of existence. Ram sees the arcs of a trans-finite net spreading outward from the source, sees an infinitude of other vortices approaching its plexus from more angles than he can wrap his bodiless head around. They pass through each other in ways that defy and tease his mortal three-dimensionally entrained mind – but the arrangement makes subtle sense to a higher form of his being, trembling on the edge of an unchartable metamorphosis into something so much greater as to be intrinsically unimaginable. Simultaneously, on another level, the individual personality of the shaman approaches its ultimate rebirth and transformation in his flight toward the blinding light of the central sun.

The source of all is the hot, bright core and central axis of the centreless multiverse, the eternal end of every tunnel; the maw of a transdimensional creature about to swallow him up, the Infinite Light of God and his own silent heart gently glowing in timeless repose. He flies around a final bend in the dissolving tunnel, surging toward the arcane net that veils the core – which flares into him as the tunnel widens, opening into the final straight.

Ram’yana flashes toward the weave that’s flung to the ends of the cosmos, spreading himself to embrace the Light – and as he reaches it, he encounters the safety net. A web-like sieve is strung across the open maw of All, and as Ram’yana passes though it a great, resounding BOUMMB fills the boundless universe – the sound of one heartbeat, as loud as the boom that eternally creates the unborn, ever-living universe; the sound of Shiva’s eye opening and of one hand clapping.

Before your time, he hears and feels, not ready, not yet – unfinished – and he feels himself shrinking toward an infinitesimally small spot in the multitude of multiverses – back into the weave, where plan net X marks the spot where all things meet in his current-bound primate life.

Boumb… Boom…. Boom!  

 

 

That’s why I’m here, writing this to you ‘now’ – the same ‘now’ that you are reading it in, really. I and eye remember it all vividly, not as something to slowly forget or avoid in the unfocused mind’s eye, but as an ongoing experience that is with me now, always, dynamically imprinted. It is with me as it is with you, when you close your eyes and open your memory to see truly through the waters of forgetfulness, to the infinite waters of eternal life.

Life and death, sensory wakefulness and supersensory dreaming are the same thing, appearing as the warp and weft of the reversible tapestry of existence. And everyone, each of us, is the whole tapestry, inextricably interwoven – everyone is everyone, and that’s about as close as this constraining corsetry of early third millennium Inglesh needs to get at this point in infinite time – xcept, perhaps, for the most important thing of all -

Every one you truly touch and are touched by, in every way, leaves the deepest and most prominent engravings in your heart, mind and soul. What we do unto others is what we do to ourselves – and other living beings are more than mere memory mirrors or handy usable tools. That’s what draws us back for more, and more again – the need to do better by our selves – over and over, until we do it right. Then we get another choice – or another chance to ride the carousel Wheel of Fortune again, if we so choose.

The multiple layers of ascendant consciousness are a self-filtering system of co-evolution – a system of slowly developing focus and perspective that leads our awareness to other dimensions, already inextricably interwoven with the relatively ‘familiar’ bounds of our largely unknown but ever-present reality. There’s no dim-witted hierarchy of order-givers or sword-wielding guardians barring the doors of higher perception – the gateway to Heaven on Earth. There’s just you – and me, and all of us, together. We all have our time to shine, and that time is always now.

Yet Death is not Dying. In the Bardo spaces between thy flowering carnations of existence, all the bright religious hopes and turgid superstitious terrors await the untrained monkey mind in its ongoing fall toward dissolution or reintegration. The Bardo Realms are entire worlds or pocket universes as apparently solid as the full-blown reality ye imagine around thee, right where thou art sitting, right now. How do ye know thou art alive, not dreaming this experience, right here and now? Do ye think that’s air you’re breathing?

 

 

 

 

A true story

 

By R. Ayana

 

 

From Shaman of Centraxis 4 @ http://centraxis.blogspot.com.au/2008/03/to-infinity-and-beyond.html

 

 

Images – author’s

 

For further enlightening information enter a word or phrase into the search box above or @ New Illuminati or click on any label/tag at the bottom of the page @ http://nexusilluminati.blogspot.com

 

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This material is published under Creative Commons Fair Use Copyright (unless an individual item is declared otherwise by copyright holder) – reproduction for non-profit use is permitted & encouraged, if you give attribution to the work & author – and please include a (preferably active) link to the original along with this notice. Feel free to make non-commercial hard (printed) or software copies or mirror sites – you never know how long something will stay glued to the web – but remember attribution! If you like what you see, please send a tiny donation or leave a comment – and thanks for reading this far…

 

 

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Here Be Magic

Here Be Magic 


The Source’s Apprentice


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FEAR = False Evidence Appearing Real

HOPE = Higher Order Potential Explored

LOVE = Living One Vibrant Energy 


Who are you, what is the world, how did you get here, where are we going and why? Every child asks these questions, as do the mortally ill and those suddenly faced with unexpected change.

Young children (and venerable ancients) are most intimately connected to the deepest mysteries of being. All existence is a glorious mystery that inspires open minds and passionate hearts. Life begins in a rush of extraordinary emotion with an intimate embrace of the actual, immediate, visceral present and leaves deep imprints that last through the next rebirth and beyond.

Many newborn babes know answers to the deepest conundrums, yet quickly forget – distracted by the ongoing process of learning to wear a new body in a strangely demanding culture of drowsy domesticated primates. Most ‘modern’ people are quickly weaned from a sense of wonder to suckle on toxic waste and moribund notions in notional nations at war with themselves. What use are masters and mistresses of universal truths to soulless machines of industrious wastage – to self-styled half blind so-called ‘leaders’ who only require mindless cogs and obedient dogs that will work on their pet projects without question?

Eternal questions lead to cascades of answers and torrents of more questions. At some point in life all beings wonder and ponder the primal questions of life, the universe and everything. Every child knows they’re on a magical mystery tour, exploring and creating a gloriously intricate realm of intriguing riddles and sumptuous sensualities. Every freshly incarnate soul knows answers to eternal conundrums and recognises that truth must be really simple, clear and meaningful – unlike the plethora of corporate, ‘religious’ and ‘spiritual’ lies they’re fed to keep them in place in the usual fowl-brained pecking ordure.

People are rapidly weaned from infinite fonts of unending wisdom, fed on senseless half truths and superstitions by blithering wastrels until we’re self-caged in boxes and propped before blinding screens devoid of imagination, filled up with loony marching tunes, violent comical characters, warrior ‘ethics’, impersonal personalities and mobsters from the Id.

Yet every being who finds themselves living in the bosom of Gaia has the ability to flourish in a garden of freedom, art, truth and beauty – unless the divine rapture of happy revelry is beaten and brainwashed out of them by damaged control freaks. The adulteration of adulthood customarily twists each bright new spark into a carelessly forgetful servile dolt wearing uniform uniforms that suit self-styled bosses and no-one else. Yet the bright living world continues to glow and beckon with magnetic inner light, awakening inner sight and inner sense in every insightful innocent soul.

Even while selling, selling out or selling one’s soul, answers and questions lurk within, biding their time til the moment of wonder emerges anew – flowers that bud from slimy mud to bloom in the light of an unbranded bright new day.

Children know what magic is. Magic is obviously the ability to alter the fabric of ‘material reality’ at will. Adolescents and adults who quest after magical reality or ultimate truths usually encounter the teaching that magic is the ability to alter one’s level and state of consciousness at will. It transpires that these two views of magical reality are one and the same, for the world is made of mindstuff – the very same stuff you’ve made of your self.

We’re all the creator of the world we inhabit. We make and remake the cosmos we perceive from instant to instant in a seamless flow far quicker than any word or thought a monkey mind can shape or utter. We mould malleable mindstruff to fit about our hopes, dreams, desires and fears. The strongest, most emotively driven visions predominate, setting the course of our self-chosen destiny from moment to moment. At every instant new doors are opened and closed by decisive thoughts which come and go so swiftly they barely seem to register, ignored by minds entrained to self destruction through perpetual distraction.

Who won last weekend’s game? Who’ll win next week’s? Who really cares or remembers the identikit features of identical born-to-die gladiators or the meaningless trivia of daily scores? Every broadcast from the blaring, pumping, chest-thumping media is thoroughly massaged premasticated pap made to sell, sell, sell the messy message that life is hell without labels and boxes and plastic bags. The ‘news’ is a neverchanging regurgitated weather report overflowing with the meaningless mummery of falsified finance, shaggy cat stories and fishy tales about the none that got away from The System.

People aren’t encouraged to examine their minds – to investigate the source and route of each thought that passes through the easily distracted awareness of industrious sociable beings. In the kingdom of the blind, endless mindless busyness is promoted to a virtue and self-examination is regarded as ‘useless navel gazing’.

The boss will tell you that there’s plenty of time for self examination when you’re fading and tired and retired from the rat race. There’s plenty of time to be free when you’re old, weak, moribund and no longer a potential threat to the busy, dizzy status quo. Meanwhile, follow the leaders and only read parking meters – and pay through the nose for the right to exist, eat, drink and inhabit space. Do what’s expected of you and reap your reward; Work. Consume. Obey. Marry and reproduce. Die – and then begin all over again, with that alluring ‘clean slate’ – that fresh start each adult craves when they realise they’re botching Life and selling their heritage for a bowl of cold potage.

Turn on. Tune in. Opt out! The real world and real you awaits; waiting for you to discover your self.

You always get what you wish for – often when you’ve forgotten you ever wished for it – so be careful what you wish for, for wishing is magic. Each idle thought is a wilful wish when fuelled by hope or fear, love or anger or any potent emotion in the unformed ocean of eternal becoming.

 

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Magic in a Holographic Fractal Multiverse


The cosmos is infinite, and we don’t even live in a single universe. We live in – and contain – an infinite multiverse of limitless potential.

Fractals and fractal imagery demonstrate the truth of an infinite cosmos shaping and shaped by each whole fragment of ultimate reality. Every part, particle, participle and person reflects and refracts the infinite whole – a fluid hologram altered by individual perspectives in a freewheeling free willed phantasmagoria of endless possibility and infinite variety in continuous communion with itself.

As free will is real and events are not locked into predetermined courses, there can’t be any such thing as accurate prediction – just hypnotic programs that attempt to create self-fulfilling prophecies – for all is in flux and the Book of Life is always being inscribed and rewritten as the Book of Changes. There was no single Big Bang or Creation event, for creation continues at all times in all places, everywhere and anywhen. The illusion of creation is simply the result of premillennial brainwashed minds; a dopey falsehood imagined by ‘scientists’ entrained to believe in a fantasy parental archetype – a creator god (or goddess) – by superannuated superstitions strangely exalted as ‘faiths’ or ‘religions’.

There is no god and no master, but truth, beauty, freedom and love are royally real. You are the creator. You are totally free – and ultimately responsible for everything! No guilt, honour, opprobrium or any other imaginary construct applies to you as a result of your creation. Mistakes are impossible in an infinite multiverse; all is research and all is Art. Yet some artistic creations are more pleasing to the senses than others and some acts far more compassionate and conscious. The holographic nature of reality assures that everyone IS everyone and that one simple ‘rule’ actually does apply to all human behaviour and discourse – the eternal Golden Rule; do as you’d be done by.

You create (your own) reality. How are you doing it? Self-styled creators tend to develop an exalted opinion of themselves, in the false belief they’re in charge of everyone and everything else – yet everyone is in charge of and charged by their own ongoing freeform destiny, ultimately beholden to no other yet intricately interlinked with all. Everyone is divine, a whole fractal facet of everyone and everything.

You magnetise reality, shaping and guiding the transitory ‘material world’ to follow the pattern of your dreaming. How are you doing it? Are you actually moulding the infinite potential of possibility itself, or are you selecting the best of all possible worlds from the myriad pre-existing choices available – or both, or neither? Are you a corpse that died at an earlier time, dreaming the ongoing world as you decompose into soil? Are you a Neo(tonous being) imagining a preprogrammed life in an artificial matrix?

How can you truly know the truth?

By examining each thought and image that enters your mind, and seeing from whence it arises. By meditating, and truly SEEING the sea of mentality through which you’re swimming until you find the still, pure centre where the true you abides, becoming the source of all creation at the centre of the cyclone, wreathed in the swirling spin of everchanging thoughtforms and myriad potential.

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Kaleidoscopic Cosmos



There is another way of viewing the kaleidoscopic cosmos. Matter doesn’t exist. It’s an illusion created by apparent ‘particles’ which also don’t exist in ‘real’ terms, but are actually eddies formed by intricately interlocking standing waves. We live in a fluid fractal hologram. All patterns echo the primal form from which all other fractal versions and visions are derived; the vortex at the core of all things, the shape of the cosmos itself.

Every ‘electron’ and every other vortexial fragment of wholistic unity holds a holographic image of everything within its spinning skein. Every grain of a holographic image contains an image of the whole picture, and every vortex is implicately linked to all others at all levels of resolution.

In quantum theory an ‘electron’ is said to rotate around its axis more than once during each rotation, circling through infinite plena of potentials (other universes) before returning to the phase – the place – from which it’s observed. Thus every part of all possible universes is in potential and actual contact with every other part, at all levels of resolution – and so are you.

Every cloud is a fractal representation of every other cloud. All clouds are different yet similar forms, all exhibiting tendencies we recognise as ‘cloudness’. All trees are fractal representations of every other tree. Every person is a fractal representation of every other person. Every ‘universe’ is a fractal representation of every other universe, and all are intimately linked in the most fundamental ways. All forms are representation of the primordial vortex, the wellspring from which all arises.

Everything we perceive/conceive/receive is produced by standing waves, and standing waves are formed between complementary poles. Every thing vibrates between its core and extremities – the poles of creation – yet the extremities and core of every single thing extend forever and are linked to literally everything.

We live in a far greater reality than a simple single universe. The universe we perceive is a tendency that tends to maintain its apparent form and substance almost wherever we look, but if you step back from the brink of egocentric personality and really see you’ll notice differences and changes all around and within you, all the time. We are part and parcel of everything, and everything changes all the time in ways too varied to mention. Everyone is surfing through spacetimes and everyone gets exactly what they wish for with their most wilful impassioned desires.

Hopes and dreams – affirmations – predominate over fears and insecurities when you invest them with awareness, focus and consideration. Hopes manifest most easily when they dovetail with the dreams of other beings in a mutually reinforcing matrix. Hope for the best! Dare to dream of Paradise – for all.

Psychic abilities are real and available; you enact their reality all the time. Telepathy is an ongoing eternal reality; not something to be achieved, but recognised. The same applies to all psi abilities or ‘psychic powers’. Learning magic begins with the simple recognition –reknowing – that it exists, and you are already ‘doing’ it. That’s how you got here. That’s why you’re reading this.

.You are implicately and inextricably interwoven with the entire potential cosmos. To activate a broader awareness of all this potential you have to explore the core of your being and the limitless bounds of self. The whole whirled world is whorled from mindstuff and thou art god.

And myriad other beings already know this. We soar from the shoulders of giants.

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Way Out, Far In


To begin any magical operation draw a circle around yourself, starting in the East. Do it now. In the southern hemisphere of this spinning Earth sphere the circle of protection is drawn clockwise (looking down from above). The opposite pertains in the northern hemisphere.

The circle is an inviolable horizon and you are its centre. All possibilities exist between the horizon and the core. Arrange your body so your spine is erect and your breathing is full and clear – this can take a single moment or many years to achieve, depending on where you’re at and how you came to be here now.

See where you’re seeing the world from. Move that point of awareness – the place where you live – into the centre of your head. Do it now. View the world from the centre of centres and watch your peripheral vision expand – you’re already aware of far more than you think.

Listen to the thoughts you think you’re thinking… see them circling round the inviolate centre where you reside… the centre where nothing exists… in the Heavenly Pool at the core of creation.

You are not the thoughts, but the still silent witness within. Become the nothing that sees and is everything. When you’re here the void is clear, not dark at all but filled with the light of eternal awareness. Be here now. Be free…

You are already immortal You don’t have to die to change or be free. You just have to recognise yourself in every thing and every one… and set it all free to be in victorious sweet surrender…

When you’re located at the still centre of the cycle, place this centre directly above the equally still and central point at the centre of the bowl of your hips – your water-centre of ‘gravity’, the hara or navel chakra, below and behind your physical navel. You can view the world from here as well, with a differing perspective that creates a different style of consciousness. Breathe deeply from and into this core and fill it with chi, prana, the Holy Spirit.

When your spine is straight and the waters above are directly above the waters below, a current begins that sparks the fusion, creating the pure flame of an opening, flowering heart.

Breathe…

If you do this and seek the truth all teachings will follow and flow through you, manifesting from the limitless potential of our massive multiplayer online cocreation. Be the immortal that witnesses all from the core of breath and being. Remove the screen from your eyes and BE HERE NOW. We create the best of all possible worlds… together.

It’s a beautiful, wonderful world.

 

All things in all times in all places are one thing, and that thing is love

 

- R. Ayana

And see TimeSpace


Thanks to those who passed and pass this to and through…

 

 

 

Images – author’s @ http://farm7.staticflickr.com/6165/6161617058_3ac4db913b_b.jpg

 http://farm7.staticflickr.com/6189/6161617036_1f90b7f1a7_b.jpg

http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7030/6404834715_07e44b669e_b.jpg

http://farm7.staticflickr.com/6051/6285429377_78f450cdb9_b.jpg

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Running the Gauntlet: Psychedelic Water 25

Running the Gauntlet: Psychedelic Water 25

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“Hey, Bro!” The jocular voice bursts through the rumbling vehicle’s window while a fistful of knuckles raps a syncopated tattoo on the roof. “Going to town? Any chance of a…”

“Got room?” Maryanne asks on the cusp of the Professor’s next question. “Aye,” the shaman replies, glancing over his shoulder to check that the rear seat isn’t too cluttered. “Pardon the mess.”

“You should see our tent,” the younger man says as he opens the rear door. He pushes sheafs of broadsheet newspaper across the cracked upholstery as his girlfriend bounces in beside him. The shaman shifts into first gear when the door slams shut and the Jackaroo Deva flattens twin muddy trails in the unkempt paddock. They slowly circle a fungal encampment of varicoloured domed tents and turn onto the rutted wheel tracks that score the recently shorn grassy weeds. Maryanne leans forward between the front seats and her coffee-flavoured breath pours across Ram’s face. “You don’t really believe that little green men are coming to Earth and kidnapping people, do you?”

“Not little green men; and not aliens, but travellers who are aspects of our selves. And most of them don’t kidnap anyone.” He nods when they pass their host. Paul distractedly smiles back as he kneels beside a small mobile chicken coop to distribute handfuls of grain to jittery hens. The chooks flap about in their wire pen, disconcerted by the atonal symphony of noisesome humankind who’ve so rudely and recently filled their peaceable domain with raucous simian yammering.

“What would they want with human beings, anyway?” Maryanne perseveres. “Do they put us in zoos or cut us up for medical experiments or spare parts, or what?”

The shaman glances into the mirror and catches her frown-crowned eyes. “The entire planet is a zoo to some of them. It’s hard to remember that infinity is a very big place; many more than one type of being interacts with us all the time, and have done for ever.”

“So, what, then? We’re just animals to them?”

“Or some kind of breeding experiment?” the Professor suggests with a sarcastic smile. The shaman glances into his eyes in the rear vision mirror while Maryanne waves farewell to Paul and the chooks. “Or both, maybe?” she asks.

“ ‘Just’ animals?” the shaman asks in reply. “It’s hardly surprising we worry about becoming medical experiments in the hands of others. The way we treat animals is the reason for all our fears about what may happen if we find ourselves helpless in the hands of another species.”

“Lab animals have a piss-poor life, I guess,” the Professor observes.

“The hens seem happy,” Maryanne says as she snuggles toward him. The professor’s arm winds round her shoulder and the shaman raises his voice to be heard over the engine’s rumble; “Almost every creature that falls into human hands ends up having a terrible life – and then they’re cooked and eaten.” The four wheel drive enters an exit tunnel formed by an arcade of overarching acacias and they all return a happy wave from a wet clot of barefoot young ferals who are obviously on their way back from the swimming hole.

Ram’s voice judders as they accelerate across a patch of outsized rocks embedded in a muddy patch of driveway. “Could human fears of ‘alien abduction’ have anything to do with guilt and karma? What do you suppose those chickens think about all this?”

“But that’s just it – animals don’t think!” the Professor yells as the vehicle revs uphill on the sparsely gravelled dirt track. The shaman yells back over the roar; “All that old garbage spewed by Descartes has been proven wrong. Modern brain and behavioural studies have shown that animals think and dream and plan. And not just higher-order animals, either.” He weaves around a bikini-clad bevy of pedestrians and drives through a long broad arch of native bush toward the recently tarred road. “But the truth of the matter goes much deeper. Everything’s conscious and aware – everything has a personality, emotions and aspirations. And we always like to believe we’re better than all other lifeforms; it’s written into most religions.”

“Too right,” agrees Maryanne. “I’d like to go vegetarian.”

“Why don’t you, then?” goads her boyfriend.

“Because I live with you!” she declares, bouncing back into his arms. “So you reckon they treat us the way we treat animals?” she calls over the din as the Jackaroo Deva’s wheels spin in a clay filled ditch on the edge of the bitumen.

“All those stories you’ve heard about ‘aliens’ harvesting body parts and conducting medical experiments on humans is no different to the things we do every day,” the driver avers.

“So you reckon it’s just projection – we imagine that’s what we’d do in their place?” the Professor asks. “Partly,” his chauffer replies as they wend their way uphill between a plunging lantana-strewn slope and the vast shadowy grove of an overgrown macadamia orchard. “But very few other races actually abduct humans. And it really has everything to do with our karma – and dharma – as well. We magnetise events to ourselves…” He almost plunges off the narrow one lane road when a battered old Fnord panel van plummets downhill around a blind corner. Its bearded driver grins maniacally, laughing at his dreadlocked offsider as he offhandedly pilots the careening van toward the Star Earth Tribe’s camp. “…But the multiverse is a very big place where everything tends to happen.”

“Shithead!” Maryanne grips the headrest of the driver’s bucket seat. “So that’s why you reckon they come here, stealing babies from mothers’ wombs? If these ‘space travellers’ are so much more advanced that us, what would they need with anything we have?”

“It’s more to do with what we are – and the biosphere is a Mother’s womb! But for a start, most aren’t space travellers in the strictest sense, but space-time travellers…”

“Like Doctor Who, eh?” she laughs.

“ ‘Exterminate’…” her boyfriend cries in a warbling tremolo as his hand slaps his mouth in a cartoon Amerindian war whoop.

The shaman waits until the younger man has expended his breath. “Some come from various versions of our own futures, returning to the source of the grime.” He shifts up to third, admiring the lichen-coated boles of rare native trees on the side of the track as they trundle uphill. “Why?” Maryanne asks. “To make home movies, or what? We know so little about them or ourselves, I guess… but it’s hard to see why they’d want to have anything to do with us. And say you’re right – what if they killed their own grandparents?”

“The old grandfather paradox is a furphy,” he yells to her reflection, keeping the revs high on the steep slope. “We live in a multiverse, not a universe, so when time travellers come here they enter a parallel universe very like their own, instead of the one they come from – so there’s no paradox if they kill someone who seems to be their own grandparent, for instance; nothing changes back in their home realm.

He pauses while they digest this convoluted morsel. “And some live in space all or much of the time. Our level of awareness is brutish compared to many who spend a lot of time outside gravity wells.”

“Brutish…” Maryanne savours the word. “We’re savages, sure… but we know so little – about our bodies, even – that it’s hard to see what they might need us for. You think they need our wombs – or our babies?”

He watches her features fray with concern in the widescreen mirror as she persists along her wonted track. “It’s not that unborn babies are usually kidnapped,” he tells her. “Most are implanted in the first place before they’re removed…”

“Implanted? Don’t alien… uh, ‘travellers’ have wombs of their own?”

“With a view?” the Professor laughs as they motor uphill past the upper ranks of untended macadamia trees.

“Actually, many don’t have wombs at all. They breed artificially. Some represent versions of ourselves who pursued a technological route of reproduction for millennia, and now their fertility is failing…”

“Did away with women at last, huh?” the Professor suggests.

“Men, more likely,” sneers his girlfriend.

“Both, actually.”

“So what, they need our fertile genes to backbreed with or something?” the Professor chortles.

“A little of that. Some also abandoned emotions along the way, and eventually realised they need those as well.”

“Fascinating bullshit,” Maryanne’s boyfriend announces, buckling his seatbelt when the main road comes into sight. “Why would they need to come here to do that? Seems pretty inefficient.”

“Well… you know how the cells that will become testicles or ova start out as the same cells, before the chromosomes of the foetus tell them which form to take – whether to become female or male?”

“Are you changing the subject?”

“No – I just wonder if you know where those germ cells come from in the first place.”

“From the mother and father, of course; they’re there in the genes to start with.”

“No they aren’t – not directly. That’s an interesting detail very few people are ever taught about human reproduction. The germ cells which ultimately become testes or ova don’t come from the foetus at all.”

“Where do they come from, then? Space travellers invading our wombs?” the Professor suggests as he snuggles up to his girlfriend.

“Not quite…”

“Bullshit!” he yells from the back while Maryanne sinks into his larger frame. “The ‘y’ chromosome determines sex, that’s all. The cells are there from the beginning.”

“It’s an unsurprisingly little-known fact that they simply aren’t. The germ cells come from the egg sack – from the mother’s placenta.”

“What? No way, man!”

“Yes way, dude,” he retorts (assuming the Professor doesn’t realise that the word ‘dude’ also means ‘camel’s penis’). He stops at the t-intersection while a stream of traffic pours down the larger narrow road before them. “The cells detach from the placenta and enter the womb. Only once the germ cells lodge in the foetus do they begin to differentiate according to the presence or absence of the ‘y’ chromosome. The reproductive cells originate inside the mother.”

“But that would mean that all the genetic potential in daughters or sons comes exclusively from the mother!”

“Not exactly – the foetus is a melding of father and mother, but the organs that make the reproductive cells aren’t; they’re cells from the womb which are reprogrammed to fit the foetus’ development.”

“But all the reproductive cells actually come from the mother?” The Professor stares at the passing traffic as he contemplates this apparent absurdity.

“Before they’re reprogrammed by the new genetic mix, aye – and her mother, and hers, and hers down through time – just like mitochondrial DNA.”

“If that’s true, it’s pretty amazing.”

“It’s true all right. Do a little research and…”

“But I don’t believe it.”

“Fine,” the shaman replies, turning to face his passengers while they wait at the juncture of the road to town. “But to get back to the original issue – if you’ll pardon the pun – any child brought up exclusively in a test tube wouldn’t have any functioning sexual organs at all; not unless they spent time during a critical juncture of development inside a mother’s womb.”

“They’d have no sex at all? Just neuters?” asks Maryanne while she fumbles with her knotted seatbelt.

“More like workers in an insect hive; they’d all appear female, more or less – but with no functional sex organs.”

“That’s horrible,” she says with a grimace.

“Maybe from the perspective of humans at the dawn of the twenty-first century. Travellers can come from infinitude futures, but many have cut themselves off from natural reproduction and everything that comes along with it, to their detriment. That’s why they need us. They realise they’ve lost something essential and they’ve reached an evolutionary dead end, regardless of the level of their genetic technology”

“I’m glad we’re more than just a gene pool or organ bank, then.” Maryanne says. He hesitates to tell her that human blood is very useful, or that certain travellers prize human body parts for less benign reasons than those he’s currently outlining. “So, what, they stick their babies in a mother’s womb and then take them out and bring them to full term in a tank or something?”

“Or into one of their own females, one they’ve been back-bred for the purpose; that’s essential for emotional imprinting for mother and child. Sometimes they insert artificial wombs into human females who may or may not be carrying a naturally conceived child of their own at the same time. They sometimes insert hybridised human/traveller embryos into the wombs of human females for a time for a number of reasons – including adapting to this planet and acquiring emotions.”

The Professor laughs. “Poor bastards. They don’t know what they’re in for!”

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A True Story
 
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Glass Onions: Explorations of High Strangeness

Glass Onions

Explorations of High Strangeness

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A rainbow warrior in a slightly seared Day-Glo orange jumpsuit squats beside the fireplace and stares into the flames. The newcomer successfully replicates the appearance of an escapee from some postmodern imperial jail on the far side of the planet. He warms his hands on the rounded basalt rocks that enclose the small fire without making eye contact with anyone in the circle.

Twin silver charm bracelets ring the young man’s wrists, further enhancing an impression of recent incarceration; black neo-tribal patterns blur across florid sunburnt cheeks as his face turns from the flames and dips into shadow.

The shaman slumps into his folding chair on the other side of the fireplace and releases a silent sigh of regret; Amber… His eyes automatically scan the grassy sward and scrubby regenerating bushland for a glimpse of the elusive umber-hued woman.

“Coffee?” Maryanne suggests, tilting a cup in the stranger’s direction. The newcomer answers the girl with a slight shake of his head while Phico’s pale blue eyes continue tracking the ascending smoke plume. He peers through a gap in the regenerating canopy and squints into the wide blue sky. “Where were we?”

“What year is it?” the shaman inquires.

“Inside a glass onion?” Maryanne suggests.

“Military intelligence,” corrects the Professor as he tousles her dark tangled mop. His girlfriend grimaces up at him in annoyance and leans forward, pulling away from the grasp of his knees. “Same diff,” she says, poking a stick into the coals as she sips her black coffee. Phico drops a wee budlet into the raft of assembled cigarette papers on the shaman’s knee. “What do you reckon, Ram’yana? Can the military – or ex-military – ever be trusted to tell the truth about anything?”

“That’s a loaded question,” the shaman replies noncommittally. “They’d first have to know the truth themselves, and who’s going to tell them – the nightly concentration camp news? Their glorious leader? Some other cellmate in their prison of one track minds?” He meets the jumpsuit-clad man’s eyes as Maryanne sloshes the dregs of her drink on the fire. “Or the aliens, maybe?” she suggests. The newcomer glances sidewise at the girl’s broad smile and shifts his weight, settling a little closer to her.

“‘Travellers’ or ‘visitors’ is the preferred term,” the shaman advises. The words seem to spring from nowhere, popping from his mouth without forethought as he watches the others freeze into their positions within the intimate tableau of the small circle. An xpansive sweep of his arm indicates the bushland setting that surrounds their quintuplet tête-à-tête. “We’re the aliens here. Just ask the local Kooris, they’ll tell you. Maybe. If they feel like it.”

“Some of the Bundjalung brothers and sisters call us the space people,” Phico supplies as the shaman stares through his thoughts and concentrates on the makings in his lap.

“Straight as a tie,” the bearded shaman echoes as he licks the paper tube’s seam. He holds his coffee cup up before his brow, then lowers it to the level of his throat and heart to infuse the brew with his essences. He concentrates the resultant combination before his solar plexus, inhaling rich esters before swallowing a sip and refortifying himself with a lungful of smoky forest air.

“So what do you say?” the Professor presses. Maryanne’s lips smile beneath her frowning brow. “Do you reckon they come from outer space?” she asks.

“Or inner spaces?” Phico suggests.

The shaman smooths the four paper number and circumcises the tip with his teeth. “There are many different sources of saucers,” he says as he spits out the joint’s foreskin. “I hesitate to tell you what I really think, but seeing as you ask…” He taps the cardboard filter more firmly into place. “They come from here, there and everywhere – and everywhen; a vast range of different levels of technological and psychic maturation are all appearing here all the time, from a multitude of timestreams, including our infinitude futures and various presents.”

Maryanne’s frown etches deeper patterns on her forehead as she pours herself another cup. “But if they’re time travellers, where did they start out?” she asks. “It’s like saying some god created the universe without explaining where he came from.” The Professor’s hand dips between the cotton material and her spine and she shivers before the fire.

“In an infinite multiverse of infinite universes there is no ‘first’.” Ram says, swiftly recovering his powers of speech. “And they’re not all time travellers. Plenty of disks come from right here on Earth, and others from elsewhere within this timespace continuum – but the technologies implicit in the manipulation of rotating electromagnetic fields are an evolving feast of nestling possibilities; a humungous glass onion.” He watches Maryanne’s eyes glaze over as his small audience all lift their cups to their mouths as one. “But the really interesting point in all this – for me, at least – is the way we’re being protected from developing a cargo cult mentality.”

Intermittent drumming recommences on the other side of the paddock while the Professor tousles Maryanne’s hair once again. “How’s that?” he asks, dark eyes affixed to a group of scarcely clad rainbow faeries who are headed downhill to the creek. Maryanne shakes her locks from his fingers and sweeps mussed-up hair from her eyes.

“Technologically advanced cultures often leave less sophisticated societies shattered in their wake – like all those native tribes who gave up the ghost in the face of wonders brought by advancing empires; unimaginable items dropped at the feet of stone age people who could hardly conceive how they’d been made.”

“A sufficiently high technology always appears to be magic,” Phico agrees. “Was that Clark, or Moorcock? Anyway, where was I? Oh yes,” he nods, speaking directly to Maryanne, “‘cargo cult’ specifically refers to those New Guinea tribes who intercepted supplies dropped to troops by passing planes in world war two. The natives hacked runways into the jungle and even built wickerwork airplanes and parked them nearby to lure the cargo gods down. They abandoned their lives and lifestyles to pray to promising new gods who dropped strange food and trinkets from the skies – supplies for troops dropped by parachute and often intercepted by the tribes.”

“Just so,” Ram agrees, “and most were soon absorbed into the monoculture of the new invader, or became dispirited by their perceived impotence in the face of all those gifts from the gods – or were wiped out by diseases, alcohol, social disruption… bullets and bombs.”

He catches a glimpse of the almighty forest which once stood where they sit round the small gum-wood fire – an almost thoroughly desecrated paradise whose remnants sprout back as seedlings and saplings all around them, while the spirits of elder trees remain rooted in an uninterrupted dream world that’s endured for millions of years; encompassing all that unfolds and buds beneath their overarching boughs and impenetrable canopies. This has been a fireplace for a long, long time, he realises.

The vision departs as swiftly as it came. “There are many who help to uplift humankind by a variety of means,” he continues, “but their efforts must always remain hidden. Humans have to believe they’re developing these extraordinary new technologies, abilities and ethical systems of their own accord. Otherwise many good souls would be lost in despair, in realisation of how backward we truly are.”

“So they have to secretly leak info and stuff into our cultures, so we don’t get depressed?” the Professor enquires. “Makes sense, if they’re benign. Like that non-interference prime directive on uh… that sci-fi show, you know…”

“Star Trek,” Maryanne supplies. “And there are a number of ways to leak info and tech into the world,” Phico adds. “You can insert it directly into some people’s minds, without having to stage a Roswell incident or impregnate TV programs with suggestive scripts.”

“By telepathy?” asks Maryanne. “Hypnosis?” the Professor suggests. “With lies,” the charcoal-faced stranger proclaims as he runs a hand over his short-shorn scalp. The shaman consecrates the joint and incinerates its tip. “Let me tell you a story.” He takes a deep drag and passes the spliff to his left. “Please do,” implores Maryanne. She accepts the burnt offering while she strokes the Professor’s calf muscle. “Uhhuh,” her beau nods. “Go on,” says Phico.

So he does.

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“It isn’t my story – it’s one I read when I was a teenager. Here,” he says, and quickly consecrates the second finished number before passing it to Phico, along with a refillable gas lighter. The older hippy completes the circle by passing the first joint back to him. “That was quick,” Maryanne observes. “You should enter in the speed rolling comp this arvo. Whose story is it then?”

“Uh… it comes from an old Fantasy and Science Fiction magazine, I think. It’s been a long time.”

“Must have been. Wasn’t that one of those pulp mags back in the sixties?” The shaman nods while Phico lights up, puffing smoke signals into the diminishing plume that arises from smoking embers in the depleted fire. “And the fifties,” the elder supplies as a puff of smoke makes it past his withheld breath. “He goes way back, this one. Like me.”

“Like a Wayback Machine,” the shaman agrees. He turns to greet another recovering partygoer and Paul’s lightly bearded face appears over Phico’s shoulder, sniffing the smoke cloud that wreathes the older man’s head as he accepts the smouldering spliff. “Come on,” insists Maryanne, bouncing up and down on the spot. “Tell us the story!”

“Well… I’ll make it brief,” Ram says. He pauses for a deep slow toke before passing the first number to the Professor, while Paul – the prime scion of the Star Earth Tribe – kneels to reawaken the drowsy flames. “A bunch of engineers and technicians are called in by U.S. Military Intelligence, to reverse-engineer a machine they say has fallen into their hands…”

“Let me guess,” interrupts Maryanne, “it’s a flying saucer.”

“Actually, no, it’s a perpetual motion machine…”

“Uhuh…” The Professor inverts the joint and shotguns smoke into his girlfriend’s instantly opening mouth. Even as the tale unreels from the shaman’s busy tongue, the tableau strikes him as remarkably redolent of a fuzzy-headed avian parent feeding a famished emerald-plumed chick; “…and the military tells the scientists they have two weeks to figure out how it works and build a functioning replica.” Ram’s head swirls with mismatched memories and he takes a deep breath of oxygenated, orgone-charged air to clear his mind. “The engineers scoff at first, and then they get down to business. They’re locked in a lab and given anything they ask for to complete the job.”

“And they’re able to do it?” Maryanne surmises through a cloud of smoke. The sentence is barely out of her mouth when she doubles over in a coughing fit. “Good shit!” she announces in staccato bleats while the Professor pats her back. The Day-Glo escapee leans back from leaping flames that Paul cajoles from rekindled coals with handy handfuls of desiccated mulch.

“Well – after two weeks the generalissimos come back into the lab and ask, ‘How’d you go?’ – expecting the engineers to have failed – and the head scientist says, ‘Well, we looked at how it worked and pulled it all apart, but we couldn’t get into that little black box on the side…’ The military guys said, ‘Don’t worry, we didn’t think you’d be able to do it,’ and the scientist shook his head and said, ‘Oh, we did it all right. It took us a while, but we worked out a way to bypass the box.’

“The generals stood around stunned while the eggheads and engineers showed them a working replica, and it turned out the high brass had been fooling the scientists all along; the sealed black box contained a secret power source after all…”

“And they built a perpetuum mobile anyway?” suggests Phico.

“Aye, just so – if you believe something is possible then it becomes possible.”

“So,” says the Professor as he passes the joint on to Paul, who passes him the other smoke while he blows into the embers, “is that what you reckon is really going on? That they fooled some scientists into building a working flying saucer by telling them they’d found one, or something?”

“If you like,” says the shaman. “Actually, if I remember the story correctly the generals traded the perpetual motion machine with the Soviets – for an antigravity device they’d developed using identical means. Let’s just say there are many different sources of saucers, and just because they were designed and built here on Earth doesn’t mean the information originally came from here – or here alone – or that the military mind is ever capable of telling the truth. It’s just not in their job description. The whole topic of so-called ‘unidentifieds’ is all a glass onion,” he says with a nod to Maryanne, “with many levels of permeability and nested masks of Russian doll truths.”

Paul coughs his way through another toke. “Wow,” he chokes; “Smooth!”

“He is, isn’t he?” Maryanne jests, taking the joint from Paul’s fingers while Phico grasps the conversation’s baton and runs with it; “And suggestions can be implanted in receptive minds in all sorts of ways, to seed and take root in fertile imaginations.” He has a swift toke and passes it on to the shaman…

From Glass Onions – Psychedelic Water Part 23where the true tale continues @ http://centraxis.blogspot.com/2010/04/glass-onions-psychedelic-water-23.html 

Be Aware – this link leads to the Prince of Centraxis site, which is chock full of implicate & xplicit concepts & images!where the true tale continues

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Images – author’s

For further enlightening information enter a word or phrase into the search box @ New Illuminati or click on any label/tag at the bottom of the page @ http://nexusilluminati.blogspot.com

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Extraterrestrial Tantricka, Approaching the Essence, Hermit


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Extraterrestrial Tantricka

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Approaching the Essence

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Hermit

Images – author’s
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