X Marks the Spot | |
aether (OP) User ID: 49170728 United Kingdom 11/17/2013 06:41 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 47446189 Australia 11/17/2013 06:47 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Scene: Hot afternoon...self trained chippie and a trained guy... Bored....hot...driving in roof strapping cleats 40 mm long He says" This is boring" I say "I have an answer" He goes "what" I say' Drive em in with one good hit" You do get quite pro ficient |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 47187049 United States 11/17/2013 06:55 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | ... Quoting: Seer777 How do you hold two things together? Place something between they are both attracted to, or both 'hold on to'...if you will. Like nailing two pieces of wood together. The 'nail' is the 'bond'. true [link to img.diytrade.com] :CherryBlossoms: you know there is a tradition of god kings to self sacrifice in the event of failure to resurrect visible golden age environment i wonder if that is a male thing or is it matriarchal to So how do they resurrect visible golden age environment? |
aether (OP) User ID: 49170728 United Kingdom 11/17/2013 07:02 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Thoth is of learning yes, if you were to meet him it would be in a learning type environment, such as at an old wooden school desk, or being given lectures or taught stuff by him. Hmm, I have seen the above post many times, cheers aether, have you met him? If so may I ask in what form he appeared to you, if you do not mind :) well i haven`t i am noticing that through several decades i have become "closer" to thoth without my noticing until quite recently like a few months to weeks i can now look back and see because of what i know now it was never i was looking for thoth i never gave thoth a thought until now it feels like thoth has been looking at me and coming ever closer to my company you see when i went to the lagoon in view of pyramids i knew after , that i had met thoth or the point was about thoth but thoth was not there leaving me feeling i was thoth i left it at that and forgot about it nothing thus far has altered my view of thoth |
Seer777 Ride the wings of the mind User ID: 50018194 United States 11/17/2013 07:07 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Thread: Did anyone just have an inner conversation with Yahweh, Thoth, and/ or Buddha? (Page 3) Quoting: Seer777 H=Hydrogen H2O. Water. Brow. minus 1. Bow... Arch. Wave. Frequency. Scribe. Word. In beginning was the WORD... Difficulties strengthen the Mind as labor does the body... ~Seneca |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 50104197 United Kingdom 11/17/2013 07:09 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Thank you very much for answering, much appreciated. This full moon has not given me the normal emotional turmoil felt, sure a few headaches but nothing at all like I have been getting previous, a good sign I hope. Good night. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 50145556 United States 11/17/2013 07:10 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Seer777 Ride the wings of the mind User ID: 50018194 United States 11/17/2013 07:13 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Thoth? Have you read the Emerald Tablets? If not, I recommend. [link to www.crystalinks.com] Do you presume to know what I see and what I do not? Difficulties strengthen the Mind as labor does the body... ~Seneca |
aether (OP) User ID: 49170728 United Kingdom 11/17/2013 07:14 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Thread: Did anyone just have an inner conversation with Yahweh, Thoth, and/ or Buddha? (Page 3) Quoting: Seer777 H=Hydrogen H2O. Water. Brow. minus 1. Bow... Arch. Wave. Frequency. Scribe. Word. In beginning was the WORD... sequential ingredients of emotion in word feels nice, to me |
Seer777 Ride the wings of the mind User ID: 50018194 United States 11/17/2013 07:18 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Thread: Did anyone just have an inner conversation with Yahweh, Thoth, and/ or Buddha? (Page 3) Quoting: Seer777 H=Hydrogen H2O. Water. Brow. minus 1. Bow... Arch. Wave. Frequency. Scribe. Word. In beginning was the WORD... sequential ingredients of emotion in word feels nice, to me In this regard...it has little if anything to do with emotion. Difficulties strengthen the Mind as labor does the body... ~Seneca |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 50109983 Ireland 11/17/2013 07:19 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | If you play classical music for around 2 weeks it raises the consciousness levels of the plants, they become self aware and can compose their own music. Quoting: <<orbs>> [link to youtu.be] happy plant cells :) :h cells: |
aether (OP) User ID: 49170728 United Kingdom 11/17/2013 07:21 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Thread: Did anyone just have an inner conversation with Yahweh, Thoth, and/ or Buddha? (Page 3) Quoting: Seer777 ... H=Hydrogen H2O. Water. Brow. minus 1. Bow... Arch. Wave. Frequency. Scribe. Word. In beginning was the WORD... sequential ingredients of emotion in word feels nice, to me In this regard...it has little if anything to do with emotion. oh i see |
Seer777 Ride the wings of the mind User ID: 50018194 United States 11/17/2013 07:47 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Thread: Did anyone just have an inner conversation with Yahweh, Thoth, and/ or Buddha? (Page 3) Quoting: Seer777 H=Hydrogen H2O. Water. Brow. minus 1. Bow... Arch. Wave. Frequency. Scribe. Word. In beginning was the WORD... Quoting: aether Yes. Essentially, describing how 1D (-------)goes to 2D(~~~~~~~). Requires 'curves'. Vibration. [link to www.colorado.edu] Difficulties strengthen the Mind as labor does the body... ~Seneca |
aether (OP) User ID: 49170728 United Kingdom 11/17/2013 07:55 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Thread: Did anyone just have an inner conversation with Yahweh, Thoth, and/ or Buddha? (Page 3) Quoting: Seer777 H=Hydrogen H2O. Water. Brow. minus 1. Bow... Arch. Wave. Frequency. Scribe. Word. In beginning was the WORD... Quoting: aether Yes. Essentially, describing how 1D (-------)goes to 2D(~~~~~~~). Requires 'curves'. Vibration. [link to www.colorado.edu] where do we draw the line |
Seer777 Ride the wings of the mind User ID: 50018194 United States 11/17/2013 07:58 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Yes. Quoting: Seer777 Essentially, describing how 1D (-------)goes to 2D(~~~~~~~). Requires 'curves'. Vibration. [link to www.colorado.edu] where do we draw the line 'Where' is always moving. How? With these... The square and compass. Difficulties strengthen the Mind as labor does the body... ~Seneca |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 49989237 United States 11/17/2013 10:53 PM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 50169600 United States 11/18/2013 06:53 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 19535695 United States 11/18/2013 07:04 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Hi everyone :) Balancing the hemispheres of your brain [link to astralquest.podomatic.com] :arcofc: :cnncct: |
aether (OP) User ID: 49170728 United Kingdom 11/18/2013 07:17 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Yes. Quoting: Seer777 Essentially, describing how 1D (-------)goes to 2D(~~~~~~~). Requires 'curves'. Vibration. [link to www.colorado.edu] where do we draw the line 'Where' is always moving. How? With these... The square and compass. yes |
aether (OP) User ID: 49170728 United Kingdom 11/18/2013 07:20 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Lunar Crater Anomalies Nov 18, 2013 Elongated craters on the Moon are said to come from “grazing impactors.” Quoting: observationIn one of the earliest Pictures of the Day by the late Amy Acheson, the question was asked, how do you make a crater? When astronomers began to observe the Moon centuries ago, the craters there were considered to be the remains of volcanic vents. As telescopes advanced in their resolving power, the structure of lunar craters was found to be anomalous. Flat floors and central peaks characterize a significant percentage of lunar craters. The majority of those that remain are well-defined, conical holes with clean sides and no evidence of debris surrounding them. Rather, they appear melted with slumping walls in some cases. In the image at the top of the page, two members of a crater group in Mare Fecunditatis are shown. The conventional explanation for them is that a massive asteroid struck the Moon a glancing blow, scooping out the elongated Messier crater and then bounding back to the surface, where it excavated the Messier A formation before returning to space. There are no ejecta anywhere near the crater formations, particularly outside of the long axis boundaries, so where is the debris from the impact? The ability of an object to survive the energies involved with a high-velocity strike is also questionable. Especially since the two craters measure 15 X 8 kilometers and 16 X 11 kilometers, respectively. There are several other elongated craters on the Moon, and others on Mars. They have features in common: flat floors, steep walls, lack of impact ejecta, and a fresh appearance................... [link to www.thunderbolts.info] |
aether (OP) User ID: 49170728 United Kingdom 11/18/2013 07:21 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Hi everyone :) Quoting: >~* Flutterby Fringe*~< Balancing the hemispheres of your brain [link to astralquest.podomatic.com] :arcofc: :cnncct: good morning |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 27543704 United States 11/18/2013 07:22 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | ... Quoting: Seer777 How do you hold two things together? Place something between they are both attracted to, or both 'hold on to'...if you will. Like nailing two pieces of wood together. The 'nail' is the 'bond'. true [link to img.diytrade.com] :CherryBlossoms: you know there is a tradition of god kings to self sacrifice in the event of failure to resurrect visible golden age environment i wonder if that is a male thing or is it matriarchal to Jesus for example, self sacrificed because his father told him to, I think. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 27543704 United States 11/18/2013 07:25 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | If you play classical music for around 2 weeks it raises the consciousness levels of the plants, they become self aware and can compose their own music. Quoting: <<orbs>> [link to youtu.be] happy plant cells :) :h cells: That is cute. I liked your lsd pic thread. |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 19535695 United States 11/18/2013 07:37 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 23967033 Germany 11/18/2013 07:39 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | |
aether (OP) User ID: 49170728 United Kingdom 11/18/2013 07:39 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | this site has some nice gifs showing the interaction of a CME with ISON. This happened on November 13/14, precisely at the time of the recent outburst. Quoting: observation[link to cometal-comets.blogspot.com.au] |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 27543704 United States 11/18/2013 07:39 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | Lunar Crater Anomalies Quoting: aether Nov 18, 2013 Elongated craters on the Moon are said to come from “grazing impactors.” Quoting: observationIn one of the earliest Pictures of the Day by the late Amy Acheson, the question was asked, how do you make a crater? When astronomers began to observe the Moon centuries ago, the craters there were considered to be the remains of volcanic vents. As telescopes advanced in their resolving power, the structure of lunar craters was found to be anomalous. Flat floors and central peaks characterize a significant percentage of lunar craters. The majority of those that remain are well-defined, conical holes with clean sides and no evidence of debris surrounding them. Rather, they appear melted with slumping walls in some cases. In the image at the top of the page, two members of a crater group in Mare Fecunditatis are shown. The conventional explanation for them is that a massive asteroid struck the Moon a glancing blow, scooping out the elongated Messier crater and then bounding back to the surface, where it excavated the Messier A formation before returning to space. There are no ejecta anywhere near the crater formations, particularly outside of the long axis boundaries, so where is the debris from the impact? The ability of an object to survive the energies involved with a high-velocity strike is also questionable. Especially since the two craters measure 15 X 8 kilometers and 16 X 11 kilometers, respectively. There are several other elongated craters on the Moon, and others on Mars. They have features in common: flat floors, steep walls, lack of impact ejecta, and a fresh appearance................... [link to www.thunderbolts.info] This video says craters are not bowl shaped but cone shaped when starting out. It was once thought that the circular Linné (as well as other craters) is bowl-shaped, thus setting a precedent for the morphology of craters on the Moon and on Earth. But laser-mapping observations by NASA’s Lunar Reconnaissance Orbiter (at right) determined in early 2012 that that’s not the case; Linné is actually more of a truncated inverted cone, with a flattened interior floor surrounded by sloping walls that rise up over half a kilometer to its rim. Read more: [link to www.universetoday.com] |
1908247 User ID: 50172285 Brazil 11/18/2013 07:40 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | this site has some nice gifs showing the interaction of a CME with ISON. This happened on November 13/14, precisely at the time of the recent outburst. Quoting: observation[link to cometal-comets.blogspot.com.au] ison has been a bad boy, lol, lots of shockwaves at it good morning Nus |
Anonymous Coward User ID: 27543704 United States 11/18/2013 07:46 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | this site has some nice gifs showing the interaction of a CME with ISON. This happened on November 13/14, precisely at the time of the recent outburst. Quoting: observation[link to cometal-comets.blogspot.com.au] Looks microscopic, lol |
aether (OP) User ID: 49170728 United Kingdom 11/18/2013 07:52 AM Report Abusive Post Report Copyright Violation | you know there is a tradition of god kings to self sacrifice in the event of failure to resurrect visible golden age environment i wonder if that is a male thing or is it matriarchal to Jesus for example, self sacrificed because his father told him to, I think. yes For the Egyptians it was the creator-king Ra, for the Sumerians it was the high god An, from whom kingship descended. Similarly, the Hindu Brahma, the Chinese Huang-ti, Mexican Quetzalcoatl, Mayan Itzam Na and numerous counterparts among other nations, all preside over a paradisal epoch, while establishing the ideals and principles of kingship. Quoting: kingsIn Egypt, Mesopotamia, Persia, China, Greece, Italy, northern Europe, pre-Columbian Mexico and Central America--in fact, wherever the institution of kingship arose--the general rule is that royal genealogies lead back to this exemplary ruler, celebrated as the first in a sacred line of kings. The different myths recount in rich detail how the god built a great temple or city in primeval times, invented the alphabet, or taught a new language to a pre-literate race. They say it was he who invented the wheel, introduced the science of agriculture, instituted laws, and taught the true religion--in short, brought to a barbarous race all of the arts of civilization. There is also a crucial connection here. This "ancestor-king" is so completely identified with the Golden Age that it is impossible to separate the one myth from the other. There is no Golden Age without a founding king, no founding king without a Golden Age. The fabulous chronology of Egyptian kings or pharaohs offers a telling example. In his sweeping history of ancient Egypt, the Greek historian Herodotus enumerates the early lineage of kings. He tells us that there was a first king of Egypt, and his name was Helios. This first king of Egypt was not a mere mortal! He was a celestial power. Of course Herodotus was simply translating an Egyptian name into Greek. For the Egyptians, the institution of kingship began with the rule of the primeval sun god Atum or Ra, who, prior to his retirement from the world, founded the Zep Tepi, the First Time, or Golden Age. In Egypt all of the kingship rites point backwards to the age of Ra, a supreme god celebrated from one end of Egypt to the other as the prototype of kings. Indeed, every historical king's or pharaoh's authority derived from a connection to the ancestral king, for as the best Egyptologists have pointed out, the pharaoh was accredited as such by the claim that the blood of Atum-Ra coursed through his veins. In rites deeply rooted in Egyptian cosmology, each new king symbolically ascended the throne of Ra, took as spouse Ra's own mistress, the mother goddess, wielded Ra's scepter, built temples and cities modeled after Ra's temple or city in the sky, adorned himself with the beard of the god, wore the crown of Ra as his own, and defeated neighboring enemies in just the way that Ra had defeated the hordes of darkness or chaos in the Zep Tepi. Identification of local king and celestial prototype was absolute. Such is the universal tradition. Every king was, in a magical way, the Universal Monarch reborn. And this is why the chroniclers of king took such pains to establish the unbroken line. Only by proclaiming that the local king carried the blood of his predecessor, the Universal Monarch, could they certify his suitability for the prescribed function of kings. The ancient Sumerians repeatedly proclaimed that kingship had descended directly from the creator-king An, the most ancient and highest god of the pantheon, and the revered founder of the Golden Age. Consider the myths and images of the Hindu Brahma, Manu or Yama, the Iranian Yima, Danish Frodhi, or Chinese Huang-Ti--all models of the good king, ruling over a primitive paradise. The respective cultures esteemed these mythical figures as prototypes. In later ages the chroniclers have such figures ruling on earth. But in the earliest traditions the kingdom is in the sky, and the ancient rule of the Universal Monarch is one of the most pervasive archetypes of world mythology. Natives of Mexico insisted that the great god Quetzalcoatl, a sun god who ruled before the present sun, was their first king and founder of the kingship rites. He not only introduced all of the arts of civilization, but presided over an ancient paradise. The ancient Maya proclaimed that their once-spectacular civilization had its origins in the rule of the creator-king and god of the Golden Age, Itzam Na. At the center of Mayan culture, stood the sovereign chief, announcing himself as something like "the King of Kings and ruler of the world, regent on earth of the great Itzam Na." The leading Mayan expert, J. Eric Thompson, saw this as an "inflated notion of grandeur….a sort of divine right of kings which would have turned James I green with envy." And yet throughout the ancient world, one encounters this divine "grandeur" of kings at every turn. The original concept may appear as self flattery, but it actually has more to do with a burden of kings, the requirement that the king live up to the mythical aura of the revered predecessor. Never was there a king in early times that did not wear the dress of a mythical god--the model of the good ruler. Whatever the celestial, founding king had achieved, it was the duty of the present king, pharaoh, or emperor to duplicate, at least through symbolic repetition. For such was the first test of a good king. This historical burden of kings will explain why every king was expected to renew the primeval era of peace and plenty. Why, for example, was the Egyptian Pharaoh Thutmose III so eager to announce that he had restored conditions "as they were in the beginning", in the Zep Tepi or Golden Age of Ra? Or why did the Pharaoh Amenhotep III congratulate himself so for having made the country "flourish as in primeval times..."? The Pharaoh was expected to repeat the achievements of the celestial prototype. In the same way, when the Sumerian king Dungi ascended the throne, it was declared that a champion had arisen to restore the original Paradise.. Indeed, every Sumerian king was expected to reproduce the wonders of "That Day," or the "Year of Abundance"--the Golden Age of An. When the famous Assyrian king Assurbanipal took the throne, the chroniclers proclaimed that "the harvest was plentiful, the corn was abundant. . .the cattle multiplied exceedingly." For such was the accreditation of a good king. Among the Hebrews, the expectation was continually expressed that the king would introduce a new Golden Age. The Irish King, according to the respected expert J. A. MacCulloch, ruled under the same expectation: "Prosperity was supposed to characterize every good king's reign in Ireland," MacCulloch writes, and "the result is precisely that which everywhere marked the golden age." This is, of course, a very familiar idea. In the words of the eminent psychoanalyst, Carl Jung, the ancient king was "the magical source of welfare and prosperity." It's interesting how often scholars have noticed the theme, without explaining it. How did this universal idea arise--that the earth is fruitful under the good king? According to the myths themselves, the ideals of kingship were a mirror of the life and personality of the great celestial king whose rule brought abundance and cosmic harmony. Hence, the same state of things should accompany that king's successors who share in the blood-line and charisma of the great predecessor, whether that predecessor is called Ra or An, Quetzalcoatl or Itzam Na. |