Thursday, April 23, 2020

Mind Vril and Matter

Mind in itself is a great principle the exact nature of which cannot be grasped by the ordinary mind. 

Thought on the contrary is the manifestation of mind assisted by Vril.

Mind is the original cause of thought processes just as it employs the fine matter of the brain cells in these processes.

When we recognize the co-existence and co-ordination of Mind Vril and Matter we are able to perceive the real underlying causes of the phenomena of thought.

Physical science is wrong when attempts to limit the activities of Vril or vital force or nerve force or prana to the particular  human body in which is generated or stored.

Psychic phenomena is explained only when the long distance effect of Vril is perceived and admitted.

The mind cannot produce effect at a distance without the employments of the power of Vril. 

Those who assert that thoughts are things are right as far as they go but they do not go far enough. A thought cannot be generated without Vril. Neither can be projected to a distance without a peculiar employment of Vril.

It is only when the triangle of being Mind Vril and Matter is recognized that one's full powers and energies may be manifested.


from the book Outfoxong Destiny The Nature of Vril Harnessing the Secrets of Vital Magnetism by Valiant Thor.
 

Friday, April 17, 2020

Dream Catchers

  There are different types of dream catchers. Every dream catcher has a hole in its centre.

What do dream catchers do? Purpose & Meaning of the Dream Catcher

Sometimes referred to as "Sacred Hoops," Ojibwe dreamcatchers were traditionally used as talismans to protect sleeping people, usually children, from bad dreams and nightmares. Native Americans believe that the night air is filled with dreams, both good and bad. When hung above the bed in a place where the morning sunlight can hit it, the dream catcher attracts and catches all sorts of dreams and thoughts into its webs. Good dreams pass through and gently slide down the feathers to comfort the sleeper below. Bad dreams, however, are caught up in its protective net and destroyed, burned up in the light of day.

Dream Catcher Meaning: Web, Feathers & Beads

All parts of the authentic Native American dreamcatcher have meaning tied to the natural world. The shape of the dreamcatcher is a circle because it represents the circle of life and how forces like the sun and moon travel each day and night across the sky. The dream catcher web catches the bad dreams during the night and dispose of them when the day comes. As for the good dreams, the feathers act as a fluffy, pillow-like ladder that allows them to gently descend upon the sleeping person undisturbed. There is some contention when it comes to the meaning of the beads that often decorate the dreamcatcher. According to some American Indians, the beads symbolize the spider—the web weaver itself. Others believe the beads symbolize the good dreams that could not pass through the web, immortalized in the form of sacred charms.

 
 It is believed that if a person made a catcher with his own hands, then he put the strength of his spirit in the catcher, and he begins to work as an energy machine. Namely, it delays low-frequency waves that carry nightmares (nightmares become entangled in the web of the catcher). In the morning, the rays of the sun burn nightmares. And the catcher can catch the negative again. And since nothing dangerous can happen to a sleeping person in a dream, then nothing bad happen in reality too.

 Originally created by American Indians, dreamcatchers today come in a variety of different sizes and styles. They usually consist of a small wooden hoop covered in a net or web of natural fibers, with meaningful sacred items like feathers and beads attached, hanging down from the bottom of the hoop. Real authentic, traditional dream catchers are handmade and crafted only from all natural materials, measuring just a few small inches across in size. The hoops are usually constructed of a bent Red Willow branch covered in stretched sinews. Wrapping the frame in leather is another common finishing touch for "real" dream catchers.

most ethnographers believe the dreamcatchers were passed down from the Ojibwe through intermarriage and trade. The Ojibwe word for dreamcatcher asabikeshiinh actually means "spider," referring to the web woven to loosely cover the hoop. The patterns of the dream catcher are similar to the webbing these Native Americans also used for making snowshoes.  

Ancient legends about the history and origin of the dreamcatcher exist among several Native American tribes, but chiefly through the Ojibwe and Lakota nations. While many cultures find spiders to be creepy crawlers, the Ojibwe people found them to be a symbol of protection and comfort. According to the Ojibwa story, a mystical and maternal "Spider Woman" served as the spiritual protector for the tribe, especially for young children, kids and babies. As the Ojibwe people continued to grow and spread out across the land, The Spider Woman found it difficult to continue to protect and watch over all the members of the tribe as they migrated farther and farther away. This is why she created the first dreamcatcher. Following her example, mothers and grandmothers would recreate the maternal keepsake as a means of mystically protecting their children and families from afar.

Throughout time, dreams have had a high importance for people. Our nightly visits to another world are peculiar, often unexplained, pleasant at times and really scary at times. Whether these dreams actually happen in reality or not, we do get some satisfaction hanging a dream catcher above our beds before sleeping.

Many Native Americans still consider the dreamcatcher to be a symbol of unity and identification among the many Indian Nations and First Nations cultures. Still, many other Native Americans have come to see dream catchers as an symbol of cultural appropriation, over-commercialized and offensively misappropriated and misused by non-Natives.  

Links
https://pandagossips.com/posts/3695
https://legomenon.com/dreamcatcher-meaning-legend-history-origins.html

Monday, February 10, 2020

Time According to Ingo Swann

Time is plastic and put on like a coat, then taken off. Everything there is mental. As for what it looks like, you would be the judge of that since it would be your home, not mine. It is created according to the complex created in your mind during the epochs of your eternal existence.

In his 1993 book, Your Nostradamus Factor, Ingo makes it amply clear in more than a few instances that all events are taking place simultaneously. That fact is beyond my ability to deal with but I have read this from many sources beyond Ingo’s book. Ingo also suggested that all events are eternally changing  as one-event moves on, growing or diminishing, will influence all other events. He suggested that the dreams shape themselves according to the advancing development of the individuated Self.

Ingo: The world recorded in history books is now changing rapidly from its roots (how it evolved) to your life on Earth now. Part of this change will be the experience of some grief and pain. The change is for the good, and one that will be endured. My message to you and others, try to put the word fear out of your vocabulary. It is a bastard concept. Ultimately, there is no thing to fear at all. You are the eternal singularity. Look out of yourself and you will realize that you are at the centre of all creation.

Tuesday, December 3, 2019

The Brain and How It Works

The left part of the brain is the part dealing with control analysis and numbers. Is the dominant side for engineers mathematicians CEO of big corporations
The right side of the brain is the side where the pictures and memories are located.
The conscious mind can be powerful sometimes knows nothing useful and do not want to give up control.

Thursday, October 31, 2019

Lost Buildings of Toronto

Chorley Park







Built: 1915 (started in 1911)
Demolished: 1961
What exists there now: Parkland
Why it's missed: Chorley Park was the fourth and last official residence of the Lieutenant Governor of Upper Canada. Architect F.R. Heakes modelled it after the chateaux of the Loire Valley. The opulent building closed in 1937 due to the high maintenance costs. It served a few other uses before being razed.

Board of Trade Building
 Built: 1892
Demolished: 1958
What exists there now: EDS Building
Why it's missed: Designed by New York's James & James firm, the Board of Trade held a prominent place on the northeast corner of Yonge and Front streets. The rounded building was the perfect companion to the Flatiron a couple of streets away.
Grand Opera House

 Built: 1874 Demolished: 1927 What exists there now: Scotia Plaza Why it's missed: A fabulous Second Empire-style building with an an intriguing history courtesy of one-time owner Ambrose Small, the millionaire that one day up and vanished, nothing like it remains in Toronto.
Old Union Station

View of Union Station from waterfront


Built: 1873
Demolished: 1931
What exists there now: Citigroup Place
Why it's missed: As wonderful as the current Union Station is, think of what it'd be like to have the previous iteration of the station preserved and used for another purpose.

The Crystal Palace, 1879-1906

 After attending a preview of the first CNE, a reporter for the Globe newspaper stated that: The ground floor of the Crystal Palace will be devoted to musical instruments, gas fittings, saddlery, hardware, chinaware, billiard tables, etc.

Toronto General Post Office


 Built: 1873
Demolished: 1958
What exists there now: State Street Financial Centre
Why it's missed: This was Toronto's 8th post office and acted as the summit of the gorgeous Toronto St. Designed by Henry Langley, it was one of the city's most ornate Second Empire buildings.

Trinity College Campus
 
Trinity College 1929


In  1912, the City of Toronto purchased the 32-acre site where Trinity College was located. In 1925, Trinity College relocated to the campus of the University of Toronto. Some of the buildings on the former site were renovated to accommodate other purposes, but the structures suffered from lack of proper maintenance. In 1929, a fire caused extensive damage to them. However, the buildings survived until 1956, when they were all demolished except for St. Hilda’s College. It became a community centre and survives to this day. 

The site of the demolished buildings of Trinity College is today named Trinity Bellwoods Park. The most visible reminder of the former campus of Trinity College is the impressive gateway on Queen Street, erected in 1905-1906, designed by Frank Darling. In the modern era, they provide the main entrance to the spacious park. 
 Hanlan Hotel, located on the Toronto Islands, Lake Ontario, Canada
 This 1889 map depicts Hanlan’s Point and the hotel on the northern tip of the small eastern peninsula. Map by R. L. Polk and Company, Toronto Archives. Landfill joined these two small peninsulas into one land mass and the area to the north of Hanlan’s Hotel was eve eventually filled in, and is where the airport on the Island is located today.
Armoury
1891 1963 University Avenue and Armoury Street
 
 The above photo of the armouries is from the Toronto Archives, Fonds 124, Fl0001, Id 0064. The view is of its west facade, on University Avenue.
 
Sketch of the Toronto Armouries dated 1893, from the collection of the Toronto Public Library, r-5511.
Toronto’s armoury was to be located on the east side of University Avenue, a short distance north of Queen Street West, and south of today’s Armoury Street. Thomas Fuller chose the solid Romanesque Revival style of architecture as it was suitably militaristic in appearance, similar to the great fortresses of ancient times.
Built in 1891, the Toronto Armouries officially opened on May 17, 1894 according to the official story but we have a picture from 1893. In the interior of the armouries was a great  drill hall measuring 280’ by 125’, with a ceiling that soared 72’ above the floor.
 
 Links
https://tayloronhistory.com/2015/12/29/the-lost-hanlans-hotel-on-the-toronto-islands/
https://tayloronhistory.com/2016/01/27/torontos-lost-armouries-on-university-avenue/
https://www.blogto.com/city/2010/11/the_top_10_buildings_lost_to_demolition_in_toronto/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_lost_buildings_and_structures_in_Toronto
https://www.thestar.com/news/gta/2016/05/24/torontos-lost-architecture.html 
https://www.blogto.com/city/2013/11/how_toronto_demolished_the_finest_mansion_in_canada/
 
 

Monday, October 28, 2019

Psychic Literacy And Psychic Intuition Exercise


Increase psychic literacy leads to enhanced psychic alignment  enabling our joint direct sensing and intellectual systems to respond in a constructive way and respond faster if need be

Low psychic literacy equates with low psychic sensitivity. If such a condition prevails our intellects cannot make informed decisions regarding situations that are carrying heavy psychic factors within them. In such a condition we will be unable to help ourselves or others when the need arises.

Exercise

If you  experience some kind of psychic intuition or forewarning yourself and if there is time enough to do so ask your direct sensing systems to send along more information and see what happens.

Make a deliberate effort to become aware of the fact that your direct sensing systems are probably sending up psychic information all the time and in several forms.

Shortly you will be able to notice that unless your intellect locks on to psychic impressions they generally re submerge and dissapear from view.

Catch them in writing while you can. Start keeping your psychic impressions in a psychic notebook. Many successful people do. Every once in a while read trough it.

There are psychic intelligence systems networks that operate communally as well as individually. These psychic networks transcend individuals.

from

"Psychic Literacy ad The Coming Psychic Renaissance" by Ingo Swann