The Open Door
Life Story#8: Food Notes
Part One: Lunchtime
It's a badge of honour from my time as a young person; a crowning glory among the great achievements of my glittering career in academia.
I never - not once - sat down to a school dinner during my entire time in 'education'.
School dinners don't really happen these days, from what I can see. Lunch involves . . .
Blog#8: Take Me To Your Saviour
Part One
It's over four months since 2020 breathed its weary, dreary last, expiring in a fit of flu-like symptoms, fabricated statistics, and renewed imposition of house arrest upon many millions of planetary citizens. But that's not all. In various sectors of the so-called more awake, alternative world, there was a feeling of great . . .
Life Story#7: School's Out
"Schools train you to be ignorant.... they prepare you to be a usable victim for a military industrial complex that needs manpower. As long as you're just smart enough to do a job and just dumb enough to swallow what they feed, you're going to be alright." Frank Zappa
Part One: General Reflections
Some time near the . . .
Snapshot#2: Fever in India
A clear explanation of the media-induced panic about people getting ill in India.
Blog#7: Where is Taygeta Anyway?
Part One: We Have Contact...
It was sometime last autumn, October most likely. I was browsing through some of the posts in the 'forum' section of the David Icke website. This really is a goldmine of information, especially on the currant bug story. Plenty of valiant souls can be located there, good folk.
At the same time, . . .
Life Story#6: White Rabbits
Part One
It was on Saturday mornings that the thunk at the letterbox in the hallway denoted the arrival of the latest edition of 'Peace News'. My father would sit transfixed over morning eggs and bacon as he pored over the latest accounts of grisly happenings in Vietnam, Biafra, and elsewhere, not to mention the constant threat of total . . .
Snapshot#1: Return of the Untouchables
My former Buddhist teacher hailed from England: Tooting, South London, to be exact. He did, however, spend twenty years, focussed around the 1950s, in India. It was here that he learnt most about Buddhism, studying and practicing with a variety of prominent Buddhist teachers, notably several Tibetans fresh into India from their . . .