Blog #38: Lazy Sunday Afternoon
Part One
OK. So it's Sunday. It's afternoon by my reckoning, though early evening for most of my neighbours. In our house the time schedule, such as it exists at all, resembles that of Barcelona more than along-the-road Aberdeen. Things happen late. And it's kind-of lazy; I've been a bit lazy with the blog just recently. There's not much I've felt inclined to communicate, that's all.
'Lazy Sunday Afternoon' comes from a song by a group called the Small Faces from 1968. It's not a song that I especially like, so I'm not linking to it here. The title evokes a lot, however.
Lazy Sunday afternoon; but no idea when this little piece will eventually make it to the 'publish' button.
I suppose that things have become simpler since I finally reached the point of accepting that it's all bullshit. Convid, carbon dioxide, nitrogen, food shortages, gas shortages, Ukraine, Biden, Johnson, Sturgeon, Truss, Putin, World Economic Forum: all bullshit. All just different aspects of the same crappy anthem: keep them down, keep them scared, keep them scrabbling around for 'hope', for salvation, praying for someone or something to turn up and make it all OK. Once recognised - properly recognised, 'known', not just nodded to mentally - it loses its fascination, its enchantment, its compulsive grip. All parts of the same sub-human strategy. OK, I've got that; now what am I going to do with the rest of my life?
Until a few days ago, the big thing in the UK was about the (apparent) death of one old woman who was of possibly human/reptilian hybrid origin. I paid almost zero attention to the big show, but just enough to be surprised at how much attention it was getting from so many people. I can't see why I should spend any more time, or leak any more emotional energy, on the passing of this entity than the dying of the woman who used to work on the supermarket check-out in Burnley North. Is one of these lives any more 'valuable' innately than the other?
It would seem that British royalty managed to salvage some of its popularity since the time I visited New Zealand thirty years ago. I was surprised there that so many Kiwis would ask me about the royal family, with genuine interest and concern. They would almost seem envious of my life in the UK, so close to the dudes of royalty.
I was surprised since I came from a country where the general attitude at the time was quite anti-queen, anti-Charles. It was the time of Diana, and the other members of the royal family were typically seen as dark villains. The (apparent) death of the princess in a (apparent) car accident didn't do much for the monarchy's popularity, either. But memories fade, and by the (apparent) time of her shedding the mortal coil, queenie had become a sweet and loving grannie figure again.
Part Two
OK, so now some quotes. In lazy mode, I harvested these few from the chapter headings of David Icke's book 'Everything you need to know but have never been told.'
- 'We are all in the gutter, but some of us are looking at the stars.' Oscar Wilde
- 'Every man takes the limits of his own field of vision for the limits of the world.' Arthur Schopenhauer
- 'Great minds think alike because a greater mind is thinking through them.' Criss Jami
- 'Nothing would be what it is because everything would be what it isn't. And contrary-wise; what it is wouldn't be, and what it wouldn't be, it would. You see?' Alice in Wonderland
- 'The Matrix is everywhere, it is all around us, even now in this very room. You can see it when you look out your window, or you turn on your television. You can feel it when you go to work, when you go to church, when you pay your taxes. It is the world that has been pulled over your eyes to blind you from the truth.' Morpheus to Neo, the Matrix
Now let's turn to science for a moment. Science. I've never been big on science. Even now, fifty years on, my former schoolmates remember me as someone who was great at geography, languages, that kind of stuff. But science? I go down in school history as a hopeless heap of confusion.
Atoms, cells, silly equations. I just never got it. Still don't, to a large degree. What an irony, a couple of years ago, to find me getting to grips with what vai-russes really are, or are not, and the effects that novel MRNA shots might have on the human organism.
In retrospect, I might say that science as taught and generally conceived has it all wrong, or at least upside-down. Alice in Wonderland again. The reality is that everything is consciousness; this being the case, then science, as an investigation into how things work, should begin (and end) with a thorough study of the workings of consciousness. And what was the one thing that was never touched, not for a single moment, during the entirety of my years at school and university: consciousness. And that, folks, is no accident...
Here is a quote from the greatly quotable Terence McKenna about science:
'The hard swallow built into science is this business about the Big Bang... This is the notion that the universe, for no reason, sprang from nothing in a single instant. Well.... notice that this is the limit test for credulity. Whether you believe this or not, notice that it is not possible to conceive of something more unlikely or less likely to be believed. I mean, I defy anyone, it's just the limit case for unlikelihood, that the universe would spring from nothing in a single instant, for no reason?!.... It makes no sense.... And what these philosophers of science are saying is, give us one free miracle, and we will roll from that point forward - from the birth of time to the crack of doom - and then it will all unravel according to natural law, and these bizarre equations which nobody can understand, but which are so holy in this enterprise.....' Terence McKenna.
Just one free miracle. Most 'science' is actually cabal propaganda, a tool for shaping and distorting humanity's perception of reality. Learn to accept this - not easy for some people - and then your mind may become a clearer vessel for receiving truth..... (that's me, by the way, not Terence). Do not stand in awe of the 'scientists', the 'experts', the people giving learned speeches on YouTube or in TED talks. It's all part of the mind -fuck. Quite a large part....