First, I wanted to post these two stills from Twin Peaks, shared by WanderingGondola in a comment on "The white pebble, Peter, Humpty, and the key." (That's "TIBET" written on the map in the background, Debbie.)
That's the character Dr. Lawrence Jacoby, wearing specs with a red right lens and a blue left lens, just as in the post "Red and blue spectacles." He holds a pair of golf balls that look like white pebbles and then says he is "planning a pilgrimage to Pebble Beach." White pebbles specifically being from a beach was part of the syncs in "What quartz pebbles (now with added syncs!)."
I looked up Jacoby to see if his mismatched specs had any particular significance. Under "Personality," the Twin Peaks Wiki has only this to say:
Jacoby was known for keeping cocktail umbrellas marked with dates of influential events that affected him. He is also a keen surfer. A recognizable trait of the Doc's were his glasses - one lens of which was blue, the other red.
"The white pebble, Peter, Humpty, and the key," the post on which WG left links to the above photos of Jacoby, mentions how Lewis Carroll did with white stones what Jacoby did with umbrellas: "Carroll liked to celebrate notable days by marking them with 'a white stone.'" That post also includes a photo of white stones juxtaposed with white eggs. Some umbrellas are also in the photo, which prompted Debbie to leave a long comment (before WG's) mentioning umbrellas no fewer than 16 times.
This afternoon I saw on YouTube a new video from Uncorrelated Mormonism, called "Mormonism is Christian Magic." I didn't finish the whole thing, since he didn't seem to be covering much that I didn't already know, but two slides caught my eye. First, this one focusing on the importance of the color of Joseph Smith's seer stones (with white stones being associated with "water or seeing"):
Then there was this slide about "keys":
The illustration is a white stone statue of St. Peter holding the Keys of the Kingdom -- so the keys are themselves also made of white stone. This syncs with "The pebble key," where the same objects can be described either as white pebbles or as keys. Just to the right of this picture of two keys is a bullet point that says "D&C 129: 'three grand keys.'" This syncs with my recent post "Two keys or three?"
Coming back to the red and blue specs, this symbol quickly came to be associated with that of red and blue shoes, for example in "Fools and wise men on hills, planetary shoon, and a literal Blueberry Hill." That post mentions, in connection with colored shoes, a "sequence of colors [that] goes from silver to red to blue."
I successfully stayed off 4chan for the entirety of Lent, but now it's Easter and I'm back to my old ways -- meaning that every time I visit archive.org, I click for a random /x/ thread en route. The one I got today is called "Wizard of Oz Symbols." The original post has a photo of Dorothy in her ruby slippers and says:
Let's have a comfy thread about the occult symbolism behind the Wizard of Oz. I'll start with a question: What was the significance of the ruby red shoes in the movie? Supposedly, they were silver in the book.
That obviously syncs with "from silver to red." The post even says "ruby red shoes" instead of the more usual "ruby slippers." Although the thread was supposed to be about The Wizard of Oz, the first reply brought in Alice as well:
things like wizard of oz, alice in wonderland, etc have always struck me as psychic propaganda.
This led to lots of follow-up posts about Alice, including one that brought in Humpty Dumpty:
Lots of these "going to a magical fantasy world" stories are about sick cult activities. Many fairytales are ancient luciferian programming scripts. Notice also Peter pan "never grow up" - this is referring to the child alter personality splits that are created by the extreme abuse; they never grow up. Relevant quote from textbin link below: "HUMPTY DUMPTY'S evil speech to ALICE about how she can remain at her age - just under 8 years old forever...'two can'...this is TOUCAN programming which ANTONY RADCLIFFE speciallised in - the creation of 'child alters' frozen in time, through extreme torture. "One can't, perhaps,' said Humpty Dumpty; 'but two can. With the proper assistance you might have left off (growing up) at seven.'")






