On March 1, I posted "Strange is the night where black stars rise."
Last night, I checked The Higherside Chats and found an episode, published March 4, called "Wayne McRoy Jr. | 2026 Synchromystic Metadata, the Enoch Polarity, & the Black Star." So of course I had to give it a listen. The black star of the title is some sort of electromagnetic anomaly, and the Enoch Polarity refers to the two Enochs of the Bible: the son of Cain, after whom Cain named the city he built; and the son of Jared, who ascended to Heaven. McRoy identifies the former with an underworld city in the form of a black cube, and the latter with the heavenly Jerusalem described by John of Patmos, in the form of a white cube.
In Mormonism (e.g. the Nibley book), Enoch son of Jared is inseparable from his city, Zion (i.e. a heavenly Jerusalem), which ascended to Heaven with him, but this aspect of the Enoch legend is unique to Mormonism. Nibley devotes much of his book to drawing parallels between Joseph Smith's Enoch material and the apocryphal Enoch literature, but none of those parallels involves the City of Enoch, of which the apocryphal writers know nothing. For a non-Mormon like McRoy to associate Enoch with a city is very unusual.
That Enoch, both in and out of Mormonism, is known primarily as one who ascended to Heaven, adds synchronistic meaning to the juxtaposition with a Black Star. My March 1 post, about "where black stars rise," also mentioned Gary Lachman's book Dark Star Rising and my own post "Ascending to the black star."

