Today, reading Stories from the Messengers, Mike Clelland's second book about UFOs, I unexpectedly ran into a "mud hut" reference, closely followed by a reference to Communion -- the Christian ritual, not the Whitley Strieber book.
Clelland is writing about a woman called Denise Linn, who in the late 1980s was moved by an inner voice to eat three white owl feathers. (Yes, this is a strange book.) Here he quotes Denise's own account:
Without a further thought, I put the feathers into my mouth and swallowed them. (I don't recommend this. Feathers are very hard to swallow and not sanitary, but that didn't occur to me at the time.) The inner voice continued: As you have taken owl feathers into your body, the spirit of owl has permeated your being and shall always be with you.
On the next page, we read of Denise's 1994 visit to the South African Zulu holy man Credo Mutwa, who lived in what in our more enlightened times we would call an "earthen dwelling":
When Denise entered Credo Mutwa's humble mud hut, she was awestruck by his presence.
Mutwa, it turns out, has also eaten some pretty strange stuff:
Here's where things get really strange -- Credo Mutwa also claims to have eaten an alien. He tells of being given "a small lump of gray, rather dry stuff," by a friend, and told it was the flesh of a gray alien, or the "sky gods." He and his companion ate this together in a ritual ceremony . . .Throughout my research I have equated the owl with the gray alien. For me, these have become symbolically intertwined. Like Credo Mutwa, Denise had also eaten of a being steeped in mythic powers, and in doing so, felt she had taken on the attributes of the owl.Every Sunday, Christians around the globe partake in the rites of holy communion, the mandatory ritual of drinking the blood of Christ and eating his flesh. This sacrament is performed metaphorically with wine and bread.
My own recent post about Communion, you will recall, equated the flesh and blood of Jesus with the Tree of Life. Just now I looked up this Credo Mutwa character, and the opening paragraph of his Wikipedia article informs me that "His last work was a graphic novel called The Tree of Life Trilogy." Nephi's High Mountain Vision identifies the white Tree of Life with a woman who "was exceedingly fair and white." Somewhat surprisingly given that it's the work of a Black African, Mutwa's Tree of Life Trilogy uses similar imagery:



4 comments:
William,
You wrote : "Somewhat surprisingly given that
it's the work of a Black African, Mutwa's Tree of Life Trilogy
uses similar imagery:..."
~~~~~~~~
My response: If you notice the illustration
of the female's facial features and her spiral dreads/
box braids hair are not Caucasian.
In the article ( link below ) is reads
that Ma is from the ashes, which would
suggests she would be gray/ silver. The White Queen
is symbolic of the Luna which is a quicksilver ( Mercury ).
The Red King symbolic of the sun and Sulfur.
Recall my previous comment about the clip of Morpheus
and Neo and water. In the clip Morpheus twirls a
shining silver rectangle object. He wears a silvery outfit.
He sits on a rust/red chair. Recall I shared that
Oscar wore a rust red Phrygian cap.
Copy and paste:
Sulfur and Mercury
"Descriptions of alchemical processes often describe
the reactions of sulfur and mercury.
The Red King is sulfur -- the active, volatile and fiery principle
-- while the White Queen is mercury -- the material, passive,
fixed principle. Mercury has substance,
but it has no definitive form on its own.
It needs an active principle to shape it."
~~~~~~
Also connecting back to Wirth, all of his
tulips on his tarot cards are red as is
the tulip on the Iranian flag symbolic of
the martyr.
https://www.learnreligions.com/marriage-red-king-white-queen-alchemy-96052
https://buzzy.gumroad.com/l/thetreeoflifetrilogy
Morpheus: "You are a slave, Neo."... A Prison for Your Mind
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9ogsrRdbDlU
https://dottore.substack.com/p/the-fascinating-journey-of-the-phrygian
Yes, I certainly noticed that. Light-skinned but not Caucasian, like the Kelly-Strawberry family.
This mythic woman who's portrayed in the graphic novel segment included at the end of this post-- she really looks more grey than white, and the effect is such that she seems to be made of living stone. She's sitting on stone. Note the affinity of color between the stone and the woman. Overall, she's lighter; but the stone, too, has lighter facets. A stone woman sync?
William,
Yes, same but different which is The Rebis.
The Rebis is also the Philosopher's STONE.
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